A fine compromise for the community
Something a little unusual happened at a Newport Beach City Council
meeting earlier this month: Neighbors of a business came out to
support its getting extended hours.
Those who follow city hall business will know that typically
residents rally against any late-night hours, citing a variety of
potential burdens on them, whether restricted parking, unruly patrons
or noisy closings. They’ll complain that the business is a bad
neighbor and a detriment to the community.
Not so Corona del Mar’s Zinc Cafe. “This is a wonderful
establishment and I think the community is absolutely benefited by
it,” Mel Feldman, a Corona del Mar resident, said at the April 13
council meeting.
At issue was a request by Zinc’s owner, John Secretan, to allow
the breakfast and lunch spot to stay open later, largely because
daytime business has not quite met expectations. The Planning
Commission approved a compromise allowing the restaurant to seat
customers until 8 p.m. while ensuring the last one is out the door by
8:30 p.m. The council’s concern was that when the city approved the
restaurant’s opening, it waived a requirement for additional parking
because the daytime traffic was unlikely to spill over onto
neighboring streets. That remained a worry for 28 neighbors who
signed a petition urging the council to deny the request.
Caught between typical resident reluctance and the unusual
support, the council followed the commission by making the right
decision. In coming to this reasoned resolution, council members also
showed that they can consider a case on a particular basis -- not all
businesses will deserve the break in parking Zinc received, for
instance -- and judge its merits fairly.
That, too, absolutely benefits the community.
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