Newport Coast annexation garners little opposition
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June Casagrande
NEWPORT COAST -- A trickle of protest against annexing this exclusive
community into Newport Beach has officials optimistic that, by Friday’s
deadline, the city will have expanded its borders.
“I hope we’ll have something to celebrate on Friday,” said Mayor Gary
Adams, who has taken an active role in promoting annexation among Newport
Coast residents.
As of Tuesday, only 50 people had registered an objection to annexing
the area of about 2,600 homes.
A 30-day window of opportunity for Newport Coast residents to shoot
down annexation ends Friday. During this “protest period,” residents who
remain silent are counted as supporters of annexation. If more than half
of the area’s 3,407 registered voters file an objection with the Orange
County Local Agency Formation Commission, annexation is stopped for at
least a year. If more than 25% protest, the issue will be put to a vote
among the community’s residents.
The annexation issue has loomed about 30 years since it was determined
in the 1970s that Newport Beach should ultimately annex the
unincorporated areas within its sphere of influence. The Local Agency
Formation Commission approved the proposal Sept. 12, leaving the protest
period as the final hurdle before annexation becomes official on Jan. 1.
“It should be a pretty seamless transition,” said Bob Aldrich, project
manager for the commission. On that date, he said, Coast residents will
begin receiving police and fire services from Newport Beach. There will
be no change in how they pay their taxes, Aldrich said.
Officials have been working to promote annexation among residents,
offering, among other things, an $18-million tax incentive that they say
is unprecedented nationwide.
“We feel like we have made an overwhelming case for the benefits to
the Newport Coast . . . to become a part of the city,” City Manager Homer
Bludau said.
The city would pay $1.2 million a year for 15 years to homeowners for
a tax they now pay to the county for infrastructure installed when their
community was being built, such as the widening of Coast Highway.
The money will come from $25 million the city would be paid by the
Irvine Ranch Water District after the annexation. The other $7 million
could be used for a community center if the residents want one.
Critics have argued that, despite this upfront cost, the property
taxes on the pricey homes amount to huge long-term financial gains to the
city. Some want to hold out for a better deal. But unless protest surges
as the deadline approaches, this is the deal they’re going to get.
FYI
Registered voters who are residents of Newport Coast and who wish to
protest annexation can get forms and information at o7
https://www.oclafco.ca.gov/home.htmf7 or by calling (714) 834-2556. More
information is also available at o7 https://www.newportcoast.orgf7 or
by calling the city manager’s office at (949) 644-3000.
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