Parks shouldn’t be hotels
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The Marinapark hotel development will be on the November ballot as a
measure up for approval or disapproval by the voters.
Remember that Marinapark is a city-owned, public waterfront
property, encompassing eight acres on the Balboa Peninsula of Newport
Beach. This site is designated for recreation and environmental open
space in the city’s general plan. It belongs to you and me -- to the
residents of Newport Beach. So why is our mayor so willing to give
away our public parkland to private development?
In his Aug. 15 Community Commentary in the Pilot, (“City could
never satisfy Greenlight on resort”), Mayor Tod Ridgeway has made a
number of misleading claims for the proposed Marina Park Hotel
development. He claimed that the environmental report for the project
was adequate, as evidenced by the fact that the Planning Commission
had passed it by a unanimous vote.
He did not mention that the environmental report was barely
approved in a 4-3 vote with three council members opposed based on
the evidence presented at the hearings.
As another example, the mayor writes in his commentary: “contrary
to what you may have heard, Marinapark has never been a grassy lawn
with picnic tables or a public boat launching facility -- things
resort opponents seem to prefer to a small luxury hotel.”
It is clear that the mayor, a developer himself, has no problem
visualizing a private timeshare hotel on the property yet finds it so
difficult to visualize a recreation and aquatic park with recreation
facilities, picnic tables, a tots park and a public boat-launching
facility for kayaks, sailboats and small watercraft.
The existing mobile-home park is planned for removal whether you
vote yes or no on Measure L in November, leaving the public with
approximately half a mile of beachfront and five open acres. Whether
you vote yes or no, the remaining acreage is and will continue to be
occupied by the community center, the Girl Scouts, the American
Legion building and basketball and tennis courts.
Ridgeway claims that the projected revenues justify the hotel. Why
does the second richest city in Orange County, with a budget of $178
million and the third richest in revenues per capita, need revenue
from a time-share hotel? The optimistic timeshare hotel projection of
$2.2 million is less than 1.3% of the city budget. In reality it
could be little or no net revenue, because it would take away rooms
that would otherwise have been rented by the Balboa Bay Club &
Resort.
Ridgeway promises that the hotel’s plan will open up access to the
beach and harbor. Could you use the beach in front of the hotel? Just
as much as you use the public beach in front of the Balboa Bay Club.
Same promise, same result. The passage of Measure L will, without
question, limit public beach/bay access to Marinapark.
The developer has repeatedly touted the proposed timeshare hotel
will be a five-star hotel. There are only 35 five-star hotels in all
of the U.S., and they reportedly average three to five employees per
room. The Marinapark hotel has projected one half of an employee per
room. We were not born yesterday; the five-star description is
hyperbole. This brings into question all of the extensive claims
being made for the hotel.
In 2002-03, a city sponsored poll conducted by Godbe Research
found that more than 70% of residents and businesses in Newport Beach
did not want hotels in two specific areas of the city: Marinapark and
Newport Dunes. In addition, our own recreation and open-space
land-use plan has identified a critical need for more public open
space on the peninsula. When is the mayor going to really start
listening to the residents of Newport Beach?
We own eight acres of rare remaining harbor-front public parkland
on the Balboa Peninsula. What legacy will we give our family and
community -- a park or timeshare hotel? Now it’s up to us to vote no
on Measure L to ensure that our public parkland will be available to
all the residents of Newport Beach, not just a few out-of-town guests
willing to pay $400 per night for a room.
* JOSEPH WEAVER, a Newport Beach resident, is a member of Protect
Our Parks, a resident group opposing development at Marinapark.
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