Districting, desalination and more
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City could be divided into five council districts
1A battle over the structure of city government and how council
members are elected has consumed and divided Huntington Beach.
The controversial measure that would divide the city into five
City Council districts and reduce the governing body’s number from
seven to five with its members elected by district was first
introduced in March 2002 by former Assemblyman Scott Baugh. But the
battle really began to heat up in January when Huntington Beach City
Atty. Jennifer McGrath advised the city to sue City Clerk Connie
Brockway to invalidate a controversial initiative.
McGrath said that by suing Brockway -- along with the initiative’s
author, Baugh -- a court judge could order the city clerk to remove
the measure from a March 2004 ballot.
In July, a Superior Court judge ruled that the initiative is not
legally flawed as the council alleged and so it would be on the
ballot.
In an effort to fight the measure, Councilman Dave Sullivan in
November introduced a plan to put a competing measure on the ballot
that would slice the city into seven council districts, with members
elected by district.
The plan would compete with an initiative already on the ballot,
known as the Fair District Initiative. Either measures, if approved
by voters, would eliminate residents’ ability to vote for members at
large. Sullivan said that while he ultimately supports the status
quo, he considered the seven-district plan be vastly superior to five
districts, which he felt was not enough members to get the job done.
Ultimately, the council decided against adding the second measure.
And so, in December, a residents’ group kicked off a grass-roots
campaign to fight the Fair District Initiative.
Organizers of the Huntington Beach Concerned Voter’s Coalition
plan to educate the public on the dangers of creating council
districts and to encourage volunteers to join the battle against
districts.
And the battle rages on.
Another plant for
the Southeast area
2A proposal to build the nation’s largest desalination plant in
Huntington Beach was snuffed out by the City Council in early
December, but it could return, revamped, to the dais as early as this
spring.
The council’s decision marked a resounding victory for the
hundreds of residents who packed the council chambers during six
months of Planning Commission and City Council meetings, tirelessly
speaking out against the plant.
The $250-million project would draw seawater from the AES power
plant and treat it to produce 50 million gallons of fresh drinking
water daily, enough to quench the thirst of 112,000 families. The
potable water would then be sent through a 10-mile transmission
pipeline from Huntington Beach to the Mesa Consolidated Water
District in Costa Mesa. From there, it would be delivered to other
parts of the county.
Advocates claimed that the additional water the plant would bring
to the region is sorely needed in the face of shrinking resources and
drought. The project, they argued, would bring revenue to the
cash-starved city and visually improve the site with modern buildings
and tasteful landscaping.
Critics of the plant said it would be harmful to marine life and
an eyesore to an already over-industrialized area. They feared that
it would worsen water quality in an area already plagued with high
levels of bacteria.
Mayor Debbie Cook, who cast a dissenting vote, also argued that
the city could lose all tax revenue if the plant was purchased by a
public agency, such as the Orange County Water District.
December’s council decision dealt a harsh blow to Poseidon
Resources Corp., the company proposing the plant, but its officials
say they won’t be deterred. Billy Owens, Poseidon’s senior vice
president, says the company plans to return soon with an updated
environmental report.
State budget crisis calls on City Hall
3The budgetary ax cut deep into Surf City’s coffers this year,
claiming more than two dozen employee positions and several city
programs as casualties.
The City Council voted July 7 to cut 37 positions and several
programs to cover an $11.5 million shortfall caused by state losses,
increasing mandates and a sluggish economy.
Funding was pulled from the beloved Sister City program, the
concert band and the city’s cable TV station. Funding to engineering
services, safety programs, education programs and the senior outreach
program was reduced.
The Public Works Department suffered the greatest blow. It lost
15% of its operating budget and was forced to scale back upkeep of
city parks and trees, building maintenance operations, weed abatement
and street repairs.
While much had to go, the City Council and residents managed to
save certain positions and programs, considered vital to the city.
