Activist wants vote on annexation
Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- Allan Beek just wants to know.
The Newport Beach community activist said he realizes that a citywide
poll on the annexation of Newport Coast won’t legally bind City Council
members in their final decision on the matter.
“But it would give a very clear indication” of how residents felt
about annexing the affluent neighborhood south of the city, where about
2,671 people live.
That’s why Beek suggested during Tuesday’s council meeting that city
leaders should put a measure on the Nov. 20 ballot. A special election is
already scheduled for that date to decide the fate of a
250,000-square-foot expansion project at Koll Center.
Beek said the measure should ask residents if Newport Beach should
drop its annexation plans of Newport Coast. He added that about 20
members of the steering committee for the watchdog group Stop Polluting
Our Newport also support the idea.
In September, council members unanimously approved plans to annex
Newport Coast, along with Santa Ana Heights and Bay Knolls. While
annexation of the latter two areas has been pushed back to mid-2002,
Newport Coast could become part of Newport Beach by Jan. 1.
Residents who live in the unincorporated territory still must vote on
the plan later this year after an Orange County agency that’s responsible
for annexations makes its ruling on Newport Beach’s application.
Beek’s opposition to the annexation became public in April, when he
told council members that the move would profoundly change the character
of Newport Beach.
“Our votes will be diluted by a huge population with no interest in
our bay and beaches, and most of whom will probably be opposed to an
airport at El Toro,” he said.
Following the council meeting, Beek, who played an instrumental role
in leading Greenlight, the city’s new slow-growth law, to victory in
November, said grass-roots campaigns such as Greenlight won’t be able to
succeed in Newport Coast.
“It’s not the kind of community where we can do our political work
in,” he said, adding that residents there live in gated communities that
prevent activists from leaving fliers at doorsteps.
Wealthier political groups that can afford to send mailers would have
an advantage, Beek said.
City Hall folks didn’t seem too impressed with the idea of polling
residents on the annexation.
Councilman Tod Ridgeway said he opposes a ballot measure because there
isn’t enough time to educate voters about the issues that are involved.
And like Ridgeway, Councilman Steve Bromberg said he felt comfortable
that residents would get a chance to have their say.
“I think we’ll be OK with hearing from the people,” Bromberg said.
Even Councilman John Heffernan, who said a poll would be consistent
with Greenlight because it would give residents a chance to comment on an
event that will have a major effect on the city’s future, didn’t think
Beek’s proposal would go far.
“I don’t think it’s ever going to happen,” he said. “Not with this
council.”
Councilman Dennis O’Neil said he and his colleagues wouldn’t annex
Newport Coast if residents opposed such a move.
But “why do we have to have an election on this?” he asked. “Why do we
want to do that? Why even have council people?”
Besides, O’Neil said he had not seen a public outcry against the
annexation plans.
That might change, countered Beek, who said council members might
change their mind on the poll when residents start pressuring them about
such a referendum.
“I just think it might happen,” he said.
* Mathis Winkler covers Newport Beach. He may be reached at (949)
754-4232 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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