Candidates stump at forum
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Marisa O’Neil
Newport Beach City Council candidates struggled to be heard above the
frequent roar of airplanes overhead Saturday, even as they discussed
airport expansion.
It was fitting in a way, since air traffic noise -- along with
local land development and water quality -- came up as an issue for
the city and for the candidates speaking at a forum Saturday
sponsored by the Little Balboa Island Property Owner’s Assn.
Incumbent Steve Rosansky and newcomers Dolores Otting and John
Earl Buttolph spoke at this campaign season’s first candidate forum,
held in a Little Balboa Island home’s back yard. The 10 a.m. forum
included three of the six candidates for City Council. Others were
invited but could not attend, organizers said.
“[John Wayne] Airport will determine our quality of life,” said
Buttolph, running against Rosansky in the second district, which
includes West Newport. “Our council must ensure [Newport Beach] is
not in the path of John Wayne Airport expansion.”
All three candidates cited the airport as the most important issue
facing the city. All said they were against expansion of John Wayne
Airport.
Otting, an outspoken City Council critic, and Buttolph both said
they support the Airport Working Group, which advocates a new airport
at the former El Toro Marine Air Base near Irvine. Rosansky said that
the city needs to preserve limits at John Wayne Airport because an El
Toro airport is “off the table.”
“We can’t rely on that,” he said. “We have to pursue other
options.”
A proposed 110-room luxury hotel in Newport Harbor came up as
another major issue in the forum. Again, the newcomers came out
strongly against it while Rosansky took a more moderate tone on the
project, which will appear on the November ballot.
“We need to hear what the people want,” Rosansky said. “That’s why
the project needs to go to a vote.”
Buttolph, an attorney who negotiated with the City Council to
subject hotels to a Greenlight vote, criticized the council’s
handling of the proposed Marinapark resort. A Greenlight vote is an
initiative proposed to Newport voters when the developer of a project
requests a major change to the city’s general plan.
“The City Council under Greenlight is obligated to approve
something before sending it to a vote,” he said. “In this case they
decided the law didn’t apply to hotels. It won’t be that way in the
future.”
Buttolph and Otting said the publicly-owned Marinapark land should
be preserved as a park.
“Save this last piece of public land that belongs to us for us,”
Otting said.
Otting, a former teacher running for the seventh-district seat,
told the roughly 25 people in attendance that she believes more city
business should be done in the open, in public meetings, rather than
in committees behind closed doors. She said she wants to be a voice
for residents’ wishes, even if that goes against the rest of the
council.
Rosansky cited his experience as a council member, urging people
to vote for him based on his record.
Buttolph, a widowed father of two teenage sons, said he wants to
preserve the unique character of the city’s neighborhoods. He cited
his ability to negotiate and said that council members need to show
respect to one another and for residents.
“I’ve seen people on the council act like some people are a
nuisance,” he said.
Incumbent John Heffernan, who will run against Otting, did not
participate in the forum. Nor did Catherine Emmons, who will run
against Rosansky and Buttolph.
Councilman Steve Bromberg, who is running unopposed in the fifth
district, was present at the forum but did not participate.
* MARISA O’NEIL covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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