At a June 30 meeting, they rescued a fire engine station, two code
enforcement officers, a marine safety officer and two satellite
library branches from the chopping block. Then, in September, the
council approved a rash of fee increases, which will bring in an
additional $3 million annually. The new fees cover a variety of
services, ranging from high-rise inspections to junior lifeguards to
room rentals at the community center.
Of the new fees, an estimated $1 million comes from public works,
$700,000 from the Police Department, $550,000 from the Planning
Department, $200,000 from the Fire Department, $200,000 from
Community Services, and $20,000 from the city clerk’s office.
Cutting $11.5 million from the budget and laying off more than two
dozen employees was the council’s most challenging task this year,
former Mayor Connie Boardman said.
Tax refund could cost Surf City $27 million
4Huntington Beach has agreed to pay as much as $27 million in
refunds for a tax it collected illegally to help pay for employee
pensions.
The City Council, in August, finally accepted a court ruling that
the tax violated state law, but only after a four-year legal battle.
In 1999, local government watchdog Chuck Scheid and the Howard
Jarvis Taxpayer’s Assn. challenged the city’s authority to override a
cap on property taxes. Scheid and the association accused the city of
violating Proposition 13, an initiative passed by voters in 1978 that
capped the tax cities could levy on a property at 1% of its assessed
value.
For about 40 years, the city charged an additional 0.5% override
to pay for employee retirement benefits, citing an exception that
allowed cities to override the limit for debts incurred before
Proposition 13 was passed. The city stopped collecting the tax in
July 2001.
A superior court judge sided with the taxpayers group in 2001, and
this summer, an appellate court upheld the ruling.
The city must now pay millions of dollars to residents who paid
the tax between 1997 and 2001.
The verdict was a harsh financial blow to the city, coming only
weeks after the City Council slashed $11.5 million from its general
fund by eliminating programs and laying off employees.
More than 39,000 property owners have already filed claim forms
for refunds, which the city plans to finance by issuing bonds.
At the urging of Councilman Dave Sullivan, notices were sent out
in the city’s water bill to inform residents about the refund. His
proposal to put advertisements in the Huntington Beach Independent
and the Huntington Beach Wave failed.
The city is now collecting and reviewing requests and hopes to
begin issuing checks by summer 2004. Jan. 4 is the deadline to submit
claim forms.
The air up there is crowded and noisy
5Ongoing frustrations over flight activity from the Long Beach
Airport intensified in Surf City this year as the number of flights
began to soar.
The number of daily flights crossing over Huntington Beach have
more than doubled since JetBlue Airways grabbed all available slots
for commercial flights in August 2001.
As activity has grown, residents have become increasingly
irritated.
Residents aired their complaints at a series of meetings held by
Long Beach Airport officials.
The biggest complaint at the meetings was of noise pollution from
the planes, which some residents claim are lower and louder than they
were in years past. Some Huntington Beach homeowners said they were
forced to halt conversations as planes passed overhead.
Many residents left the meetings feeling that little had been
accomplished.
Airport officials insisted that planes are flying at or above the
required altitude and are no louder or lower than they were before,
just more frequent.
Since August 2001, the number of daily flights for planes that
weigh more than 75,000 pounds has jumped from 14 to 41. Of these,
three are cargo aircraft; two are UPS, two Fed-Ex and one Airborne
Express. The rest are commercial flights.
All flights are forced to comply with a strict ordinance, which
was finalized in May 1995. The ordinance is based on a point system
in which varying noise levels are allowed at different hours. Less
noise is allowed at night, for example, than in the middle of the
day.
Airport workers frequently check the 18 noise monitors positioned
around the perimeter of the airport to ensure that planes are
adhering to rules for allowable noise levels.
The airport exceeded its allowable noise cap for 2003, and
therefore, no new flights will be added this year.
Public TV station stays the course
6A high-priced bidding war ended this year when the Coast
Community College District decided to sell KOCE-TV to the station’s
foundation for $32 million.
