Council drives toward car deal
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Lolita Harper
NEWPORT BEACH -- Council members on Tuesday unanimously approved a
sales tax split with the owner of a Lexus dealership in order to lure
him and his multi-million dollar business to town.
The City Council voted 6 to 0, with Mayor Tod Ridgeway recusing
himself, to share 50% of the sales tax generated from the proposed
eight-acre dealership owned by David Wilson as an incentive to build
a $55-million project on the corner of Jamboree Road and MacArthur
Boulevard.
“I like to look at the glass-is-half-full approach,” Councilman
Steve Bromberg said about the proposed deal. “And looking at it that
way, we are going to make an awful lot of money.”
Ridgeway, who has been vocally supportive of attracting more car
dealerships to the city, excused himself from the vote. Ridgeway owns
property more than 2,000 feet away from the proposed Lexus dealership
site, which is well beyond the 500 feet that constitutes a conflict
of interest, but said he wanted to quash any appearance of
impropriety.
The proposed plan calls for the city to pay Wilson 50% of the
local sales tax generated at the site, considering he continues to
operate a Lexus dealership and it continues to generate sales tax,
according to a staff report. The city’s return to Wilson would be
capped at $9.5 million, plus interest of 5% per year.
Wilson was not on hand to comment on his proposed project and no
one from the audience spoke about the issue. Council members
discussed it briefly, but there were no contentious aspects to the
proposal.
Councilman Dick Nichols was concerned about the sales tax from
leased vehicles that was a hurdle in terms of the Fletcher Jones
incentive program of 1995, in which the city gave the Mercedes
dealership eight-acres of land and a similar tax-sharing incentive.
Nichols wanted to make sure that leased vehicle sales were counted
toward the Newport Beach sales tax.
Asst. City Manager Sharon Wood said the city has worked out those
kinks and, in addition, state law has also been changed to include
leases in local tax revenue.
Wilson said he is in the process of buying two lots on the
southwest corner of Jamboree Road and MacArthur Boulevard, owned by
Tony Watson, which currently house an Avis storage site and office
buildings.
The entire project, including purchasing the property, demolishing
the current buildings and developing a car dealership, will total
between $50 million and $55 million, Bludau said.
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