Group wants 1901 Newport on ballot
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Deirdre Newman
City leaders’ handling of the 1901 Newport Blvd. project has already
led to a lawsuit by the developer.
Now the city faces the threat of a referendum on the issue as
well.
A group of residents unhappy with the high density of the project
planned to start circulating petitions today to demand that the
council repeal its approval of the project or else let residents vote
on it on the November ballot.
A variation of the original project was approved last week. It
calls for 145 units and 415 parking spaces in the parking lot of the
property that houses the Spanish mission-style building at the corner
of 19th Street and Newport Boulevard.
Although the overwhelming majority of residents spoke in
opposition to the project last week, the council approved it, with a
$1.5 million subsidy to Rutter Development in exchange for lowering
the number of units.
The referendum effort is the consequence of city leaders’ ignoring
the community’s clear resistance to the project, former Councilwoman
Heather Somers said.
“It’s too bad that our council has stopped listening to the public
on issues that concern the entire community,” Somers said. “The only
reason referendums get brought about is because there is a breakdown
in communication between what the community wants and what the
council chooses to direct.”
The project had been in limbo since August. Rutter Development
officials sued the City Council and a resident group, Costa Mesa
Citizens for Responsible Growth, last summer, claiming that a
rehearing on the downtown condominium project was granted illegally,
without the required presentation of new evidence.
When the rehearing was held Tuesday, Jan. 20, the City Council --
acting as the Redevelopment Agency -- approved a slightly less dense
version of the original, which is still double the density called for
in the city’s general plan.
The referendum is on the general plan amendment to the project,
which will allow the project to be built at 40 units per acres
instead of 20.
About 20 people have joined the referendum effort so far. The goal
is to get 4,700 signatures by Feb. 19.
Councilman Allan Mansoor, one of the two council members to vote
against the project, said he was not surprised to hear that a
referendum effort was starting.
“My position has always been that development should stay within
the spirit of the general plan,” Mansoor said. “We’ve doubled that,
so I don’t blame the people in the community for wanting us to follow
our own rules.”
Resident Wendy Leece, who is a Parks and Recreation commissioner
and a former member of the Newport-Mesa Unified School District
trustee, said she would circulate petitions in her neighborhood
because she doesn’t think the project was well thought out.
“It’s poorly conceived and needs to go back to the drawing board,”
Leece said.
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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