Newport Beach creates new Marinapark lease
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June Casagrande
BALBOA PENINSULA -- Backing off on a proposal that would have roughly
doubled rents at the Marinapark mobile home park, city officials this
week put their stamp of approval on a lease that includes only moderate
rent increases.
City Council members voted unanimously Tuesday to renew the residents’
lease for one year, with two 1-year renewal options. Though the 15
full-time and 41 part-time residents had pushed for a long-term lease, it
was nonetheless a relief for them to learn they wouldn’t be getting the
worst of both worlds: long-term lease rents with only short-term lease
security.
To residents, the city’s last attempt to draft a new lease amounted to
just that. Exercising their legal option to raise the rents there to
market rates, appraisers hired by the city surveyed rents and similar
mobile home parks and came up with the recommendation to roughly double
what the waterfront lots now cost.
Residents countered that these rates were based on the value of a lot
with a long-term lease, and that with no security, there will still be a
mobile home park there in a year and a half. On their behalf, appraiser
William Hansen came up with what he thought was a fair price. In the end,
city officials agreed.
“This is the appraiser that was suggested by the tenant groups,” said
Assistant City Manager Dave Kiff.
Under the new lease, rents will remain the same until Sept. 1. Then
moderate increases will go into effect, based on Hansen’s suggestions.
Waterfront lots that now cost $1,225 a month will go up to $1,550; lots
not on the water that now cost $925 will go up to $1,125; and the $865
lots will go up to $1,050. These are much less than the city’s original
plan to charge $2,300, $1,850 and $1,700, respectively. Future annual
increases will be based on the Consumer Price Index.
The new lease does, however, allow the city to substantially raise the
rents if an owner sells a home there. Then the city would increase rents
by 30% to 50%.
The move brings to a close just one chapter of the contentious
Marinapark story. City officials have expressed hope that a luxury resort
will be built there by Sutherland Talla Hospitality. Residents at the
mobile home park have said that this plan amounts to a violation of the
spirit of their original agreement with the city.
They say that when the first lease was signed in 1985, they agreed
they would vacate if the city one day chose to build a park there. In
recent years, city officials changed the land-use designation from a park
to a “visitor-serving use,” such as a hotel.
Some say this violates the terms of the original agreement by
retroactively changing the risks. Many figured it was a safe bet that the
city would never turn a revenue-generating property into a park. But they
might have calculated the risk differently had they known the city could
turn the land into a for-profit use that would bring tax revenue to the
city.
Marinapark residents called for this story could not be contacted.
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