Time for accountability on Measure L
The resounding defeat of Measure L at the ballot box should send a
loud and clear message to the City Council, about not only the
concern over unfettered development of Newport Beach’s assets, but
the manner in which the City Council operates in general.
The city’s failure to articulate the details of the proposed
project and its obstinacy in dealing with public concerns doomed this
project from the start. The proponents of Marinapark need to look no
further than the city for its collapse.
When a municipal entity wants to convert a public asset into a
private profit, it had better be prepared to provide excruciating
details as to the benefit to the citizenry.
In this regard, the city failed. Initial inquiries were dismissed
as clerical inadvertence. When serious questions were raised about
the legality of the contract, the legitimacy of the council’s
approval of the final agreement, and violations of the city’s
charter, they were summarily dismissed as political rhetoric.
Well, the election is over and the people of Newport Beach have
spoken. Now it is time for the city to answer. Questions remain as to
why the city thought it was dealing with a limited-liability
partnership when it was not. Did the proponent misrepresent himself
or did the city merely believe that for three years and after
multiple amendments it was dealing with someone else? Why was the
last agreement modified without council consent? Was the Brown Act
violated? Who approved changes in the contract? Why did the city
invest so much time and money defending an indefensible agreement?
Where was the city’s due diligence in evaluating the plan before it
rushed to promote it?
We, the taxpayers, deserve answers to these questions. We deserve
better from a council laden with lawyers and businessmen-developers.
The City Council needs to regain our trust in their handling of
the public’s goodwill and projects of this nature in the future. They
campaigned long and hard for their seats at the dais. Our trust in
voting for them is now their fiduciary obligation.
The city should appoint an independent counsel to review the
entire process, from the initial requests for proposal to the final
contract. Each and every council member should join in the request.
The city’s credibility has suffered as a result of its handling of
this project. Its citizenry needs reassurance in the incredible power
it has placed in the council’s hands.
RICK TAYLOR
Newport Beach
* EDITOR’S NOTE: Rick Taylor is a member of the slow-growth group,
Greenlight.
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