Beek plans to oppose Koll development
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Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- As Koll Center officials get ready to sell their
250,000-square-foot expansion project to the city’s voters, the author of
the city’s new slow-growth law said Wednesday he’ll oppose the plan.
“I would give it 70% odds that I would be involved in writing the
ballot argument against” the project, said Allan Beek, who helped bring
Greenlight to victory last year.
Greenlight will play a role in the expansion because it requires voter
approval for any projects that add more than 40,000 square feet, 100
peak-hour car trips or 100 dwelling units above what’s allowed in the
general plan.
City Council members approved the Koll expansion at their meeting
Tuesday, and will vote on a zoning amendment and development agreement
for a second time July 10.
On top of about $1.16 million in mandatory traffic and transportation
fees, the development agreement also requires the developer to pay $2
million for long-term traffic improvements, as well as $60,000 to build a
new fire station and $112,500 for a planning study for the airport area,
where the project is located.
The fact that such a study would come after the project’s approval has
Beek concerned.
With the city planning to review the airport area as part of its
pending general plan update and with long-term traffic studies for the
entire city in the works, an approval of the Koll expansion would be
premature, he said.
“We should not make detailed decisions until we’ve made the overall
decision” about how to approach the city’s long-term traffic problems,
Beek said.
Councilman John Heffernan, the only Greenlight supporter among city
leaders, expressed similar concerns this week. He was the lone council
member to vote against the project.
Tim Strader Sr., one of the partners in the Koll project, has said
that because the city would get the $2 million in extra traffic funds, he
feels the expansion would help to deal with traffic problems in the area
around Jamboree Road and MacArthur Boulevard, where the center is
located.
Strader could not be reached for comment Wednesday.
But Beek, who said he met with Strader to discuss the project and
briefly reviewed the traffic study for the expansion, disagreed.
“The city should rather skip the $2 million [in extra money from Koll]
and not increase traffic,” he said. “The $2 million will go pretty fast,
but the traffic will be with us forever.”
Beek said he doesn’t think the project would bring economic benefits
to the city, adding that he didn’t think any expansion of the airport
area was warranted.
“We just don’t want the extra traffic,” he said. “Why do it? It
doesn’t do us any good. We made a plan for that area. We built it. Why
not stick to it?”
Beek also said he is no longer a member of the Greenlight political
action committee after other members asked him to leave because he is
also a member of the city’s general plan update committee. He added that
other Greenlight supporters wanted to keep a “firewall” between the group
and the city committee. The separation was amicable, he said.
Phil Arst, Greenlight’s spokesman, could not be reached for comment
Wednesday.
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