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April 8, 2014
Public Comments
April 8, 2014, City Council Agenda Item Comments
The following comments on items on the Newport Beach City Council agenda are submitted by:
Jim Mosher ( iimmosher(a)yahoo.com ), 2210 Private Road, Newport Beach 92660 (949- 548 -6229)
Item SS2. Arts Master Plan
It will be interesting to hear staff's ideas
Although that session, and earlier ones, are not part of the no- longer - searchable Council video
archive currently accessible to the public, a search of the archived written City Council minutes
for prior references to a Newport Beach "Arts Master Plan" suggests that City Manager Dave
Kiff made some comments about, and recommended allocating $100k towards, an "Arts and
Culture Master Plan" at a May 28, 2013, Study Session. The existence of such a plan also
seems to have been tangentially mentioned on January 14, 2014, in connection with an offer
(since withdrawn) from the Tourism BID to provide $150,000 to support the arts, and the present
plan may also be related to the Council's hastily adopted Policy 1 -13 ( "Public Arts and Cultural
Facilities Fund," adopted March 26, 2013), although that policy does not specifically reference a
plan, let alone a "master" one.
It seems possible an RFP was issued last year to contract with a consultant to develop a plan,
but the public does not have ready access to RFP's once contracts have been awarded, and it
bothers me that after a reasonably diligent search I am unable to find any contract with Rick
Stein or Arts Orange County in the database of contracts maintained by the City Clerk, even
though I am pretty sure the same organization is working separately under contract on the Civic
Center Sculpture Exhibit, nor for that matter can I find any recent contracts with the words "arts"
or "sculpture" in them, or even any contracts at all issued by the Library Services Department,
since the Agreement with Sarah Wilkinson regarding "Uprooted II."
I think the Council should also know that the City Arts Commission, which is the body
empowered in the City Charter to "act in an advisory capacity to the City Council in all matters
pertaining to artistic, aesthetic and cultural aspects of the City," has never, to the best of my
knowledge, formally discussed a comprehensive Arts Master Plan for the City, or Policy 1 -13,
although it may have committees meeting non - publicly to formulate recommendations regarding
pieces of the former. The Council's guidance to them will undoubtedly prove helpful in
synthesizing the recommendations they ultimately bring back to you.
Item SS3. Early Look at the Capital Improvement Plan
It is good to see the PowerPoint slides posted for review prior to the meeting. It would also
seem good if the proposed allocations of assets had been reviewed by the Council's Finance
Committee.
Among the allocations listed, the $6M on slide 3 for "CdM Fire Station & Library Replacement" is
slightly surprising to me since it implies construction is imminent, yet public discussion of the
future of those facilities is less far along than the "West Newport Community Center," which is
shown at the "Concept Development" phase.
April 8, 2014, Council agenda item comments - Jim Mosher Page 2 of 6
I am also puzzled by the origin of the request for the "Balboa Island Entry Arch" depicted on the
third slide from the end.
Item XV.A.1 Minutes for the March 25, 2014 Regular Meeting
The page numbers below refer to Volume 61. The passages in italics are from the staff report, with
suggested changes shown in strikeout underline format.
1. Page 506, Section 111, line 1: "Jim Mosher stated that, at yesterday's Finance Committee
meeting, there was discussion about the City's discretionary reserves; ..."
2. Page 506, Section VIII: "City Attorney Harp reported that the City Council voted unanimously
to petition the U.S. Supreme Court to review the decision of the Ninth Circuit Court of
Appeals, in the case of Pacific Shores et al vs. Newport Beach, dealing with the City's
ability to regulate group homes for alcohol and drug rehabilitation." [note: The section
at the end, in bold, does not appear in the recording, and it would seem particularly
improvident to gratuitously attribute to the City Attorney a comment singling out "group
homes for alcohol and drug rehabilitation." To the extent I understand it, the issue at bar is
whether the City's past words have demonstrated an improper intent to regulate those
particular kinds of group homes differently from others, and the City's defense is that
whatever its words it treats all homes the same. Should the Appeals Court decision stand,
as seems likely, the present words would only provide more evidence of improperly biased
intent.]
3. Page 507, Item XI, last paragraph: "In response to Jim Mosher's question about the
placement of containers and use of bags, City staff stated that bags will still be allowed to be
placed curbside for collection and that placement of containers should be in the street
and not on top of the curb." [note: I subsequently learned from Dean Ruffridge, the CR &R
Vice President in charge of the transition, that their pickup mechanism works equally well for
carts placed on the curb top, and that placement is actually preferred in hilly areas where
carts can get loose and roll down the street, especially in storms.]
