City may look at legion lease
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June Casagrande
NEWPORT BEACH -- The City Council will consider creating a committee
to review the American Legion’s lease on its Balboa Peninsula property, a
move that could have serious implications for a controversial luxury
resort project at Marinapark.
The site is the center of a debate over a five-star, 156-room resort
that developer Stephen Sutherland wants to build on the city-owned
Marinapark property -- the home to the American Legion Post 291 since
1949. Dominated mainly by a mobile home park, the site also has some
wide-open beach access.
Sutherland’s project includes plans to move the Legionnaires from
their current location at 15th Street to a new hall the developer will
build for them at the opposite end of the lot. For this reason and others
that range from traffic concerns to parking problems to beach access, the
proposed resort has drawn a roar of protest from the community.
While still waiting for the developer to present revised plans for the
hotel, City Council members on Tuesday will vote on whether to create a
committee to examine the legion’s $1-a-year lease on the 10-acre site.
Specifically, the committee would consider whether to change the American
Legion Post’s lease from an annual renewal basis to a longer-term
commitment.
“Right now, the American Legion is on a year-to-year lease, and we
really want to talk to them about it,” City Manager Homer Bludau said.
Last November, council members entered into an exclusive agreement
with the developer. But they said they will support the project only if
the veterans agree to the move.
City Councilman Tod Ridgeway, whose district includes Marinapark, said
the committee likely would include two council members and would also
help guide the council in making a future decision on the hotel plans.
The committee, he said, could help the city stay flexible in its
options until members take a position on what to do with the property.
“I think we will honor a long-term commitment to maintaining the
American Legion on the property,” Ridgeway said. “They’ve had a presence
there for a long time, and we’re committed to maintaining that presence.”
Before a hotel could be built there, the Planning Commission and City
Council would have to approve plans. Then, under the city’s Greenlight
Initiative that requires voter approval of projects large enough to
require an amendment to the city’s general plan, the matter would be put
to a vote of the people.
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