In October, trustees voted 4 to 1 to sell Orange County’s only
local news station to the KOCE-TV Foundation, a nonprofit private
corporation that exists to raise and spend money on behalf of the
station, rejecting offers from various religious broadcasters and
other private entities.
Many feared that a sale to another bidder would change the
station’s format of local news and educational programming. KOCE has
been the county’s only local news source since the Orange County News
Channel went under in September 2001.
While stations have made unsuccessful bids for KOCE in the past,
it was not until the college district felt the blow of major budget
cuts last year that it decided it could no longer foot the $2 million
of the station’s $7.9-million annual budget.
KOCE-TV initially entered a $10-million joint bid with Los Angeles
affiliate, KCET-TV, the lowest bid in the original round. Religious
broadcasters Daystar Television Network and Costa Mesa’s Trinity
Broadcasting Network came in with the initial high bids of $25
million each.
The partnership dissolved, however, because of time constraints.
Foundation members called on local leaders in business and education,
including Broadcom Corp. Chairman Henry Samueli and Peter Ueberroth,
former Major League Baseball commissioner and organizer of 1984
Olympics in Los Angeles, to gather support and funds. The KOCE
Foundation then submitted the $32-million sweetened bid, with $8
million up front and the rest in a long-term note, just before the
Oct. 8 deadline.
Trustees chose the foundation, the only bidder promising to keep
the station’s PBS format, as the highest responsible bidder at their
Oct. 15 meeting. Almavision Hispanic Network had submitted a slightly
higher bid, but the trustees could not agree that the broadcaster had
proof it had the money.
In December, the college district board cast its final vote to go
ahead with the sale of the station to the foundation, keeping it a
public broadcasting channel.
Fireworks don’t top off the Fourth of July
7Although the famous Fourth of July parade was as grand as ever,
Independence Day was not the same in Surf City this year.
Once the floats had gone by and the trumpets and trombones were
packed away, residents were left with no finale to their celebration.
It was a year without fireworks.
With Huntington Beach High School’s field being renovated, the
evening’s fireworks display had to relocate. The city’s Fourth of
July Commission had studied the various options. Marina High School
was considered, but lacked the parking to support the anticipated
crowds. Central Park West, Golden West College and Boeing were also
considered, but deemed unsuitable.
Undeterred, the committee came up with what it thought was the
ideal solution, one that would allow for grandest display in the West
Coast and the second-largest fireworks show in the country, they said
-- the beach.
The City Council, however, decided by a narrow margin in February
to reject the commission’s request and cancel the fireworks display
in 2003.
Many residents were shocked and appalled. The council had nixed
the idea because it feared a repeat of civil disturbances. Despite
assurances from Police Chief Ken Small, some council members did not
think authorities could control crowds at the beach.
The decision stuck despite residents’ complaints. While many
people reported leaving the city that night and heading to watch
displays to the north, south and inland, the sounds of illegal
fireworks rocked many neighborhoods. And when the morning of July 5
dawned, streets were littered with debris from bottle rockets and
other fireworks not permitted by law in Huntington.
Parents are paying for a little less class
8A group of parents in the Huntington Beach City School District
decided they wanted their children’s class sizes small and expressed
their willingness to pay for it.
Nearly 100 parents showed up for a November meeting held by a
committee of district parents called the Community for Class Size
Reduction. The committee asked parents in the district to donate $200
for each child attending its eight schools, regardless of the grade.
If $200 came in for every one of the district’s 5,000 students, then
the committee would raise $1 million. They’ll be happy with half of
that, committee member Joe Churilla said, but $920,000 would fully
restore the 20-1 student-to-teacher ratio in kindergarten through the
third grade.
The group needs to raise $205,000 only to retain small class sizes
in the first and second grades.
By the end of the meeting, parents had pledged $13,600. After
another meeting three weeks later that attracted about 25 parents,
the group had raised more than $20,000.
