New year, new goals for new mayor
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June Casagrande
The last time Tod Ridgeway took over as mayor, he burst out of the
gate with a central message, one he was determined to hammer home:
Some growth is good.
That won’t be his message this year -- not because his feelings
have changed on growth in the city. Instead, the change of tenor
Newporters are about to experience is due to the different political
and economic climate in which Ridgeway returns to the city’s helm.
“What I was concerned about then seems to have mellowed because of
the fiscal crisis,” Ridgeway said. “There has been a better
acceptance of allowing us to do our rehabilitation, to better provide
for basic services in this city.”
Ridgeway’s message in 2002 was in response to the Greenlight
movement, whose slow-growth agenda was seen by some as too slow.
Beginning with his speech at the Mayor’s Dinner of Speak Up Newport!
and continuing throughout the year, Ridgeway’s strategy was to shift
off the defensive and take a bold and proud position arguing that the
city needs some development in order to increase its tax base.
“I still have that basic philosophy, but the need to go on the
offense is not as great as it was,” Ridgeway said. “There’s a whole
range of other priorities now.”
One of the first things Ridgeway said he hopes to do as mayor is
to hold a meeting between council members, staff and members of the
public -- hopefully at some location other than City Hall -- to find
out what everyone’s goals and priorities are.
“I’d like to get council, staff and citizens all together to talk
about where we’re going,” he said.
A number of important issues will dominate city concerns in the
coming year, Ridgeway said: the general plan update, the question of
whether the city will play a role in airport management, the vote
over a luxury resort at the Marinapark site and a number of new
developments that have not yet made the headlines.
For example, he said, the city has been working to woo a Lexus
dealership to move into the city near the airport. Work in Lido
Marina Village will also be a concern, as will the city’s ongoing
issues like water-quality and Peninsula improvements.
“I think the City Council has done a good job of building
consensus lately, and I’d like to see that taken even further,
starting with a meeting to find out what everyone hopes to
accomplish.”
Steve Rosansky, the newest member of the council, said he supports
the idea of an information-gathering meeting.
“I’m in favor of anything that opens up the lines of communication
between the staff the council and the public,” Rosansky said.
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