Chamber sides in favor of resort
- Share via
Alicia Robinson
With the battle lines drawn over the proposed Marinapark resort
project, the Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce has officially taken
sides in favor of the resort. Voters will decide in November whether
to change the city’s general plan to allow development of the resort.
Opponents have argued that the luxury hotel and time-share units
will be a profitless boondoggle that robs the public of waterfront
space. On the front page of the chamber’s August/September
newsletter, the group’s board of directors came out as a strong
proponent of the Marinapark project, touting it as a financial
benefit to the city and one that will improve public facilities. As
part of the project, developer Stephen Sutherland has promised to
build a new facility for the Girl Scouts, rebuild some public tennis
courts and help finance remodeling of American Legion Post 291.
The chamber often takes positions on legislative matters and has
stated its views on other November ballot issues, chamber President
Richard Luehrs said.
“By and large, we think the project has some merit,” Luehrs said.
“It’ll be a nice little boost for the Balboa Peninsula, and it
deserves serious consideration.”
Sutherland has done a good job explaining how public access to the
beach will be maintained, Luehrs said, adding that it’s questionable
how much access people have to the area now because of the mobile
home park that occupies part of the property.
“In my opinion, [there’s] not very much [access], because you’ve
had a trailer park there with fencing and signs up that say ‘private
property,’” he said.
DeVore bones up
on debating skills
Republican 70th Assembly District candidate Chuck DeVore spent
last week with like-minded conservatives, learning about the
principles of our nation’s founders at the Claremont Institute’s
Lincoln Fellowship program, held at the Four Seasons Hotel in Newport
Beach.
DeVore and nine other Lincoln fellows attended eight days of
seminars on topics such as the issues at stake in the Lincoln-Douglas
debates of 1858 and the origins of contemporary political thought.
“There are certain ways that I came out on issues that I kind of
instinctively or by tradition came out on,” DeVore said. “Now I
understand much more firmly the philosophical underpinnings that
resulted in those opinions that I held.”
The nation’s founders believed it’s not the job of government to
solve the world’s problems, DeVore said, but he does not have a
problem with the U.S. war in Iraq.
“There’s a difference [between] being free from anarchy or tyranny
or despotism and having the government provide for your every need,”
he said.
Calling for better information-sharing
Thomas H. Kean, chairman of the Sept. 11 commission, and J. Cofer
Black, federal counterterrorism coordinator, were among panelists at
a hearing Tuesday held by Rep. Chris Cox to discuss the commission’s
recommendations on information-sharing.
Cox, who chairs the House Homeland Security Committee, opened the
hearing with a speech praising the commission for its work and noting
that Congress has made a strong bipartisan effort to respond to the
threat of terrorism, according to his published remarks. The
commission’s report was critical of Congress for resisting
reorganization to handle international terrorist threats and for
allowing oversight of security issues to weaken, criticisms Cox said
Congress should now address.
“The failure to share information and to collaborate against
terrorism, the report asserts, also resulted from a broader failure
to align priorities between the federal government and the Congress,”
Cox said. “As I view it, that is not so much a condemnation of the
past as a call to reform for the future.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.