HomeMy WebLinkAboutS17 - Airport Policy Review CommitteeCity Council Meeting
November 25, 2003
Agenda Item No. S17
CITY OF NEWPORT BEACH
OFFICE OF THE CITY COUNCIL
TO: Mayor & Members of the City Council
FROM: Airport Policy Review Committee
RE: Recommendations
DATE: November 20, 2003
A. INTRODUCTION
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The Airport Policy Review Committee (Committee) was established in January
2002 and was asked to submit recommendations to the City Council
regarding modifications to City aviation policy. In developing the
recommendations outlined in this memo, the Committee and staff carefully
considered the processes that resulted in the January 2002 annexation of
Newport Coast and the December 2002 approval of amendments to the JWA
Settlement Agreement. The Committee also reviewed the extensive list of
City/County cooperative projects that have, over the past 20 years, enhanced
public resources or services while reducing government expenditures.
Finally, the Committee has evaluated recent events that reflect this County's
views regarding air transportation demand and service.
B. RECOMMENDATIONS
The Committee recommends that the City Council:
(1) Create, and request the Mayor appoint members to, a "Sphere
Issues Committee" and direct that committee to meet with the appropriate
representatives of the Board of Supervisors to discuss issues of mutual
interest to the City and County.
(2) Authorize the Mayor to transmit a letter to the Chair of Board of
Supervisors requesting that the County (a) participate in a process with
Newport Beach to review and discuss Sphere Issues and (b) designate
appropriate representatives to meet with the Sphere Issues Committee.
(3) Authorize staff and consultants to conduct the studies and
analyses that the "Sphere Issues Committee" considers necessary or
appropriate to fully understand the opportunities presented by any of the
Sphere Issues identified in this Memo and /or to identify other
properties/ services that could be considered possible Sphere Issues.
(4) That the Sphere Issues Committee submit a status report to the
City Council no later than six months after its formation.
C. DISCUSSION
The Committee's recommendations reflect a 70 year history of City /County
cooperative agreements and projects. The City and County have, in just the
past few years, fashioned unique agreements that have simplified otherwise
complex changes in jurisdictional boundaries and provided additional air
transportation opportunities for Orange County residents and businesses.
In 2000, City and County entered into a series of agreements, and
cooperated in an effort to secure special legislation, that culminated in the
successful City annexation of Newport Coast and Newport Ridge. These
agreements included an unprecedented City transfer of land use and
building authority to the County so that vested development and related
open space dedications could proceed expeditiously and without additional
cost to the landowner or the taxpayer.
More recently, the City and County worked cooperatively with the FAA to
secure their approval of amendments of the John Wayne Airport Settlement
Agreement. These amendments have presented incumbent and "new
entrant" commercial and commuter air carriers with opportunities to provide
the traveling public with additional air transportation service.
The collaborative efforts that resulted in the annexation of Newport Coast
and the amendments of the John Wayne Airport Settlement Agreement, while
more visible, are similar to a long list of other City /County cooperative
projects, programs and services that include:
• City lease and funding of the interim water quality testing lab on
Shellmaker Island;
• A City /County Joint Powers Agreement that resulted in the
construction — at no taxpayer cost - of the Newport Aquatic
Center;
• City /County cooperative agreements relative to City construction
of a fire station and community center in Santa Ana Heights;
• Joint City /County funding and administration (performed
primarily by the County) of the Santa Ana Regional Water
Quality Board Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) mandates for
Newport Bay and San Diego Creek;
• City /County cooperation on grants for watershed improvements,
such as those proposed in Buck Gully, that benefit City, County
and State property and coastal resources;
• City /County projects in process such as the Big Canyon Creek
Restoration Project and the West Bay Restoration, Trail, and
Boardwalk Project;
• City /County cooperation on tideland administration issues such
as data sharing relative to Harbor Island appraisals;
• City /County cooperation relative to water quality testing and
public notice of potential water quality problems;
• City /County coordination and cooperation on public health
inspections and monitoring such as grease control inspections
and food service inspections;
• City /County participation on the Orange County Coastal
Coalition; the Newport Bay Watershed Executive Committee; the
Newport Bay Watershed Management Committee and others;
• County /Newport Beach/ Huntington Beach /Seal Beach sand
replenishment program.
The Committee has identified a number of County properties and related
services that are located or provided in or adjacent to Newport Beach and
that should be considered "Sphere Issues" for the purposes of the process we
have recommended to the Council. These properties and services are similar
in that each impacts, or has the potential to impact, Newport Beach
residents, each involves at least some activity or service that Newport Beach
currently provides, and two (Santa Ana Heights and Coyote Canyon)
represent territory recently annexed to the City.
