Sorting out City Hall conflict
John Heffernan
I read with interest Dolores Otting’s Watchdog piece entitled “New
City Hall sounds like same old problems” on the Sunday Forum page.
My response includes the following points:
* Roger N. Torriero is the principal of Griffin Holdings, which is
located in Laguna Beach.
* Griffin Holdings was selected at our last City Council meeting
to conduct outreach and initial site and rendering work for a
possible new City Hall facility to be built on the existing site,
along with a parking structure, replacement fire station and
community meeting room.
* In June of 2003, Torriero was awarded a similar contract by the
City Council. But, a conflict of interest was soon thereafter
uncovered -- Torriero was also working for the developers of the Lido
Marina Village project, which is a site quite near City Hall.
When that issue arose, the city elected not to proceed with
Torriero, and no new City Hall action was taken by the City Council
for the balance of 2003 and 2004.
* The City Hall subcommittee (Bromberg, Ridgeway and Heffernan)
first met again in January this year with Roger Torriero. Torriero
disclosed to that subcommittee that such prior conflict no longer
exists, because Torriero no longer works for the Lido Marina Village
Project, and he reexplained the scope of his work under the pending
new contract.
The subcommittee then recommended to the entire City Council that
the city proceed with the earlier Torriero contract, which does not
commit the city to build a new City Hall, which the City Council did
approve at its Feb. 8 meeting.
I agree with Otting that such Torriero conflict history should
have been fully explained at that meeting, and since I raised that
subject initially in 2003, and again on the Feb. 8., I take
responsibility for such failure.
* Part of the scope of Torriero’s $578,000 contract is to conduct
multiple public outreach meetings to assess the resident’s opinion of
the need for a new City Hall and to explain why it is needed, where
it will be located, what it will include and what it make look like.
The Torriero contract amount is roughly 1.45% of the projected
$40-million cost of the new City Hall facility, which also includes
the parking structure, replacement fire station and community meeting
room.
* A new City Hall facility is not assured. For example, our
residents may well indicate: spending $40 million for it is not
needed because the existing facilities are adequate or can be
rehabbed; or the City Hall facility should be located elsewhere in
the city more central to our present city boundaries; or the city’s
current financial picture indicates that we should not proceed with
it at this time. Thus, there is much to be carefully reviewed and
considered before the City Council commits to such a large
expenditure of public funds.
* A final comment is that the projected $40 million cost can also
be viewed not as a single lump sum payment, but as an annual cost
over what is typically the 30-year loan term used with building
improvements. If so, then the resulting annual cost is around $2.6
million to $3 million, using possible future long-term, tax-free
municipal bond rates of between 5% and 6.25% -- versus our current
city annual budget which is now is roughly $180 million.
Today, the 30-year AAA bond interest rate is roughly 4.50%. But
paying over time, as we know from our own home loans, likely doubles
the final total dollar outlay.
* JOHN HEFFERNAN is a Newport Beach city councilman.
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