A CLOSER LOOK -- Can Measure S make up for lost chances?
Alex Coolman
From a distance, the dense row of houses that lines the cliff at the
Castaways development in Newport Beach looks a little bit like a layer of
frosting on a thick piece of cake.
In 1993, the proposal to build the homes was the source of an argument
that split the city. A controversial initiative, Measure A, proposed to
buy the land to hold it as open space.
Developers and environmentalists squared off as the election drew
near, with each side charging that it had the city’s best interests in
mind.
But voters were unwilling to foot the $68 million the plan would have
cost. Measure A failed, the homes were built, and environmentalists were
left to lick their wounds.
Today, the development debate still rages -- only a new pair of
initiatives, Measure S and Measure T, are the focus of the argument.
Change in alliances
That growth should still be a touchy subject is no surprise in a city
that prides itself both on its environmental and its economic strengths.
What’s remarkable about the ongoing debate, though, is the way the
political alliances have changed over time.
Clarence Turner was the mayor and Jean Watt was a councilwoman when
Measure A was a hot issue, and they were both vocal supporters of the
initiative. Today, the two are split, with Watt backing Measure S and
Turner heading the drive to pass the competing measure.
Measure S would require a citywide vote on projects creating more than
100 peak-hour car trips, more than 100 homes, or more than 40,000 square
feet of floor area in excess of general plan specifications.
Measure T would take parts of the city’s traffic phasing ordinance and
make them part of the city charter, and it would also cancel Measure S.
Turner said his disagreement with Watt comes down to a split over the
role of representative government.
“I was in favor [of Measure A], and, yes, I did endorse it, and, yes,
I do wish it had gone through,” he said. “And I am [still] in favor of
that. If the people will buy stuff and keep it open space, I am for it.”
Turner is quick to say he isn’t in love with the way the Castaways
turned out.
“The clustered look that it has now,” grates on him, he said, and he
added that he bears responsibility for the way it looks.
But the Measure S approach, he argues, is too extreme in its attack on
the judgment of elected officials.
A taxing issue
In 1993, Watt felt she could see the frosting coming on the cake, and
she said she thought Measure A stood a good chance of being passed.
“Then the anti-tax people came in and hit very hard” on the
$120-per-year-per-household cost that the initiative would have required.
“They eroded any chance we had.”
The strategies that were used in that campaign -- emphasizing the cost
to the ordinary pocketbook -- worry Watt, because she said the same
techniques are being inaccurately applied in the anti-Measure S drive.
“The swing votes, they’re going to be swayed mostly by something that
hits them either in their own personal pocketbook or something that
affects them in a very personal way,” she said.
Watt contends that some of the arguments that Measure S foes make --
that the initiative could limit a homeowner’s ability to remodel, for
example -- are distortions of the measure intended to drum up financial
anxiety.
But Measure T proponent Tom Edwards, who also favored Measure A,
thinks the economic argument is crucial.
When it comes down to it, he said, the fate of Measure A says
something significant about Newport residents’ priorities.
“When people are given a chance, they seem to say that they want these
things [such as open space], but they’re not prepared to pay for it,” he
said.
A bottom line
Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce President Richard Luehrs, who
opposed Measure A and opposes Measure S, argued that this economic bottom
line is something that needs to be acknowledged.
Say what you like about the aesthetics of the Castaways, he said, it
seems to be popular with the people who live there.
“If it were a bad product, I think you’d see a whole bunch of ‘for
sale’ signs, or you’d see discounting to buy those homes,” he said.
Watt doesn’t dispute the idea that the homes are popular, but she
thinks the cake is hardly something that all Newport residents can enjoy.
“Even now,” she said, “developers are able to get things done that are
ultimately at the expense of the taxpayers.”
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