Newport Beach has a plan
- Share via
Tod Ridgeway
In regard to Dolores Otting’s Watchdog column “Newport in need of
real planning” on Sunday’s Forum pages:
The sky is not falling!
Similar to the familiar fairy tale, Otting implies in her Forum
piece that the city should not be moving forward with the replacement
of City Hall and fire station and the construction of a parking
structure for a total cost of $41.5 million because of other pending
needs.
Yes, there are some potential infrastructure replacements on the
horizon, but this is not unusual. The city routinely funds $30 to $40
million in capital improvements each year, including key projects
such as the Arches Bridge replacement, Bonita Canyon Sports Park,
Mariners Library, Big Canyon Reservoir cover and disinfection
facilities improvements to improve water quality.
And yes, Rep. Chris Cox was instrumental in getting $800,000 in
federal assistance for the reservoir project. The debt service for
the City Hall, fire station, and parking structure project will cost
us less than 2% -- less than $3 million a year -- of our annual city
operating budget.
Whether it is waterline replacements, sewer pump station upgrades,
bridge replacements, arterial highway and local street paving
projects, improved traffic signal coordination, park design and
construction, or bay and ocean water quality improvements, this city
has delivered important infrastructure improvements and replacement
in a cost effective and timely manner.
We agree that, in the future, we will need to address the
replacement of the 30-year-old police station (parts of City Hall are
almost 60 years old), fire stations in Corona del Mar and on the
Balboa Peninsula, the Oasis Center, build some new parks and other
key infrastructure.
Today, we have funded a new Mariner’s Library using a state
library grant and generous private donations; a fire station in Santa
Ana Heights that is primarily funded by county redevelopment funds;
and a community center in Newport Coast that will be paid for with
annexation agreement funds. The Sunset Ridge lease payments will be
$1 per year, not the $1 million for 15 years that Otting stated.
City infrastructure replacements will always be a priority and
today’s new facility is tomorrow’s replacement project. To date, the
city has an excellent track record in the timely funding of
replacement infrastructure.
We have master plans and 20-year replacement programs for our
water system, sewer system, streets and highways, drainage systems
and bridges. Buildings wear out too; therefore, we are planning
several building replacements over future budgets. As always, city
staff will seek grant funding opportunities, cooperative cost saving
projects and creative solutions to leverage our city dollars for
future infrastructure projects.
The city has received millions of dollars in grant funds, Measure
M and other contributions to supplement our capital improvement
budget over the years.
So, to say we have no plan is like running around like Chicken
Little. We have responsible elected officials directing quality
people who do responsible planning and fiscal planning that will take
us into the next 100 years.
Newport Beach is one of the most financially stable and fiscally
conservative cities in the state. It didn’t get that way without a
plan!
Tod Ridgeway is a Newport Beach city councilman.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.