Greenlight challenges proposed changes
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Alicia Robinson
Slow-growth advocates are challenging proposed changes to the city’s
development guidelines now being discussed by a group of residents.
In a letter to the City Council on Tuesday, Phil Arst, the
spokesman for the slow-growth group Greenlight, charged that some
alternatives being discussed by the committee could add 200,000 car
trips a day to city streets and increase wait times at already
crowded intersections.
The general plan guides development in Newport Beach, setting
zoning densities and allowed uses for land in the city. In 2003 the
city began the once-a-decade process of updating the plan.
Suggestions being made include intense development in congested
areas such as Mariner’s Mile, Arst said.
An additional 200,000 car trips “is absolutely unacceptable, and
they’ve got to go back to square one and not permit any more growth,
even if it’s in the general plan, that adds to already unsatisfactory
traffic conditions,” he said.
Doing otherwise would fly in the face of what most residents want,
Arst said, noting that a 2002 survey of residents commissioned by the
city showed that a majority of those polled wanted to keep the status
quo when it came to development. Most also opposed widening streets
and allowing high-rise offices and large hotels.
When the general plan advisory committee wraps up its work --
possibly late next year -- a laundry list of alternatives for each
area of the city will go to the City Council. The council was
scheduled to hear about progress on the plan at a study session
Tuesday.
City Councilman Steve Bromberg said he was surprised by Arst’s
letter because fellow Greenlighter Allan Beek is on the panel that
created the committee doing the update.
The committee is made up of residents, so the alternatives reflect
what they want, Bromberg added.
“I’m taken aback that Greenlight feels that these principles that
38 good citizens in the city came up with constitutes unreasonable
development,” he said.
One key question is whether residents will vote on the general
plan update when it’s complete. Arst said he believes residents
should get to vote.
Such decisions are yet to be made, city officials said.
“These are questions that we haven’t begun to think about because
we don’t have a recommended land-use plan,” assistant city manager
Sharon Wood said.
Under Measure S -- or Greenlight -- guidelines, a general plan
amendment must be put to a vote if it would increase a property’s use
by 100 dwelling units, 40,000 square feet or 100 peak-hour car trips,
she said.
“Some members of the City Council have said that even if those
thresholds are not reached they think the matter should go to a
vote,” she added.
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers business, politics and the environment.
She may be reached at (714) 966-4626.
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