Newport considers new rules
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June Casagrande
Responding to pressure by members of the Greenlight Committee, the
city might change the way it measures hotels’ effects on the
community. But city officials deny that the move is in response to
lawsuit threats by the Greenlight group.
On Feb. 10, the City Council will discuss whether to include
square footage as a consideration when weighing hotel projects.
Historically, the city has followed a formula of the Manual of the
Institute of Transportation Engineers that estimates hotel traffic
based on the number of rooms. The city’s Greenlight Initiative
measures new projects by using square footage. But when city
officials and Greenlight leaders were hammering out how to implement
the initiative, the city decided that hotel projects would be
measured by the number of rooms instead of square footage.
Next month’s council meeting could change all that.
“We had a gentlemen’s agreement with the Greenlight people that,
if this wasn’t working out, we would revisit it,” said Mayor Tod
Ridgeway, who participated in the talks three years ago on how to
measure hotels.
City officials were uncertain whether new guidelines would apply
to the Regent Newport Beach Resort planned at Marinapark on the
Balboa Peninsula. Council members agreed last year that they did not
believe the hotel triggered a Greenlight vote, but that it should be
decided by the people anyway. The matter is expected to appear on the
November ballot.
It’s also unclear whether next month’s council decision would
affect the Marinapark project.
“It’s kind of splitting hairs in my book,” Ridgeway said. “The
people will decide that project either way.”
City Atty. Bob Burnham said he believes that changes to guidelines
might affect whether the Marinapark project is characterized as a
Greenlight vote or as a council-mandated vote.
Greenlight leaders last week threatened to sue the city over this
matter, saying that it set a precedent for the city to bypass
Greenlight on future hotel projects.
John Buttolph, a spokesman for Greenlight, said he still believes
that the Marinapark project balloting should be acknowledged as a
Greenlight vote.
“I am encouraged by the city’s apparent willingness to bring their
guidelines into compliance with the letter of the law,” Buttolph
said. “The devil’s in the details, and we’ll just have to wait and
see what the city does.”
Burnham said that the he has been considering revisiting the hotel
measures since November, when Buttolph wrote to the city with
concerns about the Marinapark project.
“My response to your ‘requests’ is not based on, or a reaction to,
your threat of litigation,” Burnham wrote to an attorney representing
Greenlight. “That said, this office does believe, based on analysis
in your letter, that the public might benefit from a modification to
the council policies.”
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
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