An appealing way to conduct business
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At first glance, the change the Newport Beach City Council made last
week to its way of calling for reviews of Planning Commission
decisions raises a few red flags. Does altering the process so a
majority of the council must approve the review take away power from
individual council members and, by extension, their constituents?
Will it limit public discussion of potentially important city
business if a sole council member can’t request another hearing? Does
it establish an inconsistency in the process, given that a single
planning commissioner still can request a review of decisions made by
other commissions?
Having reviewed the change, we think the red flags can be lowered.
The new process, while systematically different, is still
fundamentally the same.
The most important similarity is that council-member or
constituent concerns can still be heard in a public forum. If a
council member has questions about a decision, those questions can be
asked in public at a City Council meeting. What is different is that
the discussion, rather than waiting for an official public hearing,
can start immediately. In fact, it will have to because that council
member will need to convince three colleagues to bring the issue back
for a full debate.
By extension, we are convinced that these same initial discussions
will ensure -- and perhaps even publicly display -- individual
council members’ power and influence. As the process was set up, any
council member could call for a public hearing. But rarely did one
member’s questions lead the rest of the council to agree to overturn
the Planning Commission. It was, to a great extent, a waste of the
council’s time, as well as the time of any other people -- residents,
business owners, developers, activists -- involved. By requiring the
majority agreement, it will be clear from the beginning whether a new
discussion will be worth the time. If a member can’t convince three
colleagues at least to discuss the item, what chance is there of
convincing them to overturn the decision?
We do urge the council, of course, to take these initial
discussions about potential appeals seriously. The process will not
work if they are not thoughtful and considerate when questions arise.
They should err, if they must, on the side of too much talk, of too
much debate. If they don’t agree to allow an appeal, that could be
the last time an issue comes before them -- the recourse of having
one council member call an issue forward will be gone.
Months ago, when this issue was being talked about, the Pilot
reported that Councilman Dick Nichols’ many appeals were at the root
of the discussion. Residents at last week’s meeting spoke of their
concern that Nichols was the target. Council members say that is not
the reason. We trust that is true and that they will listen when
Nichols, who since being elected has requested the most reviews,
brings his questions forth. We trust they will do that with all of
their colleagues, present and future.
Finally, we agree that there is an obvious inconsistency between
how the council and the Planning Commission handle appeals. And if
the process established for the City Council works, it may be worth
ending the difference and giving the commission the same
requirements.
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