New City Hall sounds like same old problems
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DOLORES OTTING
* EDITOR’S NOTE: Today the Daily Pilot begins a new Forum page
feature, “Watchdog,” in which city activists will be given a regular
opportunity to put a microscope on the action of our two city’s civic
leaders.
Like many of you, I watched the last Newport Beach City Council
meeting from home and it was well into the night -- close to 11 p.m.
(so what else is new) -- before one of the hottest and most expensive
projects to hit a city agenda in Newport finally appeared before the
public for discussion: the new City Hall.
As the City Council discussion ensued we learned that there was a
conflict of interest, and due to this “conflict” the city deferred
from executing the agreement with Griffin Structures Inc. for almost
two years so that this “conflict” could be resolved. I kept waiting
for them to explain to the public what this conflict of interest was,
but it was not revealed. They kept talking about it, but never
telling us about it. At this point I was beginning to wonder whether
I was watching a scene from “The OC,” but no, it was the City Council
-- the Newport Beach City Council that is supposed to conduct the
business of the public in public. The preamble to the Brown Act
states: “The legislature finds and declares that the public
commissions, boards and council and other public agencies in this
state exist to aid in the conduct of the people’s business. It is the
intent of the law that their actions be taken openly and that their
deliberations be conducted openly.”
And more importantly, the Brown Act states: “The people of this
state do not yield their sovereignty to the agencies which serve
them. The people, in delegating authority, do not give their public
servants the right to decide what is good for the people to know and
what is not good for them to know. The people insist on remaining
informed so that they may retain control over the instruments they
have created.”
So here we are embarking on a $45-million-plus project, per
Councilmember John Heffernan’s count, for a new City Hall, a new fire
station and a new parking structure that no resident in the city has
asked for. I have gone to the parking structure at Lido Village that
is less than three tenths of a mile driving distance from City Hall
and have counted the cars parked there many times. Out of the 371
parking spaces I was lucky to find 120 cars parked there. How is this
new parking structure going to be any different? What is the return
to us, the residents, for this $45-million debt that will likely be
increased by cost overruns and interest and will probably double by
the time we pay it off?
If this is what we, the residents really want, then there are
empty buildings in Newport Beach that could service all of the above
and even a new police station, since we can rest assured that will be
in our horizon. However, since it appears that it is OK for our
children to go to school in trailers year after year, it should be OK
for our public servants.
Hold on to your wallets for we seem to be on a fast-track program
to get this project done. I just wish I knew who we were contracting
with since we started with Griffin Advisors, went onto Griffin
Holdings and now we are with Griffin Structures. I guess we like
playing the name game in Newport Beach, which is shades of Marina
Park.
* DOLORES OTTING is a longtime city activist who ran for the
council last fall.
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