City Hall project picks up steam, sort...
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City Hall project picks up steam, sort of
If this proposal for a new Newport Beach City Hall is a railroad
job, then the cart is in front of the engine.
I attended the outreach meeting at the Newport Beach Council
Chambers on Saturday and listened to a professional firm the city has
hired for more than $500,000 to reach out to the community and
present a proposal to examine the pros and cons of a new City Hall.
It was disturbing to attend a meeting, which could affect spending
millions of dollars of taxpayer money, with an underflow crowd of 17
people.
Four were City Council members and one represented the commercial
center next door. There were just 13 ordinary residents who showed up
for the “outreach” meeting.
Public notice of this meeting appeared to be one notice in the
Daily Pilot, and the city representative felt the Daily Pilot didn’t
seem much interested (no reporter present), and he also felt the
televising of the council meeting and the Newport Beach website would
help get the word out. I’m not sure how many people watch the
televised council meetings, and it would be interesting to know how
many hits the website gets about the proposed new City Hall.
What I heard is that the City Hall was built in several segments
and that it’s old, doesn’t meet earthquake or disability standards,
is crowded and is not constructed in a way that makes it
user-friendly. All of this may be true depending upon one’s opinion.
What I don’t hear is: Do the residents of Newport Beach want to
build and pay for a new City Hall, and what will it cost each
taxpayer on a yearly basis? Is the cart before the horse? I’m sure
there is a segment of this city that feels we are an important city,
we can afford the very best, and we are willing to pay for it. I tend
to wonder just how big that segment is.
At the last City Council meeting, our good mayor instructed the
firm to take advantages of the different community associations to
get the word out and get input from the citizens of Newport Beach.
Instead, what seems to be planed is three meeting at the City Council
Chambers on Saturday mornings.
Maybe the citizens don’t care about this issue. It just seems to
me if we the taxpayers are being asked to pay this cost, along with
future voters, we ought to be a heck of a lot more interested and
involved. And that means now.
BOB MCCAFFREY
Balboa Island
City needs resident opinion on City Hall
As discussed in the Forum “Watchdog” and “Q & A” on Sunday, it
appears as though the residents of Newport Beach are again going to
get another round of politician hogwash as it relates to the City
Hall rebuild-remodel-relocate issue.
I agree with Dolores Otting that the city has not promoted the
workshops sufficiently. I did receive a letter from the city a few
days before the April 2 meeting, no e-mail, and I barely noticed the
banner as I drove by City Hall one day.
Is Griffin Structures Inc. intending to use part of its $580,000
city contract to obtain polling information from the residents prior
to coming up with preliminary designs? It seems polling information
would be valuable since many residents will not be able to attend a
workshop.
As to City Manager Homer Bludau’s comments, I feel it is time to
discontinue empire building in the management of Newport Beach city
government. Not once did I read in his comments that the city (or
preferably an outside third party auditor) has produced a
comprehensive study measuring the costs and benefits of downsizing
the city departments and outsourcing work to private firms.
Wouldn’t this information also be valuable before building a Taj
Majal at taxpayer expense?
Finally, when asked where the money will come from, Bludau
responded that “... we would be looking at a bond issue that would be
paid over time, like a home mortgage. It would not result in any more
taxes or increased fees or charges to the public to help in paying
for it.”
Does this mean that the city is so flush with cash (now and in the
future), that it can service the debt on a $30-million bond offering
without increasing revenue?
I would like to review these assumptions.
ED LYON
Newport Beach
More than urban runoff hurts Back Bay
In regard to your Sunday editorial: “We must stop the pollution of
our waters.” I couldn’t agree more. And with the unusually heavy
rains, the runoff problem becomes crystal clear.
There is a far greater problem that the article does not address,
and that is the ever increasing amount of pollutants that are dumped,
daily, directly into the waters with every increase in gates and
passengers at John Wayne airport. Fran Robinson fought so hard to
preserve the natural beauty of the Upper Bay for generations to come,
but now with a couple gates here and a few more flights there, we are
slowly destroying the creatures that make this their home.
The time has come to stop this madness before it is too late. A
plan needs to be developed by the City Council and our state
legislature to begin reducing the number of flights at John Wayne.
Perhaps it would be easier if we just made a chart equating the
increase of flights/gates to which form of wildlife we are destroying
so the stupidity would be easier for everyone to see.
TREB HEINING
Newport Beach
Benefits of field lights ought to be clear
I’m encouraging the city of Costa Mesa to continue to have fields
at Kaiser School. I coached soccer for eight years in Costa Mesa,
Region 120.
I happen to be a mom of boys, and it was just a such a tremendous
opportunity to be able to meet my son’s friend, and as he’s now a
junior at Estancia High School, to know these families and to have
that. It’s such an important part of our community, especially coming
from someone whose son went to private school and into the public
school system. It provides a great opportunity for these kids to know
each other, and the lighted fields are so important.
One of the things the boys that I coached for years were so
excited to have was the fields with the lights. So the residents that
are complaining about that need to remember the kids and the program
and what it’s about: It’s not just competition and soccer; it’s about
these kids getting to know each other so that way when they get to
high school they are drug-free and alcohol-free and they’re not
drunken driving on our streets because they had a positive, safe
environment growing up in a city that supported them.
MICHELLE ARANT
Costa Mesa
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