REBUTTAL
Philip Arst
Do we want Newport Beach to become another Santa Monica? Or should we
remain as an environmental treasure and the best place to live anywhere?
A group of residents have united to conduct an initiative campaign to
ensure we stay the best. The “Protect from Traffic and Density”
initiative addresses the consequences of the major development projects
recently proposed for Newport Center as well as throughout the city.
Last week in the Pilot, the Newport Center Assn. presented its view of
the benefits of a major enlargement of Newport Center (“Newport Center
needs room to grow,” Oct. 12). A key claim was that adding more high-rise
office buildings would bring their workers to Newport Center to shop and
bring revenues to the city. Unfortunately, the consequent huge drawbacks
to the residents of the city were not mentioned.
The most fundamental point to consider is that high-rise office buildings
do not earn any net income for the city. A city of Irvine study
determined that they require high levels of costly city services (police,
fire and heavy wear and tear on the streets from all of the traffic).
Revenues from office buildings generally are limited to property taxes
and barely offset the above costs. Irvine found that sales tax income
from them was minimal because office workers do their primary shopping in
their home neighborhoods and not where they work. Do you really believe
that office workers, tired from their long commute from Riverside County,
can afford the time or money for Neiman-Marcus or Bloomingdale’s?
Newport Center expansion also means an estimated 20,000-plus average
daily auto trips will be added to our already overcrowded streets.
Also missing from the statement of Newport Center benefits is the fact
that in addition to six development projects, there are many other major
projects proposed for Newport Center and other parts of the city.
And if there are that many this year, I shudder to think of the
additional traffic congestion from the following years. If Newport Center
will create additional daily auto trips, where is the road space for all
the other projects? And where is the consideration for the residents?
My favorite restaurateur on Mariner’s Mile privately states that Fashion
Island, with its increasing concentration of facilities, has materially
hurt his business. And just count the many vacant stores in Lido Village
to corroborate this statement.
Is it good city planning to change the general plan to make the situation
worse? This favors a few property owners while creating semi-depressed
shopping areas in other parts of the city. There is not much net gain in
sales tax revenue by shifting business from one part of the city to
another. There certainly is not much proper city planning, either.
What is needed is a comprehensive update of the entire city’s general
plan, not just the Newport Center plan. As this is not being done, we
citizens had no choice but to form a group called “green light” in order
to circulate a “Protect from Traffic and Density” initiative. If passed
by voters, it would require voter approval before each of these
grandiose, economically questionable, congestion-creating projects is
implemented.
The initiative protects your property rights. It does this by protecting
your property values and neighborhood quality of life from excessive
traffic congestion and urbanization.
Given the recent actions of the city government in removing the heart of
our previous protections against traffic gridlock, we voters must step in
and take control.
Congestion and more congestion and hordes of outsiders commuting from as
far away as Riverside County to work here is not the same old
environmental treasure we know as Newport Beach. The best place to live
in the world is destined for major change if we’re converted into another
Santa Monica.
Get involved, support the “Protect Against Traffic and Density”
Initiative. It’s your last chance.
* PHILIP ARST is a Newport Beach resident and president of the Community
Assn. Alliance, the largest residents’ district organization in the city.
He is also a proponent of the “Protect from Traffic and Density”
initiative.
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