Newport Coast wants pieces of parks
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June Casagrande
They’re just four tiny parks -- places to sit with a cup of coffee or
a sandwich and enjoy a view of Buck Gully, Los Trancos Canyon or the
ocean. Newport Coast residents, however, believe these four little
parks now in county hands would be a lot better off in the hands of
Newport Beach officials.
The Newport Coast Advisory Committee next month will consider a
plan to ask the county to hand over four tiny parks within the city
borders: two on San Joaquin Hills Road near Buck Gully, two on
Newport Coast Drive, both north of the Marriott Newport Coast Resort
and overlooking Los Trancos Canyon.
“We feel the city can do a much better job of maintaining those
parks than the county can,” said Dan Wampole, president of the
Newport Ridge Homeowners Assn. and a member of the Newport Coast
Advisory Committee.
For example, Wampole said, for 2 1/2 years, his homeowners
association was paying to maintain the two parks on San Joaquin Hills
Road because the association believed it owned the land. During the
process to annex Newport Coast to the city, however, residents
learned that the parcels in fact both belong to the county and that
the county should have been responsible for maintenance.
Another incentive to take over the parks came earlier this year
when residents noticed a crane installing a cellular tower at one of
the parks on Newport Coast Drive. Some wrote to City Hall in protest
because the city hadn’t sought residents’ input or even notified them
of the site. The park, however, is county land.
“So an added benefit of taking over these parks would be that we
could have more control over cell siting in the future and that we
would get the [rental] revenue if we decided to have them come in,”
Kiff said.
There are no plans to install any more cellular antennas in any of
the parks as far as city officials know, Kiff said.
The Newport Coast Advisory Committee will get the ball rolling on
Monday when they vote on whether to send their request to the
council. If the council likes the plan, it will ask county officials
to consider ceding the small parks, which together add up to less
than four acres, to the city.
Supervisor Tom Wilson, whose district includes the parks, could
not be reached for comment. Kiff said he expects that the hand-over
would be a welcome idea because the county could stop paying to
maintain the parcels.
“We would expect them to transfer it over for free,” Kiff said.
“Right now it costs them more money than it gains them.”
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