Chamber head passes two-decade mark
June Casagrande
NEWPORT BEACH -- Workers were planting flimsy saplings along Jamboree
Road that day. Newport Beach was not yet home to a Four Seasons hotel. A
$100-million renovation of Fashion Island was only a dream. A group of
residents was battling the Irvine Co. over ownership of their rental
properties.
And Richard Luehrs sat facing 12 to 15 members of the Chamber of
Commerce, trying to convince them they should hire him as the new chamber
president.
Starting with this intimidating interview, Luehrs has racked up a
20-year history with the chamber. In that time at the helm of the
1,000-member business association, Luehrs has seen Newport Beach change
in ways that nonetheless prove its heart will always be the same.
“This is a special community,” Luehrs said. “The dedication and
commitment of the people here really make it what it is.”
Luehrs came to Newport Beach after 4 1/2 years with the North
Hollywood Chamber of Commerce -- a stint that helped him understand what
he was looking for in a home and a career.
“They were dealing with issues like graffiti abatement, vice was a big
issue, adult entertainment; that job was about trying to hang on to a
standard of living that was eroding in a hurry,” he recalled. “I was
looking for an opportunity to make a positive impact on a community
rather than cleaning up after some people who were doing damage.”
He was convinced that Newport Beach was a place where he could do
this. In preparation for the interview, he studied the city’s history and
issues. As he read, he learned about a place where a small-town, family
ethic had persisted despite the city’s growth. It’s a mentality Luehrs
says lives to this day.
“It’s a small-town atmosphere,” he said. “The things I think
characterize Newport Beach is that the community is willing to get
involved, people are willing to roll up their sleeves to maintain or
enhance the community standard.”
Some would say Luehrs deserves some of the credit for keeping things
this way.
Unlike a lot of other cities’ chambers of commerce, Luehrs has led a
chamber that balances business concerns with quality-of-life issues that
are sometimes at odds with business.
“Because of that quality-of-life issue, we’re opposing the expansion
of John Wayne Airport, supporting the extension of curfew and flight
restrictions, and supporting El Toro,” he said. At the same time, though,
the chamber under Luehrs advocates growth, supporting projects such as
the Koll Center expansion, which was defeated by voters in the city’s
first Greenlight election.
Luehrs listed the Greenlight Initiative as one of the biggest issues
affecting the city’s future. Fighting airport expansion and supporting
water-quality efforts are other issues he expects to be ongoing parts of
his job and the community’s.
“Richard is the kind of person who makes the people around him want to
give 110% because you see him doing that daily,” said Lula Halfacre,
chairwoman of the chamber’s board of directors for six years.
The board’s current chairman, Roger Alford, said this year’s Taste of
Newport festival is a perfect example of Luehrs’ skillful leadership. The
event was scheduled for Sept. 15 to 17 -- a plan that was thrown into
turmoil by the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
“It was Richard’s consensus-building skills that resulted in moving
the festival date and making it a huge success,” Alford said.
Luehrs said he’s looking forward to facing new challenges.
“For the last 20 years, there’s always something new and exciting in
this job,” Luehrs said. “I anticipate that continuing for the next 20
years into the future.”
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