Greenlighters do not speak for everyone
Susan Taylor
Q: When does Greenlight become a red light?
A: When it tries to bring everything in Newport to a screeching
halt!
Just as witnesses to a car crash can have very different
recollections of what happened, Dolores Otting (in her Watchdog
column in the Daily Pilot Forum of April 17) and I are at odds about
the April 2 town hall meeting regarding the proposal to rebuild or
remodel City Hall.
As a long-time resident of Newport who has followed the project
closely over the past year, I feel it is important to set the record
straight.
At the start of the meeting, Homer Bludau, our city manager, and
Roger Torriero of Griffin Structures, the presenter, clearly stated
that the purpose of the meeting was to seek residents’ input on the
various proposals now under consideration. Someone suggested that a
poll be taken to determine how many of those present wanted a new
City Hall.
Bludau clarified that the City Council has addressed the dire need
for more space in numerous public meetings over the last two or three
years. Griffin Structures, a consulting firm with significant
expertise in the construction and renovation of public facilities,
was hired to conduct a study of the city’s need for administrative
offices, public meeting space, a seismically-safe fire station, and
additional staff and visitor parking. The completed study indeed
showed a pressing need for more office space to enable the staff to
provide the high level of municipal services Newport residents
demand, a safe new fire station, and additional parking for the 3,500
people that visit City Hall each day.
Based on the findings of the study, the City Council had directed
staff and the contractor to hold a series of public meetings to get
residents’ views on the proposed solutions to the space problems.
Bludau stated that if any of those present wanted to challenge the
City Council’s actions to date on this matter, the appropriate forum
would be the City Council meetings -- not this meeting.
A few people, realizing that the meeting agenda would not be
altered to suit their desires to vent their opposition to any changes
whatsoever, left the meeting.
I disagree that this equated to “people being told that if they
did not like it, they could leave.” It was simply a clarification of
the agenda that enabled a meeting with a hundred participants to
continue expeditiously, offering as many people as possible a chance
to voice their opinions.
From the very start, several members of the Greenlight faction
tried to monopolize the discussion. It appeared that the
Greenlighters felt they had a mandate to represent all the residents
of Newport. But I’ve lived in Newport for many years and Greenlight
has never solicited my opinions on anything -- and they surely do not
represent me with their endless naysaying and sniping.
It’s sad that a group founded on good intentions now seems to
exist primarily to oppose every attempt by the Council to maintain
and improve the quality of life in Newport. I believe we are
fortunate to live in a remarkable city and that problems are better
solved by an honest discussion of the facts than by shouting “No!” as
the answer to every question.
Other would-be participants in the meeting began to speak up in
frustration, telling the Greenlighters to give others a chance to
speak -- at which point some of the Greenlighters left in a huff.
Torriero and architect Rick D’Amato continued the meeting,
summarizing the basic courses of action open to the city. They showed
several options for combining some of the existing structures that
now comprise City Hall with new structures, as well as options for
complete replacement of the existing structures.
As Otting noted in her column on Sunday, there was no “plain
vanilla choice of just a remodel option.” I thought the reason for
this omission was self evident. There is simply no way to just
“remodel” the existing buildings, which have an area of 40,000 square
feet, into the efficient 62,000-square-foot facility we desperately
need.
One square foot of space is one square foot of space -- no matter
how it is reorganized, repainted or refurbished. There is no way to
just “remodel” a 50-year-old, falling-down fire station to make room
for a second huge fire truck and today’s fire-fighting equipment and
the paramedics and expanded staff we rely on to keep us safe.
As anyone who has ever remodeled a home knows, remodeling always
costs more and takes longer than anticipated. Otting questioned the
need for a parking structure and asked what is wrong with the 400
parking spaces that now exist. Probably nothing, if you can find one.
However, with an average of 3,500 visitors to City Hall every day and
nearly 200 employees, there is a tremendous parking problem.
As instructed by the City Council, the presenters summarized the
audience feedback from the first town hall meeting. Torriero made it
very clear that these responses were not very useful, since only 12
people were at the first meeting and not all of them had responded to
the questionnaire they were given.
Otting stated, “In the end, we saw what four residents at the
previous meeting voted for. We were told that this would be what we
all want.” Could anyone really believe that the entire planning
process would be reduced to that smallest common denominator? Sure,
we were shown the results from the first meeting, but we also saw a
broader range of options and had an opportunity to discuss them.
Critics of the project have jumped ahead of the facts and cited
potential costs for the City Hall -- at first $20 million, then $40
million and then $60 million -- ignoring the fact that there is no
cost estimate and there cannot be a cost estimate for building or
remodeling plans which do not yet exist, except in the most
preliminary sense.
I find this every bit as irresponsible as their charge that City
Council members are looking to build a “Taj Majal” or some sort of
monument to their egos. Greenlight does not have a monopoly on
concern for fiscal responsibility. On the contrary, one of the
reasons Newport Beach is such an affluent community is that our
residents have a very good understanding of fiscal management. Our
City Council members are certainly astute enough to know that the
residents hold them accountable for the city’s finances, and to act
accordingly.
In closing, Otting bemoaned the fact that this project is exempt
from the Greenlight law and suggests that this somehow violates
democratic principles and mutes voices of opposition. However, this
conveniently overlooks the fact that we have a representative
democracy because it is commonly understood that the public business
cannot be conducted expeditiously in large group settings.
We exercise our rights and offer our opinions when we elect our
representatives and charge them with the thoughtful and fair conduct
of our affairs. I think the fact that the vast majority of Newport
Beach residents have chosen to let the City Council handle this
project in the normal course of city business is a measure of their
confidence in the council.
Our City Council has acted responsibly by acknowledging the need
for expanded facilities, carefully and clearly assessing the city’s
current and future needs, and exploring various ways of meeting those
needs. Now it is our turn to engage in rational and respectful
discourse, carefully consider the alternatives, and then move forward
with the solution.
While discussing plans for another government building, Winston
Churchill noted that “We shape our buildings; thereafter, they shape
us.” We now have a once-in-a-lifetime chance to use our shared wisdom
and common sense to shape the heart of our city to reflect its
beauty, strength and unique character. Let’s do it!
* SUSAN TAYLOR is a Newport Beach resident.
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