Council speaks on Pacific City
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June Casagrande
The city will get its two cents in on a project planned for
Huntington Beach, council members decided Tuesday.
The City Council voted 7-0 to chime in on the environmental study
for the Pacific City project, saying that the study and the
development raise a number of concerns for Newport.
“I’m glad to see the city is making our position known,”
Councilman Steven Rosansky said.
Not surprisingly, the biggest concern is traffic. The 31.5-acre
complex of commercial, retail, residential, office and restaurant
space includes 400 hotel rooms and 516 condominiums and will add
about 3,000 car trips a day to Pacific Coast Highway in Huntington
Beach. Some of this traffic is sure to cross over into Newport, and
Newport leaders want the study to take a closer look at exactly how
much.
A major sticking point between the two cities has to do with the
19th Street Bridge. The environmental study considers traffic
increases if the bridge is built, but doesn’t look at what happens if
it’s not and what that could then mean to Coast Highway in Newport.
“Huntington Beach analyzed it as if the bridge were there,”
Councilman Tod Ridgeway said. “ We want them to analyze it as if
there were not a bridge because they didn’t want the bridge in the
first place. I think that they’ll come up with substantially
different answers.”
Assistant City Manager Sharon Wood explained that it’s customary
for the city to offer comments on large projects that could directly
affect Newport Beach.
“This project looked like it had great possibility to have impacts
on Newport Beach so we did refer it to [the Environmental Quality
Affairs Committee],” Wood said.
That committee examined the environmental study on the Pacific
City project and wrote the comments that City Council members will
sign off on as their own. Besides traffic, Newport Beach’s comments
also question whether the environmental study adequately considers
the project’s possible effects on air and water quality. For example,
Newport Beach is also taking the liberty of correcting projected
population figures in the document, and suggesting that the developer
use porous pavement whenever possible in order to prevent runoff into
the ocean.
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
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