Message to city on Marinapark still bottled up
Joseph F. O’Hora
I am a 30-plus-year resident of Newport Beach with about 25 years of
management and consulting experience in the hospitality industry. In
another life, I was also president and chief executive of the firm
that owned the Newport Ensign newspaper when it was in its prime
during the development wars of the late 1970s and 1980s.
With this letter, I’d like to offer some community commentary
regarding the proposed Marinapark timeshare hotel project, which will
appear on our November ballot disguised as Measure L.
First, let me go on record as being appalled at the lack of city
staff creativity and political sensitivity to our community’s needs.
What persistently unimaginative, lazy and shortsighted planning! Is
anyone at City Hall listening to our residents’ often-expressed
wishes for more open space and less development? A range of more
community-benefiting options available for this once-in-a-lifetime
site comes readily to mind. Proposals for its commercial development
were the lazy, painless way out and should never have been solicited
in the first place.
Modifying the city’s general plan in the manner proposed by
Measure L means commercial development of the largest remaining
undeveloped harbor-front property left on the Balboa Peninsula. Is
this the best that can be offered to present and future residents of
our city? Is a timeshare hotel, with its ever-changing flow of
transient traffic, that is located one-tenth of a mile from a large
grammar school and two churches -- the latter with extensive
preschool and after-school programs -- a better choice than a park?
How will a Girl Scout meeting facility located on the hotel site
itself sound to the parents of current and potential young Girl
Scouts?
Clearly, many people in positions of civic responsibility don’t
seem to have gotten the message that has been repeatedly delivered to
them by the residents over the last quarter-century. In this case, it
appears that Santayana was right when he wrote, “Those who cannot
remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”
Secondly, the longevity of this proposal is really amazing,
especially in view of the obvious political risks associated with
abrogating the specific intent of the city’s general plan in such an
egregious manner. (I remember helping to organize a presentation to
another City Council more than three years ago on an earlier
incarnation of the same proposal from the same developer.) I wonder
why it keeps turning up like a bad penny?
Even more amazing is the fact that this proposal lives despite the
fact that it is obviously and seriously flawed from an economic
standpoint. Hospitality industry management people with whom I have
reviewed the project concur with my judgment that the concept itself
appears operationally naive in the extreme. A 98-unit hotel
(exclusive of its 12 timeshare units) is, among other things, simply
not large enough to provide an adequate operating return on the
invested capital it will take to develop the site. This is a tough,
competitive, oversaturated hospitality market -- just ask the
operators of any of the area’s hotels. Marinapark isn’t likely to
ever show an operating profit. The more luxurious and “five star” it
is, the greater the chance that it will never show black ink from
operations.
The developer must know this. His carrot isn’t in hotel
operations, which he would subcontract in the usual industry manner.
It’s in timeshare sales. His potential one-time sales revenue from
the timeshare sale of the 12 units included in the proposal can
conservatively be projected in the $20 million-plus range, even
assuming no more than an 80% sales success rate. The city sees none
of this revenue.
Once the initial timeshare revenue potential is exhausted, the
developer is gone. The city now has to deal with a facility that is
inherently not viable as a going concern. Does it authorize
expansion? Allow more (or even all) units to be time-shared? Permit
downgraded service and support to reduce operating costs?
This hit-and-run pattern of timeshare development is a familiar
one in the industry. The lure of additional tax revenue is a siren
song to municipal managers, so the story has been repeated many times
over in Sunbelt communities from Hawaii to Florida. As the saying
goes: “Everybody wants to go to Heaven, but nobody wants to die.”
Only one person seems to prosper from most of these deals, and it
isn’t the operator or the municipality left holding the bag!
Our challenge as residents lies not only in preventing this
giveaway of irreplaceable property by rejecting Measure L. Rather, it
is in having the vision and foresight to then force our politicians
to put this kind of thinking aside once and for all. It’s time for
all of us to move on to encourage and guide the creative
noncommercial exploitation of this rare site in a matter that will
truly benefit our community and the lifestyle of all its residents
for decades to come. If they will only take the time to look, the
City Council will find no shortage of community help and support for
such a move.
* JOSEPH F. O’HORA is a Newport Beach resident.
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