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AT ISSUE: A proposal to build a $30-million luxury hotel on the Balboa
Peninsula could force the American Legion Post 291 to relocate, which has
prompted many residents to oppose the project.
As a Balboa resident on property owned by family since 1927, I feel
qualified to bring to your attention a fact that has not, to my
knowledge, been mentioned in any report, pro or con, on the Sutherland
Talla Hospitality Group’s project here in Newport Beach (Marinapark).
The presentation at the Aug. 22 Newport Beach City Council meeting by
Stephen P. Sutherland gave a clear idea of the proposed luxury resort and
I have to say, it does sound appealing.
I would wish that Sutherland or others in the group could or would
arrange to spend a few days here, on location, during any month,
especially during the summer. As I have mentioned above, no one has
brought out the fact that Balboa Boulevard is indeed a “dead-end” street.
All cars going on the peninsula must exit the same way. Traffic is bad
enough all year long, however, summer can be beyond belief.
We do have a wonderful bay and beautiful beaches and we gladly share
them. But to consciously add to the traffic on a dead-end street seems
not only disadvantageous, it seems like a poor choice of location for
your project.
I wish you success on a more suitable site for your luxury hotel.
RUTH GARSTONE
Balboa Peninsula
Editor’s note: The above item is an open letter to Sutherland Talla
Hospitality Group.
This is a day that will live in infamy. Our elected representatives
sold us down the river. Despite a packed house at City Hall, all of whom
came to speak against the proposed peninsula hotel between 15th and 19th
streets, our City Council voted unanimously (one abstention) to go
forward with Sutherland Talla’s resort hotel.
Folks representing the American Legion, Marinapark Homeowners, Central
Newport Homeowners, Joint Peninsula Homeowners, as well as local
neighbors of the project, were politely listened to for several hours,
then just as politely ignored.
Despite its 77-year history in Newport Beach and historical promises
to be allowed to remain at its present location in perpetuity, the
American Legion is about to be begged, cajoled and bribed into giving up
its site so another new hotel can be added to the gridlock we now
endure.
This 156-room hotel with spa and dock access for visiting yachtsmen,
we are told, will generate no more traffic than is presently blocking
access of emergency vehicles as well as ordinary citizens. Oh, yes, and
the upscale, very expensive spa and yachting facility will provide more
beach access for the common folk, too. Yeah, right.
It’s hard not to be sarcastic, angry, disillusioned and disappointed
with a council that is supposed to be representing the residents of this
city. Terrance Phillips’ column in the Pilot was right (“We can’t let our
precious harbor commodity slip away,” Aug. 21). Soon we will have to be
tourists or millionaires to enjoy our beaches. This is just one more
example of why we have no alternative to Greenlight. Greenlight is our
last chance to control what Newport Beach is to become.
MARTIN AND MILDRED LITKE
Newport Beach
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