Here are a few items the council...
Here are a few items the council considered Tuesday.
NEWPORT BOULEVARD MARTINI LOUNGE
The council chose to follow the Planning Commission’s decision
denying a new restaurant and martini lounge proposed for Newport
Boulevard, despite a vigorous appeal from the restaurant’s would-be
proprietor.
Dennis D’Alessio, who hoped to open a 4,245-square-foot eatery on
Newport Boulevard, told the council it would be a high-end restaurant
and not a noisy nightclub, and he proposed all sorts of compromises
to address an existing shortage of business parking in the area. But
council members didn’t bite, and they finally voted unanimously to
uphold the commission’s denial of D’Alessio’s application.
WHAT IT MEANS
There won’t be another restaurant in the strip that includes the
Golden Truffle and the Bamboo Terrace, an area that already professes
parking shortages, unless D’Alessio comes up with another project for
the building he owns there.
WHAT THEY SAID
“Nothing offered tonight solves the parking problem,” Councilman
Gary Monahan said. “When I look at it, it just doesn’t work on the
parking.”
MEETING TIME, DATE AND AGENDA ORDER
From now on, the City Council will hold its meetings on the first
and third Tuesday of the month, rather than Mondays. Closed sessions
-- to discuss confidential issues such as property or employee
negotiations and potential or existing litigation -- will now be held
before meetings instead of at the end. Study sessions will still
begin at 5:30 p.m., an hour before the meeting, so closed sessions
will happen at 5 p.m. as needed.
WHAT IT MEANS
The new Tuesday meeting schedule begins with the next meeting, set
for March 1. Council members are hoping the changes will mean more
people can attend meetings -- and that they’ll have fewer late
nights. But that often depends on the amount of public comment, which
the council chose not to limit in the interest of encouraging
community input.
PAULARINO APARTMENT GARAGES
After lengthy discussions on parking problems near the Park Mesa
Village apartments and whether the developer should get an extension
on an application to shrink the amount of parking by building
garages, the council decided to continue the issue until next month.
The council in 2003 approved the request from Park Mesa owner
Cameo Homes to reduce parking by 10 spaces to add covered garages,
and that approval gave Cameo one year to build the garages. But the
project never got built because of increases in construction prices
and a mix-up over the procedure to request an extension on the
project.
The issue wasn’t clear-cut: On one hand, neighbors complained that
parking on adjacent Manistee Drive is already a problem because of
the apartments; on the other, the council had originally approved the
project.
WHAT IT MEANS
The council discuss the issue further March 15 and may consider
making entrances into the complex from Manistee Drive gates into
emergency-only entrances.
-- Alicia Robinson
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.