Group fights for its right to party
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June Casagrande
Do some city policies parallel the brutal rule of Saddam Hussein? Do
a hammer and sickle on a red flag make an apt symbol for Newport? The
Web site FreeNewport.com answers yes to both.
The site and a fledgling group of residents by the same name
appeared on the local political scene about two months ago to fight
what they see as some ill-conceived and iron-fisted city policies.
Topping their list of gripes is the city’s crackdown of Fourth of
July partying in West Newport.
But spokesman Brian Clarkson said the group plans to fight for its
version of freedom on a number of fronts. Noisy police helicopter
patrols, alcohol sale and delivery restrictions that “are nothing
short of prohibition” and city policies they say are designed to
drive bars out of the area are also raising the FreeNewport’s ire.
“Our mission is to inform, educate and motivate the residents of
West Newport as to what’s going on,” Clarkson said.
For example, he said, the city’s approach to Fourth of July
problems is all wrong. While city leaders decry statistics like the
162 arrests and 1,344 citations handed out in West Newport last
Independence Day, Clarkson said this paints a skewed picture.
“Consider the percentages,” he said. By his math, of the 50,000
visitors who descend on West Newport for the holiday, arrests
represent only 0.32%, which he says isn’t so bad.
The group also challenges the city’s emphasis on the cost of
policing the area for the holiday. The $90,000 cost of extra police
is easily offset by the sales tax revenues and fines issued on the
holiday, according to estimates on the group’s Web site.
“They’re misinforming the residents,” Clarkson said, adding that
the group has dozens of supporters. “This really isn’t good reason to
go putting all those laws into effect. If the problem is the
outsiders, then why are they creating laws that restrict residents?”
FreeNewport debuted on the local political front at Tuesday’s City
Council meeting. Clarkson and several supporters came out to oppose a
council item on Fourth of July restrictions. The restrictions
included prohibiting alcohol deliveries to liquor stores on the
Fourth of July, forbidding stores from using their parking lots to
store or sell liquor and designating a portion of West Newport as a
“safe zone.”
The council approved the first reading of the restrictions,
passing the matter on for a final vote their May 13 meeting.
FreeNewport will be there.
“We hope to get dozens of people out to show them that they don’t
represent the residents,” Clarkson said, adding that the group is
conducting a petition drive with the help of some local businesses.
City leaders don’t seem swayed.
“What we have down there is a significant problem and it’s just a
matter of time before someone suffers a serious injury,” Councilman
Tod Ridgeway said. “The city has an obligation to protect the
residents.”
Ridgeway also defended the city’s approach, saying that city
policies are designed to protect residents.
“There are bars up in L.A. where you see advertisements to ride a
bus down to Newport for the day for the Fourth of July. Things are
getting worse, not better. We’re trying to create a deterrent for
future visits of this type to Newport Beach,” Ridgeway said.
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
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