NEWPORT BEACH CITY COUNCIL WRAP-UP
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WHAT HAPPENED:
City Council members agreed to gather evidence concerning the Buzz
restaurant and a possible revocation of its permits.
WHAT IT MEANS:
The council appointed a hearing officer, who will conduct a meeting on
the issue and make recommendations to council members. The city’s
planning commissioners had revoked the restaurant’s use permit in
November after deciding it had fundamentally changed and no longer met
the conditions of the permit. Buzz officials appealed the decision to the
council, which sent the issue back to the Planning Commission in February
after the restaurant owners said they would submit new plans for the
business. Because city officials still have not received the plans, they
proposed the appointment of a hearing officer. A date for the hearing has
not been set.
WHAT THEY SAID:
“We think this will work. Hopefully this will be resolved very
quickly.” --Barry Hammond, who represents Buzz owners
Vote: 6 / 0IN FAVOR
WHAT HAPPENED:
Council members outlawed motorized scooters on Balboa Peninsula’s
Ocean Front boardwalk.
WHAT IT MEANS:
While motorized scooters are now banned from the area, people may
still ride bikes, skateboards and roller skates, but can’t “engage in any
activity on the boardwalk which creates an unreasonable risk of injury to
any person,” the ordinance states. Council members asked city officials
to include scooters without motors in that category as well.
WHAT THEY SAID:
“Every kid at Newport Elementary School has a Razor [scooter without a
motor].” -- Councilman Tod Ridgeway
Vote: 6 / 0IN FAVOR T
WHAT HAPPENED:
Council members voted to close some streets on the Fourth of July.
WHAT IT MEANS:
City officials recommended the closure to get a better handle on
holiday crowds. The affected streets are Seashore Drive between 32nd and
Prospect street, eastbound Balboa Boulevard between 32nd Street and West
Coast Highway, and the southbound lanes of Newport Boulevard between Via
Lido and Balboa Boulevard.
Vote: 6 / 0IN FAVOR
WHAT HAPPENED:
Council members split the Public Works Department into two parts.
WHAT IT MEANS:
Steve Badum will take over as public works director in July and
oversee 33 employees. Eldon Davidson, now the utilities services manager,
will become the utilities director and oversee 51 employees who work in
the city’s electrical, oil and gas, water and waste water divisions. City
Manager Homer Bludau suggested the split to give Badum a chance to
concentrate on such projects as the Bonita Canyon Sports Park and the
Balboa Village improvement project. Don Webb, who has run the Public
Works Department for decades, will retire next month.
Vote: 6 / 0IN FAVOR
WHAT HAPPENED:
Council members held their first public hearing on the city’s budget
for fiscal year 2001-02 and agreed to have the budget prepared for
adoption on June 26.
WHAT IT MEANS:
After three study sessions to discuss the budgets for each city
department, as well as the city’s capital improvement program for the
coming year, council members are now set to approve the budget at their
June 26 meeting. At that time, they’ll also vote on items listed on a
checklist to determine if they want to include them in the document or
not. City officials will prepare the list in the coming weeks. The new
fiscal year will start July 1.
Vote: 6 / 0
IN FAVOR
WHAT HAPPENED:
Council members adopted a new harbor and bay element as part of the
city’s general plan.
WHAT IT MEANS:
The document will serve as a road map for issues concerning the city’s
harbor and bay areas. Preserving the diverse uses of the bay, harbor and
shoreline, maintaining and improving public access to the harbor and
waterfront areas, and improving water quality are among the goals of the
proposed element.
WHAT THEY SAID:
“I really think this is a terrific document.” -- Ridgeway
Vote: 6 / 0
IN FAVOR
SOUNDING OFF
“The change in the noise ordinance is viewed by some as an aid to the
constant complainer who has a lot of both money and time. This
professional complainer is being given directions as to what to complain
about. I feel I know firsthand how much the City Council enjoys a
constant complainer.” -- Jim Hildreth, a resident who opposed changes to
the city’s noise ordinance. Council members approved the changes.
NEXT MEETING
WHAT: Newport Beach City Council
WHEN: 7 p.m. June 25
WHERE: Newport Beach City Hall, 3300 Newport Blvd.
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