4. Top of page 508: "... and the Land Use Element Amendment (LUEA) Advisory Committee
(U will meet on April 1, 2014 at 2:30 p.m. in the Friends Room of the Central
Library. Mayor Pro Tem Selich discussed the items on both the meeting agendas, adding
that the EIR for the LUEAAG meetin is online and available for public review." [note: the
location of the LUEAAC meeting was stated as indicated, and it was clear the El being referred to
assessed the impacts of the LUE amendment. There was no suggestion it assessed the impacts of
the meeting]
5. Page 508, last paragraph: "Jim Mosher commented on Supplemental Item19, believing that
the City should spend its money towards improving internet coverage of City events rather
than on a channel that staff has reported has near zero viewers due to the high diversity of
other choices available."
6. Page 511, Item XVI1, paragraph 5: "Patrick Hein Hynes • concierge at the Balboa Bay
Resort, commented on ..." [unless there is a speaker card to the contrary, "Hynes" is the spelling
used in the Daily Pilot
7. Page 513, middle of paragraph 1: "He also state stated that he believes..."
April 8, 2014, Council agenda item comments - Jim Mosher Page 3 of 6
8. Page 513, last paragraph: "Council Member Petros took issue with Mr. Ross's comments
regarding the his March 25, 2014 letter which implied that Council received it prior to the
meeting and neted that the Applicant had not submitted the their letter in time for him to
review it. He clarified that the materials from Mr. Ross were provided today and Council
Members have not had time to review them." [note: the phrase "and noted" makes it appear
Council Member Petros was making a comment of his own. The recording indicates he was
continuing to paraphrase, and take issue with, Mr. Ross's comments.]
9. Page 514, paragraph 2 from end: "In response to Council Member Petros' question
regarding how the City determined if there was an environmental effect associated ith with
parking and traffic, ..."
10. Page 514, last paragraph: "Council Member Petros emphasized that the City has not
subverted used the subversion et rules used to regulate and protect the environment, but
rather has applied the proper rules in arriving at its determination."
11. Page 517, paragraph 1: "He commented negatively on a recent experience regarding
replacement of a burnt out street light..."
Item 5. Adoption of a Resolution for the Reporting of Employer Paid
Member Contributions for the California Public Employees'
Retirement System
At its February 3, 2014, meeting the Board of Library Trustees saw a Hand Out giving a
foretaste of a new budget disclosure system in which the reported "Member Contributions" (line
item 7439) and "Employer Contributions" (line item 7440) to CaIPERS are offset by a large
negative "Misc Retir Contrib" (line item 7445). Hopefully the Council will understand this (there
was an explanatory document at the March 3 meeting, but it no longer seems to be available on
the City servers) better than the Trustees did, but the genesis of the present system in which
taxpayers pay part of the employees' obligation and the employees pay part of the taxpayers'
obligation, and who, as a result, is paying exactly what, is as clear as mud to me.
If the employees' intent is to pay their full obligation and then some, and from the staff report I
have the impression it is, it is unclear to me why anyone would continue to ask the taxpayers to
pay 2.42% of salary towards the Member Contribution (which the members have expressed
their desire to fully cover), apparently necessitating the convoluted reporting this resolution
addresses.
It is also unclear if the City's 2.42% is included when the report cites a total employee
contribution of 12.35 %, or not. I am guessing not, but I'm not sure.
Item 6. West Coast Highway Landscape Improvement Project
It is interesting to see the need for a Coastal Development Permit explicitly called out in
Attachments A and B. I can't recall if the Balboa Boulevard phase of the westside beautification
had one, or not.
April 8, 2014, Council agenda item comments - Jim Mosher Page 4 of 6
I find the attribution of the "approved concept" to a five - member Citizen Advisory Panel (CAP),
slightly misleading (page 2 of the staff report). My recollection is the CAP largely reviewed
plans prepared by an outside consultant, and any event passed their recommendation on to the
three member Neighborhood Revitalization Committee which had selected them, who in turn
made a recommendation to the full Council. I do not recall if any changes were made, but at
each stage the reviewing body had full authority to make changes, and they need to share the
credit or the blame. To me, the staff report suggests the City is obligated to spend hundreds of
thousands, if not millions, of dollars on whatever five unelected members of the public saw fit;
which I think distorts the process.
Item 7. Lifeguard Headquarters Rehabilitation
It is good to see the need for an extra allocation of funds is being publicly reviewed, and
hopefully before the commitment to do the work is made, rather than after.
