HomeMy WebLinkAbout06/01/2020 - Special MeetingCITY OF NEWPORT BEACH
City Council Minutes
Special Meeting
June 1, 2020
I. CALL MEETING TO ORDER - 12:00 p.m.
II. ROLL CALL
Present: Mayor Will O'Neill, Mayor Pro Tem Brad Avery, Council Member Joy Brenner (via Zoom),
Council Member Diane Dixon, Council Member Jeff Herdman, Council Member Kevin
Muldoon
Absent: Council Member Duffy Duffield (excused)
III. INVOCATION - Mayor O'Neill
IV. PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE - Mayor Pro Tem Avery
V. PUBLIC COMMENTS ON NON -AGENDA ITEMS - None
VI. CURRENT BUSINESS
1. Coronavirus Relief Act Funds and Small Business Relief Grant Program (C-8625-1) [381100-
20191
Mayor O'Neill discussed the Police Department's deployments into various Orange County cities to
assist with protest demonstrations and thanked Police Chief Lewis, police officers, Fire Chief Boyles,
and firefighters for protecting the community. He also thanked staff for preparing for the special
meeting over the weekend and stated that he attended the Orange County Board of Supervisors'
meeting on Tuesday, and Supervisor Steel indicated she will be disbursing the money allocated to
her directly to the cities in her district to ensure funds are distributed with transparency and
accountability.
Deputy City Manager Finnigan advised that the goal is to design a program that meets the needs of
small businesses and meets County and Federal requirements, explained the source of the funding,
confirmed that Supervisor Steel decided to divide her $15 million allotment amongst the cities in her
district, emphasized the importance of documentation, recommended the City retain the Orange
County Small Business Development Center (OC SBDC) as the program administrator, reviewed OC
SBDC's experience, and requested Council input regarding business size, the tiered grant structure,
and funding priority.
Council Member Muldoon clarified that the $500 million for Orange County was dispersed from the
White House through the U.S. Treasury Department, noted that County Supervisors set aside
$75 million to assist small businesses, reported that each Supervisor decided how to allocate their
district's money, stated the City is bringing in an administrator to ensure the program is done
professionally and with oversight, and thanked staff for their hard work.
Council Member Herdman suggested adding a provision within each category that a business can
apply for up to the maximum category amount and adding a new provision for grant recipients to
agree to an inspection in order to verify that funds were expended properly.
Mayor O'Neill indicated that population was used to divide Supervisor Steel's allocation. He stated
his discord with using population on a Countywide basis; however, noted the reasonableness in
regards to Supervisor Steel's district. He agreed with Council Member Herdman's statements and
suggested adding "up to" in front of the monetary amounts.
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Council Member Brenner inquired as to how the County plans to spend the CARES Act COVID-19
relief fund. In response to Council Member Brenner's question, Mayor O'Neill indicated that the
Supervisors set aside approximately 80% of the funding for County -specific responses to COVID-19
and $26 million to reimburse cities for COVID-related expenses. City Manager Leung added that the
City is tracking expenses and looking for reimbursement from the Federal Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA) and then the County. Mayor O'Neill noted that reimbursement does not apply to
revenue displacement. Council Member Brenner requested that staff keep Council informed on how
the County spends the $425 million. City Manager Leung advised that the County Public Health
Department has quite a bit of the COVID-19 expenses and the primary responsibility for handling
the sheltering of the homeless.
In response to Council Member Dixon's questions, City Manager Leung advised that the City has
approximately $450,000 to $480,000 in Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) funds,
believed that Council should look into an economic development program once staff has been given
guidance, and suggested keeping that funding separate.
In response to Mayor Pro Tem Avery's question, Deputy City Manager Finnigan was unsure of what
the City's in-house costs would be, understood that OC SBDC has an agreement with the County to
handle its entire program at a cost of about 5% of the loan amount, but anticipated reaching a lower
percentage because City staff can execute some of the administration.
Council Member Dixon agreed with the process and stated that Council will receive a report that is
similar to the CDBG report of how funds were disbursed.
There was a unanimous straw vote to use a program administrator.
