NEWPORT BEACH CITY COUNCIL WRAP-UP
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-- Compiled by June Casagrande
Here are some of the decisions coming out of the Newport Beach City
Council meeting on Feb. 26.
WHAT HAPPENED:
An item that lumped in a lease for the Girl Scout House on Balboa
Peninsula with a lease at the nearby Marinapark mobile home park didn’t
turn out to be such a good pairing after all. While the question of
whether to approve a one-year lease extension for the Girl Scout Council
of Orange County proved a no-brainer, the Marinapark lease was a little
trickier. Marinapark residents and their attorney protested the short,
one-year term that also accompanies rent increases of about 100%.
WHAT IT MEANS:
The Girl Scouts, who have already been promised a new home on the site
in the event that a luxury resort is built there, can rest easy for at
least a year, if not for decades to come. The Marinapark lease
discussion, though, revealed some factual inconsistencies between
residents’ account of their original agreement and city officials’
account. Led by Councilman Gary Adams, members agreed that staff should
provide them with enough information to determine what’s fair and legal.
WHAT THEY SAID:
“Marinapark is my home, and it’s all I have,” resident Daniel Shea
said. “It would be a tremendous hardship for you to increase these rents
at such a pace.”
Vote: 7-0 to approve the Girl Scout House lease extension.
WHAT HAPPENED:
A contract with Waste Management of Orange County to pick up trash in
Newport Coast set off a complex, passionate debate. Some residents said
the city’s plan to pay for the coast community residents’ trash pickup
conflicts with city rules and unfairly favors the wealthy, newly annexed
community. Officials responded that, as most other areas in the city
where residents get free trash pickup, the costs are paid out of taxes.
Taxes collected from Newport Coast will indirectly pay for that service,
they said.
WHAT IT MEANS:
The city will take over paying the trash hauler $13.03 per home to
pick up trash curbside in Newport Coast.
Vote: 7/0
WHAT HAPPENED:
A contract for $40,603.63 was approved to buy 53 computers from Dell
Marketing.
WHAT IT MEANS:
The computers will replace aging machines in the city’s public
libraries.
Vote: 7/0
WHAT HAPPENED:
City parks that are in high demand during peak summer hours have new
restrictions on when and who can reserve them.
WHAT IT MEANS:
Reservations at Inspiration Point, Lookout Point and Peninsula Park
will be allowed only after the Labor Day weekend until just before
Memorial Day weekend. At those parks, as well as at Ensign View Park and
Galaxy View Park, no reservations will be allowed for groups of 20 or
more.
Vote: 7/0
SOUNDING OFF
“I don’t think it’s appropriate for you to come in here and denigrate
other elected officials.” -- City Councilwoman Norma Glover to airport
activist Russell Niewiarowski, who placed on the overhead monitor an
image of Irvine Mayor Larry Agran depicted as Pinocchio, wearing a button
that read, “I lie.”
NEXT MEETING
WHAT: Newport Beach City Council meeting
WHEN: 7 p.m. March 12
WHERE: Newport Beach City Hall, 3300 Newport Blvd.
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