HomeMy WebLinkAbout00 - Written CommentsReceived After Agenda Printed
October 25, 2016
Written Comments
October 25, 2016, Council Consent Calendar Comments
The following comments on items on the Newport Beach City Council agenda are submitted by:
Jim Mosher ( jimmosher(cDyahoo.com ), 2210 Private Road, Newport Beach 92660 (949-548-6229)
Item 1. Minutes for the August 9, 2016 Regular Meeting
The page numbers below refer to Volume 63. The passages in italics are ones from draft minutes with
suggested corrections of obvious errors shown in strikeout underline format.
Page 111: Item 11, sentence 2: "He suggested study sessions for the following topics to be
discussed: 1) SoCa/Gas advanced meter street light antennae deployment; ..."
Page 112: Item XIV. 1, sentence 2: "Waive reading of subject minutes, approve as
amended, and order filed." [This has been standard boilerplate in the approved minutes for
the last couple of years, and while I appreciate having some (but not all) of my suggested
corrections (such as the present ones) incorporated in the approved minutes, it must be
noted the recommendation in the consent calendar actually reads "Waive reading of subject
minutes, approve as written, and order filed." I do not recall anyone explicitly saying the
Council was approving anything different than the minutes posted with the agenda packet,
and I do not know if others may have suggested corrections to them. For a while, a
proposed amended set of minutes was available prior to the 7:00 p.m. Council meeting.
That no longer seems to be the case. Approving minutes not being sure what they will say
does not seem a very transparent process to me.]
Page 113: Item 3a (Vin Scully Day): "a) Waive City Council Policy A-6 relating to how a
City Council Member may place an item on the regular City Council Meeting Agenda; i
v, [Although I don't recall it being explicitly stated, by approving the Consent
Calendar the Council presumably concurred with staff's recommendation to grant the
waiver. One also wonders if Mr. Scully was told he had had a day in Newport Beach?
Directing staff to notify him does not appear to have been part to the motion.]
Page 114: Motion: "Motion by Council Member Peotter, seconded by Council Member
Selich, to approve the Consent Calendar, noting abstention by Council Member Curry
on Item 1." [?]
Item 3. Authorize the City Manager and Police Chief to Execute
Emergency Management and Homeland Security Grant Applications
1. Considering the many references to it, it would have been helpful to include the relevant
passage from City Council Policy F-3 (Budget Adoption and Administration).
2. The staff report and resolution seem to imply it will allow staff, with City Manager
authorization, to pursue an unlimited number of grants as long as each involves an
additional expenditure of City funds of $10,000 or less. In other words, through this and
a series of grant approvals, it would seem the City Manager could authorize an unlimited
added burden on the City treasury. I do not believe that is what Policy F-3 says. On the
contrary, clause D.1 of Policy F-3 limits the City Manager's "authority to approve
October 25, 2016, Council Consent Calendar Comments - Jim Mosher Page 2 of 5
requests for budget increases not to exceed $10,000 in any Budget Activity or Capital
Project' [emphasis added]. Without clearly explaining what it means by "Budget
Activity," I take this to mean the City Manager is limited to adding a cumulative total of
$10,000 to any Council -approved line item. In view of this, it would have been helpful to
identify the budget line item(s) to which matching funds for the contemplated grants
would be expensed, and to clarify the City Manager is authorized to increase those line
items only up to a cumulative maximum of $10,000 — not $10,000 for each new grant.
3. Further regarding the proposed resolution:
a. In the first line of Section 1, the word "authorization" does not make much
sense. It is probably meant to be "assurance."
b. Also in Section 1, in line 4 from the end, the word "supplement' is almost surely
meant to be "supplant': see Item 1(c) on the first page of Attachment B to the
staff report -- "supplement" has the opposite meaning to the assurance required.
c. It probably doesn't matter, but logically Section 2 would seem like it should come
before Section 1.
4. Finally, although the staff report comes from the Police Department, is the Police Chief
really the most logical signer for all the grants that might want to use this resolution for
authorization? While the authorization given to the City Manager may already cover it, I
would think other department heads, such as Fire, Public Works or Municipal Operations
might also be pursuing FEMA grants and want to use this to show proof of authorization
— although in view of the $10,000 cumulative limit, and not knowing the current status of
the City's relevant "budget activity," it is unclear Cal OES will ever be quite sure the
signer's authority is real.
Item 4. Resolution in Opposition to Proposition 57 on the November 8,
2016 General Election Ballot
The Newport Beach City Council appears to have a fairly long history of taking positions not just
on legislative matters, but on ones before the voters. But that does not make the latter right, as
using public resources for electioneering seems to me a clear abuse of the powers vested in the
Council.
I would especially object to this if, as the City Manager's Abstract, says (on page 4-1), it "asked
that the City take a formal position to oppose Proposition 57" [emphasis added]: it seems to
me the height of impudence for a majority of the Council to presume they can declare what the
position of "the City" — implying the residents of that City — is when the residents will themselves
declare the City's position through their votes on November 8t"
It is comforting to see the proposed resolution actually says it is only "the City Council" that is
taking a position. Nonetheless, even that seems inappropriate, to me. Although I myself am of
no political party, I even find it mildly offensive that the second sentence of the "DISCUSSION"
starting on page 4-1 finds it necessary to identify the current Governor of California as a "D" —
October 25, 2016, Council Consent Calendar Comments - Jim Mosher Page 3 of 5
implying that that, in itself, casts disrepute on the measure. Aren't municipal decisions
supposed to be "non-partisan"?