Regarding the proposed program parameters, Mayor O'Neill expressed concern regarding the
requirement for a business to report that an employee has contracted COVID-19 while at work
because of privacy issues. In response to his question, Deputy City Manager Finnigan advised that
the requirement came from OC SBDC guidance, but it can be amended. Mayor O'Neill suggested
removing that requirement. He also suggested changing the requirement relative to showing a
decrease in sales by comparing sales to the same three months in 2019 or the three months prior to
February 15, 2020.
Council Member Herdman agreed with deleting the provision to report whether an employee has
contracted COVID-19 because of Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA)
requirements. Council Member Muldoon spoke in support of keeping the provision because it is broad
and allows flexibility. Council Member Dixon believed Governor Newsom has already established
that workers' compensation companies are required to pay regardless of where an employee
contracted the virus. Mayor O'Neill indicated Council Member Muldoon's point is fair and believed
the provision should remain.
Regarding the tiered grant structure, Mayor O'Neill concurred with adding "up to" to the tiered
amounts.
In response to Council Member Muldoon's questions, City Manager Leung indicated that staff has
generally seen the tiers separated by the number of employees, but noted there is flexibility to define
the number of employees and staff can work with the administrator to make the determinant. Mayor
O'Neill suggested increasing the to a maximum of 30 employees.
In response to Council Member Dixon's questions, Deputy City Manager Finnigan indicated a
business' receipt of other funds may not preclude the business from receiving these funds because the
funds may have covered only some of its costs, but added that the administrator will take that into
consideration. Council Member Dixon recommended staff come up with a formula for full-time and
part-time employees.
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Mayor O'Neill believed restaurants have more employees, and it is reasonable to set a 30 -employee
maximum.
In response to Council Member Brenner's questions regarding the terms and conditions, Deputy City
Manager Finnigan stated that the City could include nonprofits, but indicated that most cities have
not. She noted that staff's focus is on businesses that were forced to close and the employees could
not work from home.
In response to Council Member Dixon's question, Community Development Director Jurjis explained
that CDBG is an economic development program and is income -restricted, but staff will research the
program further.
Council Member Muldoon suggested requiring that the majority of the businesses' officers should
live in Orange County. Deputy City Manager Finnigan advised that the County agreement requires
all board members to reside in Orange County.
Mayor O'Neill believed a business should have a business license for six months prior to applying
for a grant and have 30 employees, and added that the definition of "good standing" should include
"business license fees and business improvement district assessments." Council Member Muldoon
disagreed because Business Improvement Districts (BIDs) are voluntary. Mayor Pro Tem Avery
proposed including Marine Activities Permits (MAP).
With Council Member Brenner disagreeing, there was a 5-1 straw vote to include for-profit
businesses only.
With only Council Member Brenner agreeing, there was a 1-5 straw vote to include nonprofits and
for -profits.
There was a unanimous straw vote to include "Marine Activities Permit, if applicable," in the
definition of "good standing."
With Council Member Muldoon disagreeing, there was a 5-1 straw vote to change "or" to "and" and
to add "if applicable" in the definition of "good standing."
With only Council Member Muldoon agreeing, there was a 1-5 straw vote to keep "or" and to add "if
applicable" in the definition of "good standing."
In response to Council Member Brenner's question, Council Member Herdman stated the
requirement to follow re -opening guidance is why he suggested allowing an inspection, but he did
not know what the consequence would be. Council Member Muldoon believed an inspection would
take an enormous amount of resources, interpreted this as a limitation of liability, and supported
the language as written.
In response to Council Member Dixon's question, Community Development Director Jurjis
explained the temporary permit program and reported that code enforcement officers physically
inspect the expansion to ensure it matches the plan staff approved.
In response to Mayor O'Neill's question, City Manager Leung reported that staff has considered
providing half of the funds upfront, reviewing documentation, and then releasing the second half,
and added that staff can inspect and pull permits, if needed, and withhold the second half of funding
on a case-by-case basis.
Mayor Pro Tem Avery stated that many businesses are not following the guidelines and believed
code enforcement should respond to complaints. Mayor O'Neill understood the temporary permit
program would be a self -representation on the front-end.
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Deputy City Manager Finnigan noted the additional requirement for the principal office to be
located in the City.
There was a unanimous straw vote to adopt the remaining terms and include a requirement for the
principal office to be located in the City.
