Green light or red light on a public vote?
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It’s only fitting that the City Council has sent Stephen Sutherland’s
Marinapark resort plan to the voters.
In a sense, that should have been what opponents of the project
wanted.
But it hasn’t been, and that leaves us scratching our heads and
wondering if Greenlight advocates are playing a game more reminiscent
of the children’s playground game, red light, green light.
If Sutherland’s 110-room luxury resort on the Balboa Peninsula,
between 15th and 18th streets, will be such a death knell for the
area’s residential and recreational character, as the pro-Greenlight,
anti-resort bloc argues, why is there such resistance to it going to
voters?
Granted, the ballot this November will be stuffed with measures.
Voters will have to do their homework on a litany of propositions.
They will be overwhelmed if they don’t. But if the property on which
Sutherland wants to build is such a precious jewel and should remain
untouched by a resort, it seems to us that opponents should have
confidence that voters will save what Protect Our Parks founder Tom
Billings called “a public community asset and the last public
waterfront beach park of its kind on the Balboa Peninsula.”
That’s a lofty claim, and an important one to make. Officials
should take care to preserve vital recreation space and protect it
from commercial interests that threaten to damage an area.
But this space is not to be preserved only for one neighborhood.
Las Arenas Park, which would be reconfigured under Sutherland’s plan,
is a public park, not just a park for a group of homeowners, or for
Greenlight supporters.
We respect Billings’ efforts to keep Sutherland honest, but if
this debate is about the public’s right to enjoy and live in what is
indeed a beautiful peninsula area, then surely the public should be
able to weigh in on the resort plan.
And that’s the way one would think opponents would want it. But
some opponents, which include Greenlight advocates, vigorously tried
to stop the project’s environmental report from being certified by
the City Council, thus keeping the proposal from a vote in November.
We find that curious given that Greenlight was founded on the
premise that “controlled growth” in the city should be approved by
the voters.
Greenlight backers say not enough information has been fleshed out
in the project’s environmental report. And they argue that not enough
public hearings have been offered by the city for the public to
absorb Sutherland’s plan and to make an informed decision. But this
refrain of not enough time, not enough information -- given the
intensity of outrage to the project -- could have been argued
forever. At least now the public -- the voters -- will watch the
sides battle it out in what promises to be a vigorous campaign for
your vote. In the end, maybe that will be what serves the voters
best. Not a game of red light, green light.
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