Controversy develops at meeting
Deirdre Newman
A meeting about future development in the city got mired in
controversy this week, with some residents saying they were denied a
chance to speak.
At the meeting Monday, general plan advisory committee members
presented options for developing different parts of the city, a
preliminary step before solid proposals are drawn up.
The fireworks began when Phil Arst, the leader of the Greenlight
slow-growth movement, presented information suggesting that residents
want far less development than the amount committee members were
discussing.
Following Arst’s comments, which riled committee members, the
meeting was adjourned. That left resident Mark Tabbert and others
without a chance to speak, Tabbert said.
“Members of the committee, after inviting public comment, began
debating with Mr. Arst and then abruptly stopped, stood up as one,
and it was over, leaving Mr. Arst standing and others mute,” Tabbert
said in an e-mail. “Democracy in action it was not.”
Nancy Gardner, the co-chair of the committee who was running the
meeting, said she ended it after asking if anyone else wanted to
comment, and no one responded. She acknowledged that some committee
members were annoyed by Arst’s comments and felt like he was
lecturing them.
“I think it was sort of a general level of irritation,” Gardner
said. “It’s really hard for someone to come in and sit at a meeting
like ours and understand all that’s gone on and understand what we’ve
had to learn to get to this point.”
These meetings have been going on for about two years, and
committee members have been exploring alternatives for areas like
Banning Ranch and the area around John Wayne Airport. Committee
members, who represent diverse interests, want to add enough housing
to meet the regional housing need, Gardner said.
At the meeting Monday, committee members were merely presenting
options for development throughout the city. Not all of them will
become proposals, Gardner said.
After the committee presentations, Arst presented data from a poll
that the city sponsored, gauging voter attitudes about development.
Its consensus was to retain the character of the city and that
development would detract from the quality of life.
Arst said he felt the version of the update the committee
discussed presented significantly more development in most of the
city.
So did one of the committee members, environmentalist Jan
Vandersloot, who said he was also taken aback by even the mention of
more building.
“All of a sudden the staff was introducing the word
‘intensification’ into many of the areas they were studying,”
Vandersloot said. “ ... And in the visioning process conducted by the
city two years ago, people were concerned and expressing desire to
keep densities and intensities down to improve traffic.”
Updating the general plan is all about balance, and some areas
will need increased density so other areas can be devoted to more
open space, Gardner said.
“It sounds like we could increase this here and this there and
someone just stepping in might say, ‘Geez, if all they’re going to do
is intensify, it’s going to be L.A. times 10,’” Gardner said. “But
each group was looking at their own little area and looking at it to
see, ‘Can this area meet some of these needs we have?’”
The next update meeting will be in October, and Vandersloot urged
residents to participate in the process.
“People need to get involved if we want to fulfill the
visioning-process mandates,” Vandersloot said. “We don’t want to see
this kind of creeping density come back into the process.”
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