Newport submits coastal plan to state
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Paul Clinton
City officials have taken another step toward issuing their own
coastal development permits by submitting a draft of their Local
Coastal Plan to the state’s coastal panel.
City leaders handed the plan to the California Coastal Commission
on Friday, following more than a year of community input and fierce
debate over a roughly 150-page document that would set development
standards for the coastline and public beach access.
The city submitted the first draft of the coastal plan, which
updates an earlier plan certified in 1990. The final plan is due June
30 in accordance with state law.
Instead of offering broad or sweeping new regulations, Newport
Beach’s proposed coastal plan mostly collects and documents existing
material, said Councilman Tod Ridgeway, the chairman of the committee
that crafted the plan.
“We just never put all the pieces together,” Ridgeway said about
the need for the plan. “This [plan] really puts it all together.”
The new plan incorporates the Upper Newport Bay regional preserve
and a handful of new beach access points dotting the city.
In January 2002, the City Council accepted a 5-foot walkway lining
Newport Harbor in front of the Cannery Restaurant. In the past,
Ridgeway has said he’d like to see it used as a tourist walkway
stretching from Lido Village to the Balboa Bay Club.
Nineteen other walkways have been identified in the plan to fall
under the city’s jurisdiction. If they were not included, they would
revert back to private property ownership.
Also notable, the plan doesn’t offer any zoning changes to the
so-called Banning Ranch property, which is marked for development.
Supporters of the Orange Coast River Park, a large regional open
space project that could include the unincorporated area, have called
for a rezoning of the land.
The plan also does not include the Newport Coast region since that
area already has a coastal plan in place.
The state Coastal Act of 1972 requires cities along the ocean to
create such plans. Newport Beach and Malibu are among only a handful
of cities along the coastline yet to adopt one.
Newport Beach has slowly made attempts since the 1980s to
undertake the huge project, but only really got started in early 2002
when the city created an ad hoc committee to begin reviewing the
issues and drafting the document.
Mayor Steve Bromberg and Councilman Don Webb also sat on that
committee.
The plan has stirred little controversy, in stark contrast to the
city’s General Plan update.
Bob Caustin, a local environmental activist, said he hasn’t seen
the preliminary draft, however he said he supports local control of
coastal planning, with a caveat.
“We didn’t get involved in it,” Caustin said about the coastal
planning effort. “Local control has to be here, but I think we need
to have some oversight from the Coastal Commission.”
Once the commission approves the coastal plan, the city would be
able to issue building permits to local residents who want to mount a
project along the coastline. Any city approval could be appealed to
the Coastal Commission.
* PAUL CLINTON covers the environment, business and politics. He
may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
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