Corona del Mar could be split in redistricting
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June Casagrande
As city leaders use high-tech software to redraw City Council
district boundaries, one unpleasant reality is becoming ever more
clear: Corona del Mar will not stand as a single district.
Every scenario suggested by the computer and every alternative
envisioned by members of a council subcommittee requires slicing up
this cohesive community that now comprises District 6.
“I don’t want to alarm anyone yet. We’re still looking at
alternatives, but we’re not seeing any way to keep Corona del Mar all
in one district,” said Mayor Steve Bromberg, chairman of a council
subcommittee overseeing the first stages of redistricting.
Subcommittee members hope to present to the full City Council four
proposals for redrawing the city’s seven election districts. The
districts, which are supposed to contain roughly the same number of
residents, have been severely lopsided since the city annexed Newport
Coast in January 2002. About 7,000 residents were added to John
Heffernan’s District 7, which already contained about 9,500 people.
Now, leaders are looking for ways to balance out the districts. But
every scenario they can come up with requires slicing up Corona del
Mar.
“It would be a shame to break up Corona del Mar,” said Bill
Sinclair, president of the Corona del Mar Chamber of Commerce. “We’re
a little beach enclave. We call it the Village. I’d hate to see it
split up.”
Yet there may be no other way. The most painless proposal could be
to cut the community of Irvine Terrace out of the Corona del Mar
council district and add it neighboring District 5, which now
stretches from Bonita Canyon to Balboa Island and is represented by
Bromberg.
But that’s far from set in stone. The matter will likely be the
subject of a council study session sometime soon. Eventually, it will
go on a regular council agenda for final approval. Residents will
have a chance to participate in discussions at both of these
meetings.
Corona del Mar has a long and colorful history since its
incorporation into Newport Beach in 1923. It’s one of those parts of
the city -- like the Balboa Peninsula or Balboa Island -- with its
own identity and character. Though the ZIP Code and other factors
that help define that character would remain unchanged, residents and
business leaders might still have reason to protest district
boundaries that take a bite out of their community.
Dick Nichols, the councilman for Corona del Mar, was out of the
state on Wednesday and could not be reached for comment.
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