Dredging funding should be on the way
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Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- Things are looking good for two bills and a request
for $7.5 million for the dredging on Upper Newport Bay that city
officials are trying to get through the state Legislature.
“We feel very, very, very good about all the votes,” said Councilman
Tod Ridgeway, who joined Asst. City Manager David Kiff on a two-day trip
to Sacramento to testify in favor of the bills.
“You couldn’t have asked for a better result,” he said.
The $7.5 million would secure a local and state match for federal
funds that are needed for the $31-million dredging project that’s
scheduled for 2003.
While a Senate Budget Subcommittee has already left the money in its
version of the budget bill, an Assembly Budget Subcommittee followed suit
this week.
Senate Bill 124, which would transfer a 15-acre parcel of vacant land
along West Coast Highway from the California Department of Transportation
to the state parks department and allow Newport Beach to turn it into a
park after paying $1.3 million to Caltrans, passed unanimously in the
Senate Governmental Organization Committee this week. While Newport Beach
might be the first city to ask for such a transfer of land, the state’s
voters made it possible by passing Proposition 3 in 1978.
Since the land has been appraised for more than $4 million, the city
would save about $3 million and use that money to build the park. That’s
expected to cost up to $6 million, since it will include soccer and
baseball fields, among other things.
While environmental groups and residents in West Newport Beach have
sent letters of support to legislators, the California Transportation
Commission opposes the bill since it would shortchange state highway
funds.
Sen. Ross Johnson (R-Irvine) also introduced Senate Bill 516. That
legislation would allow Newport Beach to issue Coastal Commission permits
for Newport Coast through an already existing local coastal program once
the city annexes that area. It garnered unanimous support in the Senate
Local Government Committee Wednesday.
The bill was introduced to guarantee the complete build out of the
upscale community and prevent legal challenges against the construction
of an additional 850 homes on the basis that Newport Beach doesn’t have
such a program itself.
Lawmakers amended the bill, requiring Newport Beach to certify a
similar program for the city within 36 months of annexing Newport Coast.
City officials said they’d take care of this.
“I will personally oversee that [the certification] happens,” Ridgeway
said.
On March 20, city officials submitted their application for annexation
to the county agency that decides on annexations. Apart from Newport
Coast, Santa Ana Heights and Bay Knolls are also likely to get annexed by
early 2002.
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