Mending fences easier in tandem
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Life is a lot easier when you get along with your neighbors.
Whether the issue is a tree extending its branches onto someone
else’s property, the need for someone nearby to feed your cat while
you’re on vacation or old arguments between cities over a certain
airport, it is best-assuaged when neighbors are civil.
Newport Beach and Irvine have had some bloody El Toro battles, and
the hard feelings are still evident among many. But there appears to
be hope that the Irvine/Newport Beach Borders Committee that Newport
Beach leaders want to create marks a long stride toward a less acidic
relationship.
Residents who still want an airport at El Toro continue to say so
in letters to the editor, and they’ll probably keep writing
regardless of unions between Newport and Irvine, which is fine. City
leaders, however, have a greater responsibility to move on -- or at
least move on to other important issues. Irvine will be Newport’s
neighbor a lot longer than residents will remain upset over the El
Toro issue, as hard as that might be to believe.
Interest in forming the committee will be on Tuesday’s City
Council agenda, and a favorable reception by council members would
put the ball in the Irvine council’s court. If it gets there, at
least one neighboring city councilman sounds awfully receptive to the
idea.
“There has been a lot of contention between Newport Beach and
Irvine in recent years and it would be a good idea to sit down and
talk to them and realize we have a lot more in common than we think
we do,” Irvine Councilman Mike Ward said.
Even the best of neighbors on any scale are likely to butt heads
over something, but the ones recovering quickest from hard feelings
are those who communicate and don’t allow grudges to linger.
In disputes between cities over the development of projects of any
size that effect their borders, it’s natural that one side will end
up happier with the way each dispute is solved. There’s a handful of
pending development and management issues that pertain to Newport
Beach and Irvine, and it will be easier to avoid a winners versus
losers attitude if both sides are working together toward a common
end -- whatever that may be.
At this stage, an Irvine/Newport Beach Borders Committee sounds
like an excellent idea. We hope it continues to look good after city
leaders on both sides have a better idea of what exactly it will
entail.
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