Item 8. Amendment to Central Parking System Agreement
From the staff report, it appears we have just passed the two year anniversary of our agreement
with Central Parking System, and before approving this item I would think the Council would
want a more thorough review of how that agreement is working than can be gleaned from the
present staff report. In particular, it would be good to know if revenues have increased and
expenses declined, as was anticipated.
The report also seems to anticipate that the Council will accept the requested Coastal
Development Permit for adding automated pay stations at Big Corona State Beach, which,
depending on the conditions attached to it, is not a foregone conclusion.
Item 9. Temporary Employment Agreement
It is good to see the Community Development Department is aware of Council Policy F -20 on
contracting with former City employees, something the City Attorney's Office may not have been
aware of when contracting with a former Deputy City Attorney. It might also be noted that the
plain language of the policy requires Council approval of contracts not only with former City
employees, but also with entities employing one, whether the former City employee is directly
connected with the contract, or not. I have never known if before letting contracts the City
actually asks if the company involved employs any former City employees.
It is also interesting to note that according to the staff report, a very competent and experienced
planner is available at roughly half what we pay contract planners. Should that make us wonder
why we pay contract planners so much?
Item 10. Professional Services Agreement with George H. Eiser, III
I know nothing at all about Mr. Eiser, but it bothers me that the City Council is being asked to
hire him as a hearing officer, yet there is nothing in the materials provided giving any concrete
example of his having served in that capacity before.
April 8, 2014, Council agenda item comments - Jim Mosher Page 5 of 6
Page 2 of the Meyers Nave proposal says "George has experience serving as a hearing officer
in evidentiary hearings in a number of personnel and land use matters," but no example is
given. Indeed, as best I can tell, his resume lists only work as a City Attorney, and the narrative
leading up to the preceding bullet point says only that he has been "involved [as City Attorney ?]
in multiple hearings comparable to those that will arise under the Newport Beach Municipal
Code."
Everyone has to start somewhere, but for the price we will be paying, I would think we would
want someone with demonstrated experience conducting, rather than merely being involved in,
hearings. Possibly Mr. Eiser has that experience, but it should be stated in a way the public can
verify.
It also bothers me that I can find nothing in NBMC Section 20.60.040 specifying the rotating
system of at least three planning issues hearing officers appointed for three year terms, alluded
to in the staff report; nor can I find the RFP for additional hearing officers, which is said to still
be "open."
Item 11. Approval of Side Letter with Newport Beach Police
Management Association
The significance of items like this is difficult for the public to follow because the main discussion,
and presumably the answers to any concerns the Council members may have had about them,
take place in closed session, with little or nothing more remaining to be said when they are seen
on the Consent Calendar.
Item 12. Planning Commission Agenda for April 3, 2014
I found Item No. 3 ( "Echo Beach ") interesting because the Zoning Code Section cited as the
basis of the hearing, NBMC 20.54.070, appears to provide only two options when an applicant
seeks permission to build something other than a project that had been previously approved.
One option is for a determination by the Community Development Director, without public
hearing, that the changes are consistent with what was originally approved. The other is for a
review by the "original review authority' based on a new application.
In the present case, the former version of the project ( "Seashore Village ") had been approved
by the City Council on June 20, 2008. Yet without benefit of a new application, the Planning
Commission was asked to make the Director's determination that the changes from "Seashore
Village" to "Echo Beach" (primarily replacement of duplexes with detached units and a drastic
change in architectural style) would not have changed the Council's decision.
I found this process difficult to reconcile with the Municipal Code.
April 8, 2014, Council agenda item comments - Jim Mosher Page 6 of 6
Item 13. Installation of Corona del Mar Bicycle Racks by the Corona
del Mar Business Improvement District (BID)
Although under "Funding Requirements" the staff report says "There is no direct City expense
for this project," it should be noted that there is a substantial City General Fund contribution to
the BID's annual operating budget (see page 6 of 2013 Annual Report). As a result, City
taxpayers can be thought of as contributing towards all the BID's expenses. The current
fraction is roughly one third.
Item 14. Victor P. Caliva Trust Donation
This item highlights the convoluted and somewhat uncertain relationship between the City
government and the Friends of OASIS in hosting the existing senior center, including who pays
for and who is responsible for what, last memorialized in Contract C -3772.
With a new community center with a strong senior component being considered for the City's
westside, it will be interesting to see if a similarly confusing relationship evolves, involving the
same "outside" group, or some other one; and how future donors will express their support for
those activities on the westside.