Annexation opponent pushes for inclusion
- Share via
June Casagrande
NEWPORT BEACH -- If you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em.
Weeks after a failed court challenge to the city’s bid to annex
Newport Coast, a leader of the opposition has said he hopes to be named
to the city’s soon-to-be-formed Newport Coast Advisory Committee.
But the idea has already drawn some controversy, especially in light
of the court fight against annexation that could be ongoing.
Phillip Greer, the Newport Coast resident who temporarily stopped
annexation in its tracks last month by producing hundreds of opponents’
signatures, has been named by Mayor Tod Ridgeway as a possible alternate
member of the committee -- a move that drew protest from Councilwoman
Norma Glover.
“I wouldn’t agree with that,” she said Dec. 11 as the council agreed
to postpone until Jan. 8 a vote to create the committee.
Greer said he wants to be a full member of the committee.
The committee, whose members are appointed by the mayor, would likely
include Jim McGee and Daniel Wampole, both of whom served on the
Committee of 2000, a citizen group that supported annexation.
“I don’t think that group was ever really representative of the
residents here,” Greer said. “While they were communicating with people
mainly through e-mail and a Web site, we were out knocking on doors,
talking to more than 1,000 people.”
Greer is part of a group called A Simple Vote, which he said includes
more than a dozen active members and communicates regularly with about
1,000 neighbors. The group opposed annexing their community of about
2,600 homes to Newport Beach not because members didn’t want to be part
of the city, but because they felt the matter should have been decided by
a vote among Newport Coast residents.
This was also the group that took annexation to court -- and might do
so again. Greer said members will likely meet next week to discuss
whether to push the matter in court.
But Greer said that recent attempts by the city to work in cooperation
with A Simple Vote have allayed some members’ fears that their voices
won’t be heard. These moves, plus appointing Greer to the committee as an
alternate member or full member, could render a court fight unnecessary,
he said.
“We felt really excluded from the process, but the city is doing a
really masterful job of trying to bring us back in,” Greer said. “These
kind of overtures go a long way.”
The committee will help the city decide Newport Coast issues, such as
whether to build a community center, how to maintain parks and roads, and
how to deal with a proposal to build townhomes near Newport Coast Drive
and San Joaquin Road.
Greer suggested that, instead of building a community center, the city
use a portion of a $7-million set-aside to build a pedestrian bridge for
Newport Coast Elementary School students to cross Newport Coast Drive.
* June Casagrande covers Newport Beach. She may be reached at (949)
574-4232 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.