INSIDE CITY HALL Here are some decisions...
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INSIDE CITY HALL
Here are some decisions coming out of Tuesday’s City Council
meeting.
JOSH SLOCUM’S DINNER AND SUPPER CLUB
The council continued until July 13 an appeal hearing on the
club’s request to add live entertainment and dancing. In May, the
Planning Commission granted the Mariner’s Mile club a permit allowing
it to extend its hours to serve lunch and increase its capacity from
133 to 143 people but denied the request to allow entertainment and
further increase the club’s capacity in the evenings. City officials
expressed concerns about parking and traffic on Coast Highway and
noise from the club.
Planner Bill Hodge, representing the club, contended Slocum’s is
willing to meet conditions set by the city, and they requested the
hearing be continued so they can review a long list of calls for
service Newport Beach police said have been made at or near the club
in the last year.
WHAT IT MEANS
Some council members seemed skeptical about increasing the allowed
capacity when club traffic and patrons are a source of complaints
now. However, no residents turned up to oppose the appeal. The
council will revisit the issue at a July 13 meeting.
WHAT THEY SAID
“It’s an extremely tight site,” Councilman Don Webb said. “It’s
one that I really question that we want to look at increasing the
density of the people using it.”
CORONA DEL MAR CENTENNIAL CELEBRATION PLAZA
Council members voted unanimously in favor of a design from the
Corona del Mar Centennial Foundation for improvements commemorating
the village’s 100th anniversary.
WHAT IT MEANS
A clock tower, time capsule and tile seat wall will rise up in the
municipal parking lot and parkway near Coast Highway and Marguerite
Avenue in Corona del Mar. The centennial celebration is set for Oct.
14 to 16.
BACK BAY SCIENCE CENTER
The council voted 5 to 1 to approve cooperative agreements and
funding for the Back Bay Science Center, a $4-million environmental
teaching and testing facility that is being built in collaboration
with the state Department of Fish and Game, UC Irvine, Orange County
and other agencies. Councilman Dick Nichols abstained from the vote.
WHAT IT MEANS
The agreements lay out what each agency is responsible for on the
project. The city is spending $315,000 on the facility and will be
responsible for maintenance of the building, which will be on
Shellmaker Island.
NEWPORT COAST COMMUNITY CENTER
Council members voted 6 to 0 to hire Dougherty and Dougherty
Architects LLP to design and oversee the Newport Coast Community
Center project. The city agreed to chip in $7 million for the
community center as part of the 2002 Newport Coast annexation
agreement.
WHAT IT MEANS
Design work can begin on the three-part facility, which includes
the community center, a gymnasium and a library for an estimated $8.7
million. Whether all of that will be built remains to be seen,
however. Mayor Tod Ridgeway questioned designing a project when there
isn’t enough money to build it, but the Newport Coast Advisory
Committee has said they wanted to include the library in the design
and they might try to raise private funds to make up the funding
shortfall.
RIDGE PARK ROAD SPEED LIMIT REDUCTION
Council members unanimously approved reducing the speed limit from
40 mph to 30 mph on Ridge Park Road between San Joaquin Hills Road
and Newport Coast Drive.
WHAT IT MEANS
Drivers on that portion of Ridge Park Road will have to ease up on
the gas pedal but probably not by much. A staff report showed most
drivers go 33 mph in that area.
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