City of the Arts should live up...
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City of the Arts should live up to its name
After Monday night, I wonder if four members of the City Council
for the “City of the Arts” represent the children of this town or the
developers. Instead of allocating the fees that the city extracted
from developers of the theater arts district in 2001 to the city’s
children -- or for another public purpose -- four members of the
council gave most of it back to the developers.
In 2001, the city entered into agreements with two developers that
required them to pay combined fees of $2.2 million plus 7% interest.
Now the pot is about $2.45 million.
The fees were to be used on a Theater and Arts District, in
exchange for the city agreeing to greater density and traffic than
was originally zoned for that site.
Monday, the City Council voted 4 to 1 to give almost all of that
money back to the developers to improve their own private property.
Only $63,000 of that money will be used to improve the public right
of way and the rest will be returned to the developers.
A proposal was made for the city to use some of the developer fees
for arts and theater grants for the children of Costa Mesa over the
next 20 years. That way, the city’s children would become the
theatergoers and art lovers of the next generation.
Two members of the council said the children would have to find
the funds for theater and arts from charity, since that wasn’t the
city’s business. (The city does fund sports fields and sports
recreation programs for children, but apparently, that is different).
Two girls from Sonora Elementary School spoke to the City Council
about how much they liked drama club and art masters. Now that the
chance of grants to fund those programs has been crushed, I hope the
kids get the same fun seeing the developers’ private property looking
spiffy.
GAY GEISER-SANDOVAL
Costa Mesa
Green light for theater -- not Greenlight
The citizens of Newport Beach own the Balboa Theater. Does
Greenlight realize how many people have donated money and time to the
dream of reviving this theater? Do they have an alternative option
for the theater?
The theater has been vacant for more than 10 years and this
vacancy has made it difficult to revive the downtown Balboa area.
Greenlight loses all credibility with the Newport Beach citizenry for
making the revival of this theater, and thus the revival of downtown
Balboa, a “test case for the General Plan.” I thought Greenlight was
trying to stop “big development,” not the renovation of community
treasures.
WALTER SEBRING
Corona del Mar
District’s actions swift and professional
It is with my admiration and respect for the Newport-Mesa Unified
Board of Education that I write this letter today. On Jan. 27,
several issues were brought to their attention relative to the
administration of Newport Heights Elementary School. During that
meeting, parents were told that the board would have the
superintendents look into these issues.
The district quickly took positive and proactive action. It
conducted meetings with the parents and staff of Newport Heights and
worked toward a solution. I highly commend Asst. Superintendents,
Susan Despenas and Lorri McCune, for their ability to conduct these
meetings in a professional and meaningful way. Their ability to
listen and sort through the issues has resulted in a positive and
unifying atmosphere at Newport Heights.
ROBERT SHAW
Newport Beach
You say debris,
I say jubilee
It is disturbing to all modern art lovers that Newport Beach is
attempting to label that truly creative modern art installation at
that Dover Drive home as “unsightly junk.”
I am hopeful that the Orange County Museum of Art will step in,
dismantle this art piece and reinstall it at the museum, as a prime
example of the art form known as the “Modern Art Installation.” The
tires on the roof are especially inspirational but the entire
installation just takes my breath away.
MATT MATTEUCCI
Newport Beach
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