(1) Santa Ana Heights Redevelopment Area/ Plan. The Santa Ana
Heights Redevelopment Area /Plan was established by the County as part of
the approval of the 1985 Master Plan for John Wayne Airport. In 1986, the
City and County entered into an agreement pursuant to which the City,
among other things, consented to the inclusion of incorporated territory in
the Redevelopment Area. The City also adopted land use designations for
Santa Ana Heights consistent with the County's planning documents.
The City, with the cooperation of the County, annexed East Santa Ana
Heights on July 1, 2003. The City is in the process of annexing West Santa
Ana Heights and expects that annexation to be effective in July 2004. Once
the annexation of West Santa Ana Heights is complete all of the inhabited
territory in the Redevelopment Area will be within the corporate limits of
Newport Beach. The City currently provides all municipal services to East
Santa Ana Heights and will provide those same services to West Santa Ana
Heights after annexation.
The City and County have already cooperated in the funding and pending
acquisition of a fire station site and community center to serve East Santa
Ana Heights, West Santa Ana Heights and the "Airport Area." The City and
County have also cooperated in the widening of Irvine Avenue from Bristol to
Mesa and other infrastructure improvements serving residents and
businesses in the area. The Committee supports continued discussions
relative to the roles the City and County should play in with respect to the
Santa Ana Heights Redevelopment Area.
(2) Coyote Canyon Landfill. The Coyote Canyon landfill became
part of the City on January 1, 2002 as part of the Newport Coast /Newport
Ridge annexation. A comprehensive methane gas monitoring system was
installed in the landfill at closure and an extensive methane gas collection
system was installed in the 1990's by a predecessor to GRS, the current
system operator. A significant portion of the Coyote Canyon landfill is
covered by coastal sage scrub habitat that, while not a part of the Orange
County Central - Coastal Natural Communities Conservation Plan Subregional
Plan (NCCP), is an important link between the Upper Newport Bay Ecological
Reserve and the Laguna Wilderness.
The County, according to its own calculations, spends approximately $1.1
million each year on landfill maintenance. Maintenance costs include the
expense of repairing or grouting cracks in the clay cover, repair of the
methane monitoring system and operation of groundwater wells. The City
performs similar functions on public property in Newport Beach
The condition, operation and use of the Coyote Canyon is extremely
important to Newport Beach for at least three reasons. First, the City wants
to ensure that the landfill does not adversely impact the health and safety of
nearby residents or the environment in the Upper Newport Bay Ecological
Reserve. Second, the City wants to ensure that any redevelopment of the
landfill is consistent with the adjacent residential properties and does not
cause traffic congestion or unsafe conditions on Newport Coast Drive.
Finally, the City has an interest in protecting the habitat values of the site
and the area covered by the NCCP.
(3) County Tidelands. The County, pursuant to legislation first
enacted in the 1920's, is the grantee of tidelands in Upper Newport Bay
(exclusive of tidelands in the Upper Newport Bay Ecological Reserve) and
pockets of tidelands in Newport Harbor. County tidelands include Newport
Dunes (the largest parcel), the area around Harbor Island, the Sea Scout
Base, the OCC David A. Grant Collegiate Rowing Center, the Harbor Patrol
facility and the Newport Aquatic Center (subject of a joint powers agreement).
The City has a harbor resources division, is the grantee of the majority of
tidelands in Newport Harbor and provides general law enforcement and fire
suppression services.
The City has obvious interests, and currently plays a significant role, in the
management and administration of Newport Harbor. The unification of some
or all of the tidelands under a single agency may reduce expenditures while
maintaining or enhancing service to the public.
(4) John Wayne Airport. For more than 20 years, Newport Beach
aviation policy has assumed the need for a second commercial airport to
serve Orange County air transportation demand and the City Council has
pursued efforts to implement that policy. In light of recent events, such as
Measure W and LAFCO's recent approval of Irvine's application to annex
MCAS El Toro, the Committee believes that future City aviation policy should
reflect that John Wayne Airport is, and more likely than not will always be,
the only air carrier facility located in Orange County. The City Council's
aviation policy should now focus its attention on how JWA, as the sole air
carrier facility in the County, will be operated in the future with a view to
ensuring that those operations are consistent with the interests of residents
in the approach /departure corridor as well as the needs of all Orange County
residents, visitors and businesses.
The Committee believes that John Wayne Airport is an appropriate "Sphere"
issue given its proximity to Newport Beach and location of the departure and
approach corridors, the City's use of JWA as the base for the police
helicopters operations, the importance of JWA to our local economy and the
potential for the City to provide municipal services to the facility.
4. CONCLUSION
The Committee's recommendations are intended to initiate a process
whereby the City and County can discuss "sphere issues" and develop ways
to address those issues in a manner that protects or enhances public service
and facilities while minimizing the expenditure of tax dollars through the
efficient allocation of governmental resources.