THE BELL CURVE -- joseph n. bell
Some of the pieces of our life exist in perpetual limbo -- and we grow
accustomed to them there. Underachievement by the Anaheim Angels.
Unshakable positions on the El Toro airport. The absence of the National
Football League in the greater Los Angeles area. And, of course, futile
efforts to annex Santa Ana Heights by the city of Newport Beach.
That’s been going on for as long as I can remember -- and I go back a
long way. I had breakfast with Bob Shelton the other day and he told me
it was being seriously considered when he was Newport Beach’s city
manager four decades ago. It was a perennial topic during my regular
lunches with Don Strauss 20 years later when he was a city councilman and
later mayor. Talk, talk, talk. But no action.
Now the issue is firing up again, seriously enough that a public hearing
will take place on Oct. 25. Some new elements -- tax income from
burgeoning commercial construction, a need to beef up the opposition to
any enlargement of John Wayne Airport, for example -- seem to have caught
the city’s attention.
And so the city fathers apparently intend to court us again -- the ugly
girl with braces on her teeth and body odor who has come into an
attractive inheritance. Last week, the Orange County Register described
Santa Ana Heights as “an area zoned for dogs and horses (where) neighbors
keep kennels and corrals in their back yards, producing a country smell
of manure.” In other words, we stink -- an assessment we long felt was
shared rather generally in Newport Beach.
Given all these new considerations, I decided it was time to check out
feelings about annexation among the citizens of Santa Ana Heights --
especially since opposition by 25% of the residents would force an
election. Because I’ve lived in Santa Ana Heights for l5 years, I feel
uniquely qualified to conduct a thoroughly unprofessional, highly
restricted and numerically retarded survey among my neighbors.
I asked l4 of them: Do you want to have Santa Ana Heights annexed by
Newport Beach? The results: Four categorical ‘No’s’; three categorical
‘Yes’s’; two ‘yes, but’s’; one ‘maybe’; one ‘don’t have enough
information on the issues’; one ‘indifferent’; and one ‘who cares? I just
rent here.’ If you’re counting, I’m the l4th, and we’ll get around to me
later.
Two themes ran through all these conversations, one pro, the other con.
Those who favored annexation universally cited the prospect of increased
property values. Those who opposed it feared an enforced change in a
lifestyle they enjoy. Those who were undecided vacillated between these
two positions while pointing out other perceived benefits or drawbacks.
A few of their comments provide a flavor of the answers I received.
“It’s not a good thing either way. I don’t want to lose what we have now,
but I want to be assured of remaining in this school district and
maintaining property values”;
“There’s no regimentation now, and I don’t want it because it would
change the character of the neighborhood. But I’m certain that annexation
would raise property values in the long term”;
“I have mixed reactions. I don’t want to lose the small-town feeling of
watching horses walk by in front of my house”;”I’m happy in the country”;
“I’m for it if it increases property values and strengthens the Newport
Beach position on the airport”.
Which brings it around to me. I am one of the categorical ‘No’s.’ I find
quality of life a lot more persuasive than the possibility of increased
property values. Although the great preponderance of the residents here
take meticulous care of their property and there is a good deal of
upgrading taking place, the lifestyle in Santa Ana Heights is
nevertheless a kind of beneficent, delightful -- and occasionally
irritating -- chaos.
I’ve written about my neighborhood many times, and it hasn’t changed. In
the past few months, I’ve had a young neighbor come home in early
evening, see my keys in the front door, worry about my well-being, get
another neighbor to go in the house with him to make sure I was all
right, find it empty, and leave a note on my door telling me where to
find my keys.
Another neighbor spotted my mail atop my car where I absent-mindedly left
it and put it back in my mailbox when I didn’t answer the door. Two other
neighbors installed an overhead garage door while I was at a baseball
game so my wife could surprise me with a birthday gift.
These aren’t isolated acts; they go on all the time. They represent a
spirit that permeates this area, and a lot of us are highly suspicious
that the Newport Beach presence will infect it fatally.
Admittedly, we pay a price for that freewheeling chaos. I don’t enjoy
horse manure in front of my driveway or properties that have been turned
into wastelands, but I prefer dealing with that to the regimentation that
a lot of us associate with Newport Beach.
I think if it ever came to a vote, it would be a close call. But it
hasn’t gotten that far in 50 years, and I’m dubious that it will now. I
suppose if they do take us over, the place will smell better to that
reporter from the Register.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a Santa Ana Heights resident. His column runs
Thursdays.
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