Peninsula parking solution would cost city plenty
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Alicia Robinson
The city will consider how to solve parking problems on the Balboa
Peninsula, but a solution is likely to cost between $6 million and
$12 million.
Despite that price tag, Councilman Tod Ridgeway’s plan to build a
135-space parking structure at 23rd Street and Balboa Boulevard
survived a study session Tuesday without being vetoed by the City
Council.
With businesses and beachgoers competing for a limited number of
spaces, parking in the McFadden Square area is a congested nightmare
in the summer months. While council members and several residents at
Tuesday’s study session agreed that more parking is needed, some
thought the price -- $3 million for construction of a structure and
an estimated $3 million to $12 million to buy the land -- would be
too high.
The first step will be to find out if owners of the six parcels
that would be needed to build the structure are willing to sell.
Ridgeway said the city could use eminent domain to acquire the
parcels if needed, but Mayor Steve Bromberg said it’s unlikely the
full council would support such a measure.
Business owners are interested in more parking. That includes one
owner who would have to sell his property for the project. Ken
Ricamore, who owns three lots in the project area and operates the
adjacent Portofino Beach Hotel and Renato restaurant, said he has
trouble attracting customers in the summer because of the parking
situation.
“What happens is the restaurants and the businesses down there
lose a lot of business,” Ridgeway said. “People leave.”
To pay for the parking structure, Ridgeway suggested creating a
tax assessment district for businesses that would cover as much as
half of the cost. The other half of the funding could come from
revenues from the parking structure.
City staff members will look at various options for the parking
structure, but it’s not clear how far the proposal will go.
Councilman Dick Nichols said he doesn’t think business owners who
already have the amount of parking required by city codes should have
to chip in for a new parking structure, and Councilman John Heffernan
suggested offering a shuttle to the Newport Pier area from a proposed
parking structure for City Hall.
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers government and politics. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4626 or by e-mail at
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