A firestorm on Balboa Island
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An unexpected firestorm erupted on the top of a two-story home at the
final Newport Beach Planning Commission meeting in May.
During discussion about whether to approve construction on a
Balboa Island home that goes above what city code allows, an
incredulous City Councilman Dick Nichols stood before the commission
and said: “It sure doesn’t look good. It looks like you’re taking
money for this one.”
This statement, that someone might be taking a bribe,
understandably upset members of the commission, as well as others in
City Hall and within the city’s government. Nichols’ colleagues on
the council are taking it so seriously that it may result in his
being sanctioned.
These groups are right in being upset, but it is important that
any anger and most certainly any punishment be handled properly and
not get lost in related, but ultimately tangential, arguments about
Nichols’ right to speak his mind or his duty to serve his
constituents.
This is not a case of freedom of speech or an example of a
councilman doing what was best for the community. Nichols has his own
opportunity to speak at council meetings and his own direct line to
City Hall to work on behalf of Newport Beach residents. It is a case
of propriety and civility, of a councilman stepping out of bounds and
making unfounded and unsupported charges in a public setting. Had
Nichols had proof of these serious charges, the firestorm would be
burning elsewhere. But he did not.
In a letter to the Daily Pilot after the meeting, Nichols wrote:
“I am new to the city government.” At some point, being new is no
longer an excuse for such serious missteps.
He also wrote, “I ran for office to truly represent the residents.
This requires making waves that are unpopular with the entrenched
powers-that-be.” That certainly can be the case. But those waves will
crash into nothing when unleashed in Nichols’ way.
Should Nichols’ be sanctioned? Early evidence seems to create a
case that he should, but like the City Council, residents should
withhold judgment until the city looks into the incident further.
On a wider level, this incident provides Newport Beach with the
opportunity to put in place a censure policy in the event anything
like it occurs again. Such a policy would ensure that any misdeeds
would be handled fairly and impartially. Its creation should be part
of the city’s discussion.
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