Here are some items the council will...
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Here are some items the council will consider tonight.
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE SEAT
The council will consider appointing Lloyd Ikerd to fill a vacancy
on the city’s economic development committee created by the
resignation of hotel designer Stephen Sutherland, who served on the
committee since it was formed in 1993. Ikerd is a commercial and
industrial real estate broker and a former mayor of Paramount, and he
has lived in Newport Beach for six years.
Sutherland was the major proponent of plans for a luxury resort at
Marinapark, city-owned property now occupied by a mobile-home park
and some community facilities. The project failed at the ballot in
November. In his resignation, Sutherland cited personal attacks by
city council members during the campaign for the hotel project.
WHAT TO EXPECT
The appointment was recommended by the economic development
committee, which advises the council on economic issues, and Ikerd
has experience with development issues, so the council is likely to
approve the choice.
NEWPORT COAST COMMUNITY CENTER
When Newport Coast was annexed to Newport Beach, the city promised
to devote $7 million from an agreement with the Irvine Ranch Water
District to build a community center for Newport Coast residents.
The council will decide how to proceed with the project, which has
been designed but does not include the library residents wanted,
which didn’t fit into the budget.
A design for the center includes a gymnasium with a stage area,
two community rooms and a parking lot with 93 spaces. Because the
parking lot is not big enough to meet building codes, which require
145 spaces, the city suggested more parking be added in the space
reserved for a library. Residents involved with the project want to
keep the library space empty. They maintain that the city said
parking could be shared with nearby Newport Ridge Park.
WHAT TO EXPECT
The park’s lot has 77 spaces, which would be more than enough when
combined with the planned 93 spots. But city staff members worried
that the lot is too far away and events at the park might even take
up parking at the community center, so it’s unclear how the council
will vote on the issue.
HOUSING CODE CHANGES
Rules on affordable housing policies that are now applied on a
case-by-case basis could become city code, if the council tells staff
members to draw up code amendments. The city has an “inclusionary”
zoning policy, which requires an average of 20% of new housing to be
affordable to low to moderate income households. But there has never
been an ordinance to enforce it; it’s just been hashed out on each
individual project.
Developers building fewer than 50 units could pay a fee in lieu of
providing affordable units, and those building more than 50 units
would have to meet the 20% affordable-unit requirement.
WHAT TO EXPECT
If the council asks for the amendments to be written, that’s just
the beginning. The real action would come at a public hearing when
code amendments are formally proposed, which would likely happen
within the next several months.
-- Compiled by Alicia Robinson
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