MAILBAG - Dec. 23, 1999
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In a court of law, we are required to tell the whole truth and nothing
but the truth. But in the court of public opinion, a developer may
present the facts as he wishes, whether it’s the truth or not.
Tim Quinn, who is managing the Newport Dunes Hotel project, recently
wrote an article presenting the facts about the proposed hotel as he sees
them (“Laying out facts about Newport Dunes resort,” Dec. 14). However, a
developer’s presentation of a project on paper does not always pan out as
described.
Take the case of Fletcher Jones Motorcars. The pre-development
information presented by consultants LSA Associates did not accurately
reflect the reality of the finished project. Once a project is built,
there is no penalty for presenting inaccurate, insufficient or misleading
information, but only the echoes of verbal recriminations being heard
faintly in the collective consciousness: “We didn’t know that it would
look like that.”
The picture painted by Quinn is reverberating in my consciousness,
because his picture is so different from what I believe to be the case.
The first red flag is that LSA is the firm preparing the Dunes
environmental impact report. Remember, LSA also prepared the Fletcher
Jones report. Based on a prior development agreement, the Dunes is
currently approved for a 275-room family inn with three restaurants.
Tim Quinn is instead promoting the development of a 400-room hotel; an
adjacent time-share resort with 100, two-bedroom units; and 41,000 square
feet of convention space.
Let me focus primarily on a review of the traffic study for the Dunes,
since increased traffic will be the effect most Newport residents will
notice. Traffic from the hotel and convention center will use the
intersection of Bayside and East Coast Highway as the only point of
access. This intersection is critical for Newport residents who need to
drive from one side of the bay to the other. The only alternative route
is to drive entirely around the bay, and those of us who recall the old
Coast Highway bridge remember the horrific traffic delays that actually
made this an attractive alternative.
Quinn admits that the proposed hotel will add to traffic, but then
reassures us that since check-in and check-out times are not during peak
traffic times, there will be very little impact on rush-hour traffic. The
fallacy of this argument is that hotel guests don’t just stay in their
rooms once they are checked in. They go to the beach, go shopping, go out
to dinner and they get into their cars and drive every time they go
anywhere. Now add the traffic generated by the 41,000 square feet of
conference space. Will those people be traveling during peak hours? Both
Quinn and LSA fail to clearly address these issues, although they add up
to a very significant addition to traffic in this congested intersection.
So, what type of information has been provided to the public by the
traffic study? The original traffic study simply said that this
intersection already was so impacted that more cars would not make a
significant difference. To their credit, the City Council gave LSA an “F”
on this report and sent them back to try again. This time, LSA’s report
was that there would be an impact, but Quinn says it will be minimal and
should not prevent the construction of the hotel.
LSA projects that the already approved 275-room family-oriented inn would
generate 4,000 trips per day through the Bayside and Coast Highway
intersection. But they then state that the additional 125 rooms,
potentially 200 time-share units and 41,000 square feet of conference
space of the proposed four-star, business-class hotel will generate only
800 more trips per day. The truly frightening thing about this report is
that our Planning Department seems to believe it. I don’t think this
study passes the smell test, and Newport Beach’s Environmental Quality
Affairs Committee agrees with me.
The committee roundly condemned LSA’s traffic study and pointed out
numerous inaccuracies and unanswered questions in the environmental
report. Members raised additional questions about excess noise traveling
over water and the height of the hotel at 75 feet (standing taller than
the nearby cliffs at Castaways). They concluded that the original
family-style inn would be the best development choice for the Dunes.
Let’s not sacrifice our quality of life in Newport Beach. A decision will
ultimately be made by the City Council and the citizens of our city, but
that decision should be made with a clear understanding of the true
cumulative impacts this development will have.
I, for one, would just like to be able to drive home from work, visit a
friend on Balboa Island or a restaurant in Corona del Mar without having
to fight traffic to get there.
BOB CAUSTIN
Founding director, Defend The Bay
Conflicting reporting on respect
Your reporting and editorializing on respect are confusing. You report
that Corona del Mar High School has innovated a policy to have zero
tolerance for disrespect for school employees. In the same article, the
school board president is quoted commending the effort but disclaiming
any responsibility of the district to require other schools to follow, as
such a policy must come from the community involved. Then you report on
the school board’s policy which embraces the rights of gays to have a
club and quote the superintendent as saying district policies respect
everybody.
Who is the Rodney Dangerfield in this scenario and when did disrespect
for school employees become tolerable?
THOMAS E. KOLANOSKI
Costa Mesa
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