Mayor says development needed
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June Casagrande
NEWPORT BEACH -- Shifting to full throttle his campaign to promote
responsible development in the city, Mayor Tod Ridgeway’s speech at the
annual Speak Up Newport Mayor’s Dinner hammered home the point that no
growth is not an option.
“We must rely on sources of revenue such as the transient occupancy
tax and the sales tax to pay for and maintain the high level of city
services that our citizens have become accustomed to and, quite frankly,
demand,” Ridgeway told the crowd at the Newport Beach Marriott Hotel.
It’s a point he has been trying to drive home since he took over as
mayor Jan. 1. And it’s a position that, in the era of Greenlight, is
hotly controversial.
While pro- and anti-Greenlight factions watch the ever-deepening
divide form between them over the slow-growth initiative, Ridgeway has
stood firm, along with the City Council majority, on his belief that some
development is necessary. He took this a step further Thursday night,
defending the council against perceptions it is too cozy with big
business.
“The City Council involvement with big business is o7 de minimusf7
compared to our ongoing community contacts with resident associations,
environmental groups and good old-fashioned concerned citizens,” he said,
going so far as to draw distinctions between older, wealthier residents
who tend to oppose change and younger families who would like to live and
work in Newport Beach but are forced out by economics.
“The gap between such viewpoints is heightened during good economic
times in socially diverse areas,” he said. “Wealthier groups become even
more affluent and less inclined to tolerate any development, even though
it might benefit all constituents by providing an additional revenue
source.”
Anchored by this central theme, Ridgeway also talked about a number of
other issues crucial to the city. The No. 1 priority, he said, is
extending the John Wayne Airport settlement agreement, which imposes some
limitations on airport noise and operations. Updating the city’s general
plan is also a top priority, he said, as is achieving better water
quality and maintaining Newport Beach’s first-rate quality of life.
But the biggest challenge, he concluded, will be finding ways to unify
Newport Beach residents and institutions -- at least enough to make
headway in all these arenas.
“I am asking for everyone to come to the table with ideas and
solutions,” Ridgeway said. “This will take cooperation, sacrifice and
tolerance to reach a consensus.”
* June Casagrande covers Newport Beach. She may be reached at (949)
574-4232 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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