Developer chosen for Marinapark changes
Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- Tempers erupted on both sides of the dais as City
Council members pondered the future of Balboa Peninsula’s Marinapark at
Tuesday night’s meeting.
In the end, after two hours of discussion and emotional appeals from
more than a dozen members of American Legion Post 291, area residents and
a Girl Scouts representative, council members unanimously voted to enter
exclusive negotiations with a developer proposing a $30-million luxury
hotel for the site.
While the decision does not mean council members have formally
approved the project, it limits further discussion to a single developer
for the time being.
The city also had received eight proposals from other groups, but only
Newport Beach-based Sutherland Talla Hospitality had submitted a complete
package by a July 17 deadline.
“I think the peninsula needs a shot in the arm and this is the shot,”
said Councilman Gary Adams, praising the proposed five-star resort as a
“gorgeous facility.”
“I see this as something that we can be proud of,” he said.The project
would include 156 rooms in 18 Italian-style villas, as well as two
vintage 1950s yachts with luxury suites. Also proposed are a spa, tennis,
sailing and rowing clubs, and shops and restaurants.
The city could earn as much as $30 million in lease payments, hotel
taxes and food and beverage taxes over the first decade, according to the
proposal.
But council members made it clear that without consent from the
American Legion, the plan would fail.
“If the American Legion doesn’t go along with this, it ain’t gonna
happen,” Mayor John Noyes told Stephen P. Sutherland, a principal planner
with Sutherland Talla Hospitality.
Earlier, American Legionnaires had protested development proposals for
Marinapark that would move the group’s hall.
“When no legionnaires are left, then and only then is the city of
Newport Beach allowed to reclaim the property,” said Mike Johnston, a
member of the legion, adding that he’d heard rumors that the post’s
removal had already been approved tacitly.
In an emotional response, Councilwoman Jan Debay vehemently denied
that she and her colleagues planned to expel the Legion from Marinapark.
“I don’t like the idea that this council is setting up to do wrong to
the legion,” she said, adding that while she did not serve in the
military, she held veterans in high regard. Her father had left the
family to join the Army Air Corps when she was 4 years old, she said.
Sutherland’s plan would include a new home for the legion at a
different location on the site. In a letter of intent to the City
Council, Sutherland promised to pay for the new building and rent the
space to the legion for $1 per year.
“We want to stay exactly were we are,” said Dennis Lahey, the post’s
commander. “And we want a long-term lease. Many of us marched for our
country in the past. We did not really want to then and we do not want to
march now. But if we need to march to save our home, we will.”
Under the current proposal, the legion would lose its marina and yacht
club. Council members told Sutherland to consider sharing the hotel’s
marina with the legion.
Sutherland’s proposal keeps the Girl Scout facility in its place.
Residents of the Marinapark Mobile Home Park would have to vacate the
land if the project becomes reality. In February, the council extended
the lease for the mobile homes for another two years.
Before developers could get the go-ahead for the project, it would
require a General Plan amendment, environmental impact review, approval
by the state Coastal Commission as well as the Newport Beach Planning
Commission and the council, said City Manager Homer Bludau.
But before negotiations with city officials go any further, Sutherland
Talla Hospitality also must reach an agreement with the American Legion.
After the meeting, Lahey said he was open to discussions.
“We will do everything that’s right for the facility and our members,”
he said. “I don’t know whether we can work something out. But we will be
very open-minded.”
Councilman Tod Ridgeway abstained from the vote due to a possible
conflict of interest.
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