Regarding funding priority, Mayor O'Neill believed that a lottery system would be used if the
number of applications exceed the grant total. Deputy City Manager Finnigan explained that OC
SBDC waitlists approximately 50-100 applications should those chosen in the lottery system become
disqualified. Mayor O'Neill clarified that priority applications would be funded, and the remaining
applications would be put in a lottery for any remaining grants.
In response to Council Member Herdman's questions, Mayor O'Neill reported that the City will be
receiving the funds tomorrow. Deputy City Manager Finnigan advised that money will be
distributed in three to four weeks.
In response to Council Member Muldoon's questions, Deputy City Manager Finnigan indicated there
are over 20,000 business licenses in Newport Beach and reported on the number of businesses with
less than 10 employees, less than 5 employees, and sole proprietors.
Mayor Pro Tem Avery emphasized that the City is relying on OC SBDC to ensure grants make an
impact.
In response to Council questions, Deputy City Manager Finnigan advised that there is a question
as to whether an independent contractor could apply independent of a salon owner. Council Member
Dixon recalled the business license tax system changed to account for real estate brokers and
believed there will be many different business descriptions. Mayor O'Neill related that real estate
brokers would not receive priority because they have been open, and they need to justify the request
for the money.
Mayor O'Neill agreed that the priority needs to be businesses that were shut down due to the State's
orders.
There was a unanimous straw vote to adopt staff's recommendation.
Jim Mosher indicated this is an important program, stated concerns regarding adequate notice to
the business community of the special meeting, believed staff should bring back the final program
for Council approval, noted that Exhibit A which list the uses of funds was missing, stated various
concerns pertaining to issues related to nail salons and small business compensation, and
questioned the impact on the short-term lodging businesses of the requirement for a business to be
located in a commercial or industrial area.
Steve Rosansky, President of the Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce, proposed the first 25% be
set aside for microbusinesses and, if grants are not used, they could be repurposed for larger
businesses, believed anyone who applies for a grant should be eligible to receive funding, suggested
that if the program is oversubscribed, each applicant should get money on a pro rata basis or the
Council should prioritize, in the order stated, businesses that have received no government funding,
Economic Injury Disaster Loan (EIDL) recipients, and Paycheck Protection Program (PPP)
recipients, noted this prioritization creates fairness for businesses that have not been able to access
funding, and thanked Council Member Brenner for speaking up for nonprofits since very little
money is available for small nonprofit organizations.
City Manager Leung reported that staff does not have a breakdown of business licenses by employee,
but there are approximately 500 businesses in the restaurant/hotel category and about 2,500 in
general consumer/retailers. Council Member Dixon noted staff has a way to segregate data by the
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amount businesses pay for business licenses. City Manager Leung indicated staff can gather that
data. Council Member Dixon believed the majority of business licenses are paid by small businesses.
Mayor O'Neill suggested four priority levels: 1) the staff recommendation and groups/businesses
that have not received Federal funding, 2) the staff recommendation and businesses that have
received an EIDL, 3) the staff recommendation and businesses that have received PPP funding, and
4) any other business that meets the eligibility requirements.
There was a unanimous straw vote to adopt the four priority levels.
With the incorporation of the previous straw votes, motion by Mayor O'Neill, seconded by
Council Member Muldoon, to a) determine this action is exempt from the California
Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) pursuant to Sections 15060(c)(2) and 15060(c)(3) of the CEQA
Guidelines because this action will not result in a physical change to the environment, directly or
indirectly; b) authorize the City of Newport Beach to participate in the Coronavirus Aid Relief and
Economic Security (CARES) Act Grant Program as a subrecipient of the County of Orange; and
c) authorize the City Manager to take any and all action necessary to develop and administer a Small
Business Relief Grant Program, funded with the $2,123,426.69 in coronavirus relief funds, in
accordance with the Grant Agreement between the City of Newport Beach and County of Orange.
The motion carried unanimously.
Mayor O'Neill announced that Council Member Dixon will receive the City's check from the County
tomorrow.
VII. ADJOURNMENT — 1:25 p.m.
The special meeting agenda was posted on the City's website and on the City Hall electronic
bulletin board located in the entrance of the City Council Chambers at 100 Civic Center
Drive on May 30, 2020, at 6:15 p.m.
Leilani I. Brown
City Clerk
Will O'Neill
Mayor
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