What’s the most important issue facing the...
What’s the most important issue facing the city?
Shaping regional consensus in favor of the interests of Newport
Beach residents: to prevent JWA expansion, to reduce and improve
traffic circulation, to improve water quality and to prevent
intensification of development in residential areas.
What is your opinion of how the Greenlight law is affecting the
city, and what is your position on plans to build a hotel at
Marinapark?
The Greenlight law is a good thing for the city because it allows
voters to decide for themselves whether to ratify or reject the City
Council’s approval of major development projects. It gives voters the
last word, and I think that is a good thing. I oppose the Marinapark
hotel because it is proposed to be built on land that our city’s
general plan designates for parks. I disagree with the City Council’s
decision to place short-term benefits, which it hopes to gain from
the hotel, above the council’s long-term obligation as a trustee of
public assets to preserve and steward our parks for future residents.
Are city leaders doing a good job handling the budget and
pressures on it from the state?
Our city is lagging behind other regional cities in privatizing
unskilled, nonpublic safety services. Our city cannot afford to
ignore the savings from privatization. Our city must continue to use
its financial resources for the direct benefit of the residents,
maintaining our roads, our water and sewer systems, first-tier public
safety agencies -- not for construction of a huge new city hall
complex. The state is balancing its budget on the backs of cities,
and consequently cities are deprived of local revenues that should
rightfully support the city budget. The city must protest these cuts,
but no city alone can oppose the state’s grabbing of local revenues.
Our city leaders must join other cities and state firmly to our state
legislators this simple fact -- depriving cities of local revenues
inevitably reduces the cities’ ability to maintain infrastructure and
to provide adequate levels of public safety with difficult and
dangerous consequences.
How should the city handle possible expansion of John Wayne
Airport and St. Andrew’s Church?
Our city leaders must not declare the El Toro Airport dead -- not
yet -- and should continue to support the efforts of the Airport
Working Group and others dedicated to the proposition that an airport
at El Toro eliminates pressure to expand JWA. JWA expansion is a
regional issue, and a consensus of our neighboring cities is required
to develop solutions. We must articulate a vision, persuade our
neighbors to accept that vision in their own self-interest; we must
guide the process through active and patient leadership. The St.
Andrew’s Church expansion must be kept in scale to the surrounding
areas. The city should support a compromise that allows the church to
convert a portion of its existing square footage to a youth-oriented
use without increasing density on or off-site, and with adequate
provisions for on-site parking.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.