No decision on new City Hall
June Casagrande
Some envision a $30-million City Hall complex with a parking
structure and public square atmosphere. Others say the city should
look for the most efficient way to upgrade the buildings it already
has. Still others say that now is not the time to make a costly
investment.
An hour-and-a-half discussion on City Hall improvements got
emotional Tuesday night, causing the council to continue the matter
until its June 10 meeting. The issue revealed the council members’
diverging visions for the future.
“This is something I’m really torn on,” Councilman Don Webb said.
Webb had suggested looking for solutions to overcrowding and aging
structures at the existing City Hall. But Webb, a longtime city
employee who spent much of his professional career in City Hall, said
he never intended to push for a complete razing of the existing
buildings.
“I like old buildings. When I worked here, I wasn’t in a box.
Nearly every office has a window,” Webb said. “I just feel that we
might be able to get by with leaving some of the buildings here.”
The councilman’s comments came after a lengthy presentation from
Griffin Holdings, a consultant hired to assess needs at City Hall and
solutions. The question before the council on Tuesday night was not
whether to rebuild City Hall, only whether to spend $578,185 to hire
Griffin to create schematic designs for a new facility.
But that question proved too tough to answer in one night. The
council agreed to bring the matter back in two weeks after the public
has had a chance to weigh in.
Griffin’s presentation painted a rosy picture of ways in which a
new City Hall could help pay for itself: a 15% increase in worker
efficiency, valued at about $2 million a year; nearly $100,000 a year
in energy efficiencies; and about $300 a year in revenue from the
parking structure.
The parking structure income would come from charging for
off-hours parking. City Hall visitors would not be charged for
parking.
“We can get by with remodeling; there’s no question about that,”
City Manager Homer Bludau said of the entire project. “But about
130,000 people a year visit this complex who aren’t city employees.
Do they deserve a City Hall complex that better serves their needs?
We believe they do.”
Councilman John Heffernan disagreed.
“I think government shouldn’t get bigger. It should get smaller,”
Heffernan said. “It may be couched in efficiencies, but it will still
say to the citizens that we want a new, bigger City Hall.”
Others, said that City Hall is “busting at the seams” and that
something must be done, if not now, soon.
“We’re the most affluent city in Orange County, but we have the
crummiest, most ratted-out city hall I’ve seen,” Mayor Steve Bromberg
said.
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
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