Limbo has longevity in Santa Ana Heights
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TONY DODERO
I’ve often marveled in this space about those stories that won’t die.
The headlines that are rewritten, practically word for word, time and
time again.
The usual suspects are the 19th Street bridge, the Westside Job
Center and charities, the Back Bay dredging, urban storm runoff, John
Wayne Airport expansion and noise and, last but not least, the
annexation of county-controlled Santa Ana Heights.
Regarding the last item, a reader’s e-mail about a recent omission
of fact in an editorial that ran on Feb. 22, titled, “Newport
literally crosses the line,” sent me to our archives, where I knew I
could find a number of stories for clarity.
I popped into the newsroom library (an outdated creature now with
the advent of electronic databases) with its 1950s-era metal, file
cabinets and took a quick jog down memory lane, unearthing stories
dating back to the 1970s and 1980s and 1990s and right on up to the
present century, all dealing with Santa Ana Heights and its hoped for
annexation to Newport Beach.
I even wrote a few stories myself, it seems, back when I was
prowling around Newport Beach City Hall for a living in the early
1990s.
The old headlines from the browned and frayed news clips were
familiar: “Council to review report on Santa Ana Heights annexation,”
“Newport seems willing to add Santa Ana Heights,” “Newport wins OK to
annex Bayview.” The last one was from 1985.
Hmmm. And here’s an interesting one from 1983: “SA Heights
annexation plans eyed,” written by one Steve Marble. The first
paragraph of the story reads, “A passionate battle over the future of
Santa Ana Heights has been rekindled by new efforts to have the rural
unincorporated neighborhood annexed by Newport Beach.”
In the 21 years since he wrote that story, Marble, a reporter at
the time, climbed the ranks of the Daily Pilot newsroom hierarchy to
become managing editor, leaving in 2000 to join the editing staff of
our sister paper, the Los Angeles Times, and has raised two kids and
sent them off to college.
And what has become of the Santa Ana Heights annexation since
then? Well, the issue is still not resolved.
That’s not to say part of it isn’t resolved. Just last year, only
20 years after Marble’s news story, the residents who live on the
eastern end of Santa Ana Heights finally got their long-awaited wish
and became full-fledged Newport Beach citizens.
Problem is, not everyone got invited to that party.
This brings me back to our editorial oversight.
The annexation boundaries and history is a tad confusing. On one
end are the homes and businesses east of Irvine Avenue, north of Mesa
Drive and south of Bristol Street, casually known as east Santa Ana
Heights. On the other end are the homes and businesses, roughly
bordered by Santa Ana Avenue to the west, snaking south a few blocks
and taking in the Santa Ana Heights Country Club to the north.
The western edge of Santa Ana Heights, referred to on county maps
as Area 7, has received conflicting messages over the years.
While Newport was happy to gobble up the eastern portion of the
land, Costa Mesa officials want the western side.
This came to a head in recent months as Newport officials unveiled
a four-pronged plan to investigate a possible takeover of county
operations currently in the city’s sphere of influence. That plan
included such entities as John Wayne Airport, the Coyote Canyon
landfill, the Harbor Patrol and Santa Ana Heights.
We’ve generally been in favor of Newport’s goals. But in the
aforementioned editorial, we made the following observation:
“Knowing residents in the Santa Ana Heights area were eager to
come to the beach city, Newport officials moved quickly to annex East
Santa Ana Heights and now have their sights set on the rest of the
288-acre area,” we wrote. “An area that comes with $30 million for a
redevelopment project, as part of a massive plan that if it came to
pass would have Newport Beach controlling not only Santa Ana Heights,
but the Coyote Canyon Landfill, the Harbor Patrol and John Wayne
Airport. The problem is that Costa Mesa officials are now saying the
western end of Santa Ana Heights, including the country club, is not
up for grabs, especially not those areas that are already part of the
city.”
After this editorial ran, I got a call from west Santa Ana Heights
resident and UCI science professor Cal McLaughlin, who pointed out we
neglected to mention one important fact.
The residents of Santa Ana Heights held a protest vote in the fall
of 2002 and overwhelming, by a 70% margin, chose not to be annexed by
Costa Mesa.
“The paper should really come down on the side of the people,”
McLaughlin told me in a visit to the newsroom, in which he gave me
and other editors a history and geography lesson on Santa Ana
Heights.
What we learned is even if Costa Mesa wants to annex that land,
the protest vote petition submitted to the Local Agency Formation
Commission -- the entity that oversees annexation -- creates a major
obstacle to that goal.
Instead, McLaughlin, one of the leaders of the protest vote, wants
Newport Beach to go forward with its plans to annex, something we
editorialized against.
McLaughlin is mostly right. Newspapers should come down on the
side of the people most of the time.
And in this case, I agree with him that even though he and his
neighbors don’t want to call Costa Mesa home, we shouldn’t tell them
that they should just be quiet and be annexed.
If the people of that area take a democratic vote and that vote is
against becoming Costa Mesa, Costa Mesa officials should just take
the hint.
But the larger problem is the quagmire between the two cities that
seems to be brewing over this and other issues. Costa Mesa officials
continue to make statements that they don’t want to give up that
chunk of land. And Newport officials say they’d like to have it.
That same editorial began with these lines: “In life there are
boundaries. Space that must be respected. Lines that just shouldn’t
be crossed.”
Until those lines and boundaries are mutually agreed upon by both
cities, my guess is our archives will continue to fill up with Santa
Ana Heights annexation headlines for years to come.
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