Marinapark debate lingers well into night
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Alicia Robinson
Residents arguing the pros and cons of the contentious Marinapark
hotel resort development proposal packed City Council chambers
Tuesday.
The council was expected to vote late Tuesday night on certifying
the project’s environmental report. A certified report means the
council must place the Marinapark project on the ballot. If the
report is rejected, it could be the death of the Marinapark resort.
If voters give developer Stephen Sutherland’s project the nod in
November, he will move forward with plans to build a 110-room luxury
resort on the Balboa Peninsula between 15th and 18th streets. Council
members had not called for a vote by press time Tuesday night.
The land is now occupied by a mobile home park and Las Arenas
Park, but the general plan reserves the land for recreation and open
space.
Residents, including a grass-roots group called Protect Our Parks,
have vehemently opposed the resort, saying a hotel would change the
character of the peninsula and the land should be devoted to public
uses.
“If the city wants a hotel, why don’t we build it and keep all the
profits, Newport Beach resident Robert Walkley said. “I’m not against
development, but I’m against the conversion of public property to
private control.
Council members have said the public should have as much
information as possible before they vote on the project. A report on
the resort’s potential environmental effects and a financial estimate
of what the city would gain have been released. The resort is
projected to net the city $2.2 million in its first year of financial
stability.
Tuesday’s hearing, which was also attended by Sutherland, centered
on whether the environmental report met the guidelines of the
California Environmental Quality Act. City officials have stressed
that the council, by certifying the report, was not voting for or
against the project itself.
“This project has a whole lot of steps to it,” City Atty. Bob
Burnham said. “There’s a whole bundle of things that need to be done
before this project can be implemented.”
Opponents criticized the environmental report because it did not
fully address traffic, parking and other issues, they said.
“The problem is clearly that the process is being rushed along to
meet that election time frame,” Newport Beach resident Matt Webb
said. “I think, at this point, there’s too many unanswered
questions.”
Sutherland said Monday a rejection of the environmental report
would be the end of the line.
“There really isn’t much plan of action; it’s over,” he said,
referring to a rejected report. “I just don’t see any avenue after
that.”
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers business, politics and the environment.
She may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
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