Keep options open for Peninsula land By...
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Keep options open for Peninsula land
By way of introduction, I have called Newport Beach my home for 40
years. I was co-owner and president of the Balboa Bay Club for many
years (city-owned land if you didn’t know already). I served twice as
president of the chamber of commerce, was president of the Coast
Assn. and more recently was a member of the Harbor Committee of
Newport Beach. I was named Citizen of the Year in 1975.
The Marinapark issue has raised local emotions to a record level,
and for just cause. However, all concerned have missed the point, in
my opinion.
No one would deny that the keystone to the uniqueness of Newport
Beach is our harbor. It is the anchor that makes our real estate
among the most valuable in the country. People want to live here.
People want to preserve the waterfront ambience and to enjoy all the
pleasures our harbor affords us. The advocates of Measure L -- which
if approved in November would allow for the development of a resort
in the Marinapark area -- have deliberately painted the picture that
if we don’t vote for the hotel the city will put in boat ramps with
traffic, trailers and noise. Nothing could be further from the truth.
This isn’t a vote on a hotel or something else. A “No” vote simply
votes against doing the specific timeshare hotel proposed. It leaves
all of our other options open.
Allan Beek’s group, Stop Polluting Our Newport, is suing the city,
claiming an inadequate environmental impact report. For once in
almost 40 years, I agree with them. The environmental report is
grossly inadequate in that it offered virtually no study of the
long-term needs to support the needs or other options for our harbor
as an alternative usage. Nor has the city undertaken such a critical
study. The Harbor Commission is a start, if they are given the real
core task. The question is: what support do we need to provide space
in the future for marine services that are being priced out of
Newport Beach by ever-increasing land costs? Our entire mooring
fields of long-term boaters are completely without landside support.
I’m not proposing anything specific because I don’t know the right
answer. I do know that no one else does either. I do know that if
Measure L wins, we are giving away our last bit of waterfront parcel
that we have. If we were back a few years and voted on Beacon Bay
(city-owned land), would we have allowed luxurious homes there? Would
we have leased the Balboa Bay Club property for $48,000 per year?
My point is that we need to keep our options open until we are
really sure that a hotel in this location is the very best usage for
the last remaining major piece of waterfront property that we, the
public, own. We also need to really understand what we need to
protect our crown jewel, our harbor.
Keep our options open. Vote no on “L.”
DICK STEVENS
Newport Beach
Public and private
fusion is a good deal
I’m going to vote yes on Measure L, the ballot measure that would
allow the Marinapark resort to be built. I’m a Republican. I believe
in private enterprise. I believe in public-private partnerships.
Measure L is an ideal public-private partnership. It allows a
small resort to be built on city property that is currently used as a
mobile home park. The state says the mobile homes have to be removed
because it is tidelands. The resort will provide the funds to build
some very nice public facilities. Everything else will be public.
Since the resort is on city property, it will pay taxes and lease
fees to support the city’s general fund.
Balboa Peninsula gets a beautiful new asset that creates no new
traffic. Newport Beach gets a lot of money for the use of the city
property. We all get the benefit of an improved area of our city.
That’s using city property and private enterprise the way it works
for all of us.
DOUGLAS F. GRETH
Newport Beach
A luxury resort for
such a needy city?
Regarding the proposal to build the Marinapark resort, in the end,
the question is this: Are we so impoverished that we must cede our
public park land for private development and private profit?
ANDY LINGLE
Newport Beach
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