INSIDE CITY HALL Here are some decisions...
INSIDE CITY HALL
Here are some decisions coming out of Tuesday’s Newport Beach City
Council meeting:
FICUS TREE MAINTENANCE
In what has become an annual process, the council once again
approved $60,000 for maintaining ficus trees whose roots can become
destructive when they’re allowed to grow too far. The $60,000 will go
toward pruning, root pruning and installing root barriers on some of
the city’s most problematic ficus trees.
WHAT IT MEANS
Solutions for controlling ficus tree root growth -- and the legal
liability that comes with that growth -- are invariably temporary
solutions. For example, root barriers often only work for about three
to five years. Nonetheless, these growth-control strategies give city
officials more time to deal with problem trees and, thus, more
options besides just tearing them all out at once.
WHAT THEY SAID
“I personally hope we don’t have a massive program of taking out a
lot of ficus trees all at once,” Councilman Don Webb said.
SHIPYARD AREA EXPANSION
A plan to build a mixed-use project on the peninsula took its
first major step forward Tuesday when the council hired a consultant
to do an environmental report on the project. The $73,060 contract
with Monarch Beach company Hodge & Associates will cover the cost of
an environmental report on Bill Blurock’s 2.4-acre property at 2300
Newport Blvd. The project calls for 30 loft-style residential units
above two partially subterranean parking garages and retail
commercial space. The report will consider parking, traffic and
environmental concerns that could arise from the project.
-- Compiled by June Casagrande
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