Residents call for vote on City Hall
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Alicia Robinson
As city officials seek public input on whether to build a new city
hall, some residents have formed a new group to demand a public vote
on the project.
Members of Newporters for Responsible Government, which was
created two weeks ago, handed out fliers at Saturday’s community
meeting on possible plans for the City Hall.
The City Council is working with consultant Griffin Structures to
look at preliminary design options for upgrading the existing City
Hall and adjacent fire station, and to gauge public opinions on the
project.
Under the rules of Measure S -- the city’s Greenlight law --
building a new City Hall at the current Newport Boulevard location
wouldn’t require a public vote because that land use isn’t likely to
exceed what’s already allowed by the city’s general plan.
That’s worrisome to the new citizens’ group, which includes
frequent City Council critic Dolores Otting. The group estimates the
city hall/fire station project will cost $40 million to $60 million
and claims this would be “the largest public expenditure in Newport’s
history.”
The actual cost of the project is still unknown because no
detailed designs have been drawn. Some estimates were given at
Saturday’s meeting, but officials agreed they were incomplete.
Three rough plans were shown. Each would preserve some parts of
the existing city hall, while adding new office space. Each included
a new fire station and a parking garage.
Projected costs ranged from a $19.1 million plan for new buildings
and minimal renovations to a $23.6 million proposal to preserve three
of the five existing buildings, including the council chambers. But
those costs don’t include a new fire station, something several
residents said was their top priority, or the added parking.
“The estimate here is only a part, in fact a very small part, of
the cost we’d actually see if this plan is implemented,” Lido Isle
resident Neil MacFarlane said.
While a number of residents seemed suspicious of the cost of a
refurbished City Hall, opinions on the whether the project is needed
are all over the map.
For one contingent of residents, the current City Hall is an
inefficient dinosaur that should be replaced with a facility matching
the caliber of some of the area’s other amenities.
“We spend millions on our homes, millions on our boats, millions
on our cars ... Today we need to buy ourselves a fitting City Hall,”
Corona del Mar resident Wesley Taylor said.
At the other end of the spectrum is Newporters for Responsible
Government. Member Tom Billings, who founded Protect Our Parks in
2004 to fight the Marinapark hotel plan, charged that a new City Hall
is part of a clandestine, overarching plan to redevelop the area,
including Lido Marina Village.
City Manager Homer Bludau said there was one meeting with two
churches and other tenants in the area, but he flatly denied the city
is participating in any master plan.
“It isn’t any part of a grand scheme to give a new look to the
area,” he said.
With a number of questions still unanswered, a public vote on the
City Hall may have some support. Joan Andersen, who lives in
Eastbluff, said she hadn’t really looked closely at the issue before
coming to Saturday’s meeting, but now thinks putting City Hall
construction on the ballot would be a good idea.
“It’s a huge expenditure and a long-term debt burden on the
residents and future residents of the city,” she said.
There will be more opportunity for public input. A meeting similar
to Saturday’s is scheduled for Monday. The City Council will decide
at a May 10 meeting whether to move forward on any of the three City
Hall concepts.
For information on the City Hall project, visit
https://www.city.newport-beach.ca.us and click on “projects.”
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers government and politics. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4626 or by e-mail at alicia.robinson@
latimes.com.
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