The group needs to raise the money by mid-April to ensure the
district has enough notice to be able to retain its teachers. If the
goal is not met, the group, which is holding the funds through the
Huntington Beach Education Foundation, will roll over the money and
try again next year, officials said.
Parents in the group have said that even if they do reach any of
their financial goals for small class sizes, the issue will return
annually because of the state budget crunch.
“Unfortunately, this is just year one,” Churilla said.
Hyatt opens on altered coastline
9It created hundreds of job and promises to bring in millions for
the city of Huntington Beach. The Hyatt Regency Huntington Beach
Resort & Spa, which opened in January after a two-decade process,
also altered the city’s coastline forever.
Steve Bone, who owns the resort and conference center with
hotelier Robert Mayer, came up with the vision for the low-rise
15-acre Andalusian-style seaside resort after the 20-story hotel
tower he had first proposed for the site two decades ago met with
opposition.
On Jan. 30, the 15-acre luxury resort held its grand opening at
last.
With 517 guestrooms -- most of which offer views of the Pacific
Ocean -- 110,000 square feet of meeting and function space, a
20,000-square-foot spa and fitness center, three restaurants and an
on-site retail plaza, it is said to be one of the largest resort and
conference centers on California’s coast between San Diego and Santa
Barbara.
The $120-million resort also promises what city leaders want --
tourism and new business in Surf City, as well as a wealth of direct
financial benefits.
City leaders grappling with a budget crunch are expecting annual
revenue from the bed tax on the resort to come in at $700,000 in this
first year it was open, $1.8 million in 2004 and $2 million in 2005.
It was also expected to bring in $1 million in annual revenue
because the resort is in a redevelopment area and pays 100% of its
property taxes to the city. The resort was also expected to generate
approximately $125,000 a year in sales tax. Additional streams of
revenue include annual rent payments to City Hall of $25,000 in 2003,
and then $75,000 and $150,000 in the next two years, respectively.
The city’s Redevelopment Agency owns the land.
Pacific City still just a vision for Downtown
10The first bullets of opposition were fired at a sprawling
development project that, if approved, would transform the face of
Downtown Huntington Beach.
A neighborhood group formed this year to serve as watchdogs for
the proposed Pacific City project, slated to be built on the 31-acre
field bordered by Pacific Coast Highway, Atlanta Avenue, and
Huntington and First streets.
The massive project would include a luxury resort, 516 residential
townhouses, upscale shopping, restaurants and office space. Plans
show the area spotted with swimming pools, parks and tree-lined
pedestrian walkways that would lead to the retail promenade and to
Downtown Huntington Beach.
Pacific City’s residential district would have two-, three- and
four-story condominiums, and the retail section would offer specialty
food outlets, outdoor dining, a day spa, a yoga center and a live
entertainment venue.
The residential and commercial portions would include two levels
of subterranean parking.
The Pacific City Action Coalition, a group of homeowners who live
close to the proposed site, have banded together to raise concerns
about the project’s effects on health, the environment and the
surrounding neighborhood’s quality of life.
Group members say they have no bone to pick with the project
itself but want all potential health and safety hazards addressed.
Nearly two dozen oil wells were removed years ago, leaving traces
of oily residue in their place.
The group’s primary concern is the site, formerly a Chevron oil
field, isn’t contaminated with toxins that could be inhaled by nearby
residents, once grading and construction begins.
The Chevron Corp. is responsible for thorough testing and cleanup
of the property, which will be overseen by the Huntington Beach Fire
Department.
City officials have assured residents that development won’t begin
until testing is complete and a full cleanup plan has been drafted by
Chevron and approved by the city.
The group also fears that increased traffic from Pacific City will
clog surrounding streets and take up residential parking spaces.
City planners said that cleanup at the site will begin early this
year.
The project still needs to be approved by the Planning Commission
and the City Council.
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