Six apply to fill Newport Beach council vacancy
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Alicia Robinson
Six people have applied to fill the Newport Beach City Council seat
that Mayor Steve Bromberg will vacate June 17.
Bromberg will be sworn in June 24 as a judge in the Orange County
Superior Court. He’s been on the council since 2000, but he can’t
hold both offices. Friday was the deadline to apply to fill
Bromberg’s council seat.
Some of the names will be familiar to Newport voters -- Patricia
Beek and Robert Schoonmaker lost to Bromberg five years ago, and
Bernie Svalstad ran unsuccessfully for the council in 2002. Other
applicants are real estate broker Donald Abrams, city economic
development committee member Lloyd Ikerd and city Planning
Commissioner Ed Selich.
The council will hold a special meeting June 21 to interview the
six candidates and appoint one. Public comment will be allowed once
the interviews are done.
The appointment will be watched closely because the new council
member will be thrown headfirst into some controversial issues -- St.
Andrew’s proposed expansion, the future use of Marinapark, and the
city’s general-plan update.
Bromberg was sympathetic to the concerns of businesses and boaters
on the harbor, issues not all council members understand, said Mark
Silvey, chairman of the Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce’s marine
committee.
“As far as the City Council was concerned for a long time, who
cares about the harbor?” Silvey said. “They’re slowly letting all the
condos take over the harbor. The last place in this harbor that the
city owns is Marinapark.”
An ad hoc committee is now discussing what to do with the
Marinapark site, which was the subject of a controversial hotel
proposal that voters nixed last year.
Residents in the neighborhoods surrounding St. Andrew’s
Presbyterian Church are anxious about the council appointment too.
The council on Tuesday will set a hearing to decide whether the
church can begin an expansion, which neighbors say is too big.
“I think it’s deadly for the St. Andrew’s thing,” said Margit
Motta, who is a Newport Heights resident and who opposes the church
expansion. She doesn’t think her councilman, Steve Rosansky, has
taken a firm position on St. Andrew’s.
The new member will also be the third council appointee in three
years, a fact that rankles some in the community. Council members say
they’re just following the city charter.
But the council can decide to waive the rules. Tuesday, council
members will discuss whether the new mayor should serve for six
months to finish out Bromberg’s term -- as policy dictates -- or if
the term should be extended through 2006.
The council will decide on the mayor’s term Tuesday and select the
new mayor on June 28. As current mayor pro-tem, Don Webb is the
obvious successor, but other council members might want the post.
“I’m very interested in being mayor during the greatest part of
the centennial year [2006],” Webb said. “It’s been a goal, and I’ve
let people know that.”
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