ON THE AGENDA Here are some items...
- Share via
ON THE AGENDA
Here are some items to be considered by the Newport Beach City
Council tonight.
TIDELANDS MANAGEMENT
In an important step toward realizing some of the Sphere Issues
Committee’s goals, the council tonight will consider a move that
could put more tidelands into city control.
WHAT TO EXPECT
Right now, the county administers a number of tidelands on the
city’s border and in the Back Bay. Tonight’s item could boost a move
for the city to take over that role in some areas, most notably in
the Newport Dunes.
CELLULAR ANTENNA
The first cable company to apply to rent space on city land to
place a cellular antenna under a new city ordinance is also the first
to seek an exception to the height limit. Cingular Wireless wants to
install a 50-foot, 24-inch-diameter pole in the municipal parking lot
at the southeast corner of Superior Avenue and Coast Highway. The
city’s ordinance, passed in fall 2002, puts a 35-foot height limit on
cellular antennas to be placed on city property.
WHAT TO EXPECT
Staff members have recommended that the council allow Cingular to
be an exception to the rule. If council members approve the request,
it would mean better cellular coverage for Cingular customers in the
area. People who own property within 300 feet of the site have been
sent notices. If any of them take issue with the request, the matter
could get more controversial.
SHORT-TERM HOME RENTALS
Property owners in low-density neighborhoods who hope to rent out
their homes on a weekly or monthly basis might not be able to do so
in the future. The council tonight will consider whether to stop
issuing permits for renting homes in neighborhoods zoned for the
lowest-intensity use, commonly called R-1 zoning. The council vote
would not affect people who currently hold permits to rent out homes
in this area. It would only prohibit new permits from being issued.
WHAT TO EXPECT
It’s hard to gauge how much public interest the item will
generate. Many of the people who would want to rent out homes in
these R-1 areas already do.
NUISANCE PARKING
People who like to leave a car or two parked on the grass in their
front yard might not have that option soon. The council tonight will
consider whether to add to city nuisance ordinances the practice of
people parking or storing cars anywhere on their property except a
garage, carport or driveway.
WHAT TO EXPECT
City Atty. Bob Burnham has left the matter in the council’s hands,
opting not to recommend which way the council should vote on the
matter. So it’s difficult to predict how council members will feel
about the proposed ordinance change.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.