The "Whereas" clauses of the proposed resolution likewise attach the credibility of our
government to one side of arguments that obviously have more than one side, with no chance
for rebuttal nor any assurance of impartiality or even accuracy. That, too, seems inappropriate
to me.
Finally, it is unclear to me why, of all the measures before voters this November, the Council
would, in mid -election, find a need to try to influence voters on this particular one. Would it be
appropriate for the City government to send out a slate mailer telling the residents how to vote
on each race and issue before them, or to spend a meeting detailing the "correct" votes on each
of those orally? I think not, and I find this no different.
Item 5. Newport Elementary School Field Renovation - Memorandum
of Understanding with Newport -Mesa Unified School District
Since the school district already receives a much larger portion than the City of the
property tax revenue, the staff report does not make it clear why the City is assisting
NMUSD both in the expense and execution of this primarily school -related project. One
assumes this is because the City expects to enjoy some benefit through a joint use
agreement special to this field — but that is not explained.
2. In the ABSTRACT on page 5-1 of the staff report, I'm pretty sure the "Newport
Elementary School District" no longer exists, and was absorbed into larger "unified"
school districts many years ago.
3. Further down the same page, under "DISCUSSION," I'm pretty sure the field in question
lies more "south" of the school than "west." I also believe the present dimensions of the
leased property are wider than originally intended — extending more than it originally did
to both east and west.
4. Regarding the "Description of Improvements" in Exhibit B on page 5-11, 1 thought the
project involved the construction of some kind of protective walls or berms. I don't see
them described even though something of the sort is mentioned in Recital C on page 5-
3. Is the City not responsible for that part of the work?
Item 6. Encroachment Agreement for Existing Improvements within
the Public Right -of -Way in the Newport Center Area
It has sometimes been suggested that the Irvine Company has "done so much" for the area that
they deserve special privileges. We have also been told, recently, that Newport Center was
designed by TIC as a pedestrian -oriented live -work center (even though Fashion Island, at
least, seems a shopping island surrounded by a pedestrian -unfriendly ocean of cars).
The staff report does not make clear to me what public purpose TIC's bollards in the public
sidewalks are supposed to provide. The ones illustrated on Sheets 2 and 8 of Attachment C,
October 25, 2016, Council Consent Calendar Comments - Jim Mosher Page 4 of 5
placed squarely in the middle of the public sidewalk, seem especially placed to create the
greatest possible inconvenience to pedestrians. Why would the City tolerate this, other than
they were placed there by "the Irvine Company"?
Item 7. Selection of Broker of Record - Property and Casualty
Insurance
Why is the contract for $500,000 (page 7-7), when the contractor said they could perform the
requested work for $473,070 and one of the other proposers said they could do it for $404,800
(page 7-3)?
Item 8. Planning Commission Agenda for the October 20, 2016
Regular Meeting
I doubt the final staff summary will accurately convey the rushed and inevitable feeling of the
Commission's recommendation of approval, without any modifications, for the Museum House
Tower. This is the first instance I can think of of a major proposal where it was apparently felt
unnecessary for the preparers of the EIR to make any presentation of their conclusions, and
instead the applicant was allowed to lead the Commission and public through the consultant's
results.
Item 9. Update on Water Use and Conservation Efforts - September
2016
It would have been helpful if the preamble to the table on page 9-3 of the staff report explained
the difference between the two categories in the table: "Water Use" violations and "Other Water
Related" violations. The 81 "noncompliance with permanent restrictions" and "watering on the
wrong day" notices would naively seem to me like "Water Use" violations, yet they are listed
under "Other Water Related NOVs."
Item 10. Accept Donation of $350,000 from Newport Harbor Yacht
Club and Budget Amendment for Central Avenue Public Pier and
Plaza (17H12)
1. While it mentions the need for an as -yet -to -be -complete MOU between the City and the
California Coastal Commission, and the approval by the latter of the NHYC project, the
staff report does not, as best I can tell, explain when or to what extent the CCC has
approved the City's pier project on which the donation is to be spent.
2. It also does not seem to mention the total cost, to the City, of the pier project.
3. The claimed CEQA exemption seems plausible, but one wonders if, when considering
small structures "in urbanized areas," Class 3 contemplated construction over
waterways.
October 25, 2016, Council Consent Calendar Comments - Jim Mosher Page 5 of 5
Item 11. Summary Review of First Eight Months of Operation of the
City's Visitor -Serving Marina at Marina Park (First Boating Season)
The chart on page 11-6 of the staff report indicates that with the limited occupancy experienced
to date, the slip rental revenue has not met what appear to be the contract costs for providing
two dock masters. If that is what is being shown, it would seem like it would be more realistic to
also include in the costs the expense for the City employee overseeing the contract dock
masters, as well as maintenance costs not covered in the dock masters' contract, if there are
any, as well as the estimated depreciation on the City's considerable capital investment.
I suspect the conclusion might then be that the marina's revenues would not equal the expense
even if the slips were fully occupied.