Thorny questions remain for Newport Coast
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June Casagrande
NEWPORT BEACH -- Confusion about how to distribute $18 million to
Newport Coast residents could foreshadow problems with the county in
tracking up to $20 million that may be unaccounted for.
City staff got conflicting answers from county officials about ways to
pay back $18 million owed to Newport Coast residents from an annexation
agreement, administrative services Deputy Director Dick Kurth told
members of the Newport Coast Advisory Committee on Tuesday.
Some county representatives said it was not possible to credit
residents’ tax bills. Others contradicted this, Kurth said, who along
with other city staff members met with officials from the county
executive office in late January.
The money comes from the Irvine Ranch Water District, which is paying
the city a total of $25 million over six years as part of an agreement to
supply water to the recently annexed area. Newport Beach has pledged to
return that money to coast residents: $18 million will repay a portion of
their tax bills, the other $7 million could be used to build a community
center in the coast area.
The city will distribute $1.2 million a year over 15 years to the
residents to help repay assessments that paid for roads and other
infrastructure. The amount will vary from homeowner to homeowner, but it
is expected to average about $720 the first year.
Assistant City Manager Dave Kiff said that if the county is unable to
work out the logistics of putting a credit on the residents’ assessment
tax bill, it’s possible that the city could opt to distribute checks
directly to the residents.
The advisory group is set to create a subcommittee to work through
this issue along with an even stickier question of what happened to other
assessment district money. Some residents worry that, of the $181 million
in bonds issued in the 1980s and ‘90s to help build the area, up to $20
million may be unaccounted for.
They want to know why they were reimbursed only $3.5 million for a
portion of Newport Coast Drive they paid about $13.3 million to build
before it was taken by the Transportation Corridor Agency to be made into
a toll road.
City and county officials have been quick to say that it’s unlikely
any money is missing. But they agree that residents have a right to see
exactly where their money went -- a request that county officials have
been slow to prioritize.
Kiff is heading up an inquiry into the matter. The city will hire an
investigator to help determine, which documents will best answer these
questions. Then officials will request the documents from the county to
offer coast residents an exact accounting of their money.
“There are a lot of questions that need to be answered,” Kiff said.
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