Explaining the Greenlight to sue
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Phil Arst
We’re lucky to be living in Newport Beach. An outstanding quality of
life, beach and bay amenities, they’re all here. Another unique
attribute of the city is that we voters have the power to keep the
city as an outstanding place to live because of the Greenlight law.
This voter initiative requires voter approval of major developments
that could create excess traffic congestion and change the character
of the city.
Cities from all over the state are considering Greenlight-type
measures because of encroaching traffic congestion and
over-development. It took a great deal of volunteer residents’ work
to get the Greenlight Initiative -- also known as Measure S -- on the
ballot and to withstand the developers’ heavily funded campaigns to
defeat it. Few other cities have been able to muster enough
volunteers and contributors to do the same.
Greenlight was founded to give the voters control of what kind of
a city Newport will be. Should we maintain our pristine beach and bay
environment and high-caliber residential community? Should we become
another metropolitan Santa Monica? It was all about letting you
decide. The work of the Greenlight Residents Committee, since then,
has been to preserve your right to vote on the future of the city, as
described below.
The law is set up so that the voter decision process can accept
projects that are beneficial for the city and reject those that are
not. An example of a good project that we support is the reported
plan of Hoag Hospital to buy a property located close to the hospital
known as the Newport Technology Center.
Hoag Hospital has an urgent need for medical offices to
accommodate the many doctors needed to staff its expanded new
facilities. Greenlight believes that the best use of this property is
for medical offices.
The technology center property has currently applied for 50%
general office usage. We believe that its resultant traffic will
impede patient and emergency vehicle access to Hoag. Disturbingly, we
allege that the city’s handling of this proposal would be still
another attempt to bypass your Greenlight vote on the merits of the
general office approach, versus its legally permitted use by Hoag
Hospital for medical offices.
We support the reported efforts of Hoag Hospital to either buy
this property themselves or support a medical office management firm
to create a high-class medical office center to serve our community.
As you may know, the Greenlight Residents’ Committee regretfully
filed a lawsuit against the city of Newport Beach on March 26. This
was the last day permitted to file under an interpretation of statute
of limitations laws.
The goal of the lawsuit is to maintain your right to approve or
disapprove all major developments and to not exclude hotels and some
other developments as was being attempted by the city. It also
requires a full City Council examination of the development and
disclosure of all relevant facts to the voters.
There are currently two new hotel developments either in process
or in the talking stage. Both would be located on the shores of the
bay and take us a step further into a Santa Monica-type shoreline. We
think you, the voters, should have the final say as to what kind of a
city you want. Our lawsuit was precipitated by the need to retain
public overview of these and other projects.
Now that we have explained the goal of the lawsuit, we must
examine the process leading up to it and our attempts at dialogue
with the city.
We notified the city more than three months ago and offered to
work together to resolve these concerns about your right to vote.
Normally, this should produce a dialogue that can achieve a workable
solution. Instead, in a desperate effort to bypass debating the facts
describing this legally mandated ratification by the voters and other
issues, the City Council has turned to personal attacks to try to
discredit the volunteer Greenlight Residents’ Group.
There is an old saying: If you can’t beat your opponent on the
facts in a debate, turn to “ad hominem” attacks. As the personal
attacks by the City Council have been intense, we know we are on the
right track.
This type of political conduct has no place in Newport Beach. The
voters are too smart for that and demand information. We in the
Greenlight Residents’ Group promise to continue to furnish you with
the facts and hope that if we all exercise our constitutional rights
to question and dissent, a dialogue can be created that will keep
progress in the city on the right track.
* PHIL ARST is a Newport Beach resident and spokesman for the
Greenlight Steering Committee.
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