Committee to develop coastal standards
Paul Clinton
NEWPORT BEACH -- Mayor Tod Ridgeway has picked the members of an ad
hoc committee that will craft long-awaited development standards for the
city’s coastline.
A six-man committee, set to be formally put together at Tuesday’s City
Council meeting, will be charged with hashing out the standards with the
California Coastal Commission.
Councilmen Steve Bromberg and John Heffernan are tentatively set to
join Ridgeway on the committee, which will also include three planning
commissioners -- Mike Kranzley, Earl McDaniel and Ed Selich.
The state agency has ordered the city to complete the standards --
called the Local Coastal Program, or LCP -- by the end of June 2003. The
coastal commission has set out to put coastal cities without a coastal
program in line with the state’s 1972 Coastal Act, which requires such
standards in coastal cities.
The city has been inching toward certifying a program since the early
1980s, Ridgeway said.
“It’s just something that has been in the works for 20-plus years,â€
Ridgeway said. “We’ll get serious for once.â€
The city adopted a land-use plan, the first step in the process, in
January 1990.
Environmentalists are lauding the city for starting the formal process
of developing the standards by forming the committee, after many starts
and stops.
“The city has a long track record of dragging its feet,†Orange County
CoastKeeper Garry Brown said. “We just applaud the city for sticking with
their commitment to do an LCP.â€
Brown added that he has written a number of letters to city officials
asking them to put the program into place.
The coastal commission turned up the heat on the city in October with
a letter informing city officials that they needed to put a program in
place in slightly more than 18 months.
The Oct. 5 letter also singled out several problems in the way Newport
Beach regulates development in the coastal zone, including bluff-top
building and access to public beaches.
The program could smooth the road for homeowners who hope to make
minor changes to their dock or seaside house. They would be able to
one-stop shop at the city’s planning desk, instead of waiting for a
hearing before the coastal commission. Approvals from the state body have
been known to take six months or more.
“Instead of having to go to the coastal commission, citizens could
come to Newport Beach,†Ridgeway said. “We are deputized to approve that
land use.â€
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