NEWPORT BEACH Vote on Marinapark set for...
- Share via
NEWPORT BEACH
Vote on Marinapark set for November election
In a marathon City Council meeting that ended early Wednesday
morning, the council decided to put the Marinapark resort issue on
the November ballot. After about eight public hearings and hours of
testimony from residents both for and against the proposed 110-room
luxury hotel, the council voted 4-3 to certify an environmental
report on the project and place the necessary general plan amendment
on the fall ballot.
Developer Stephen Sutherland is gearing up for a campaign in favor
of the project, and the grass-roots, anti-resort group Protect Our
Parks promises to battle him. More information about the planned
resort is expected from the city as election day approaches.
* Several hundred property owners approved two of the city’s
biggest tax assessment districts to pay for utility-line burial in
Newport Shores and West Newport. The City Council sets up the
districts after property owners submit signatures showing they will
vote to tax themselves to cover the cost of putting utility lines
underground.
The districts include 550 parcels in Newport Shores and more than
600 in West Newport. Some residents complained that the costs will be
burdensome, but nearly 66% of the votes cast from Newport Shores and
74% of the votes cast from West Newport were in favor of the tax for
utility burial.
The construction will begin this fall and should be completed by
spring 2005.
-- Alicia Robinson
POLITICS
Radio hosts speak their minds: Watch yourself, Rep.
Republican Reps. Dana Rohrabacher (R-Huntington Beach) and Chris
Cox (R-Newport Beach) defended their records on illegal immigration
Tuesday against the shrill harangues of KFI radio’s conservative
“John & Ken Show.” One of the two Orange County congressmen could be
the show’s “political human sacrifice,” the representative deemed
most deserving of being voted out of office.
Also on the chopping block are Reps. David Dreier (R-San Dimas),
Mary Bono (R-Palm Springs) and Darrell Issa (R-Vista). The results
will be determined by a poll of the show’s listeners and announced
closer to the November election.
* Not to be intimidated by the GOP’s superior numbers, dozens of
local Democrats gathered around Newport-Mesa on Thursday to celebrate
John Kerry’s acceptance of the party’s presidential nomination. The
Democratic National Convention in Boston last week unified and
energized the party, and it showed people what kind of a person and a
leader John Kerry is, area Democrats said.
* Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger flew by helicopter into a love fest
at the Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa on Friday. The
governor stopped by to thank voters for urging their representatives
to pass the state budget, which legislators did last week. A crowd of
hundreds braved the hot sun to hear Schwarzenegger speak, take his
picture and seek a chance to shake his hand.
-- Alicia Robinson
COSTA MESA
Residents examine widening Newport Boulevard
The city held an open house for residents to comment on an
environmental report for the potential widening of Newport Boulevard.
About 50 people came to the open house Tuesday night and almost all
of them gave the project favorable reviews, said Project Manager Dave
Sorge.
* City officials are celebrating that they won’t be losing $1.5
million in property tax revenue refunds and $780,000 in future
property tax revenue loss since the state Supreme Court decided not
to review a case that would have cost cities and counties around the
state hundreds of millions of dollars. The case, originated by a Seal
Beach couple and turned into a class-action lawsuit, took on the
county’s practice of recapturing -- when it collects more than the 2%
increase in assessed value after a home’s property declines and then
rebounds. Proposition 13 capped assessment increases at 2% a year.
* The Orange County Transportation Authority Board of Directors
voted again not to encourage the county Board of Supervisors to take
a voter referendum on the CenterLine light rail system. This time,
they also directed staff members to work more proactively with other
cities in Orange County to garner support. The current proposal is
for the 9.3-mile route to run from Santa Ana to John Wayne Airport
through Costa Mesa.
-- Deirdre Newman
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.