Vote No on Y
Vote No on Y

Measure Y is both Big Government and Bad Government

“We’ve got to pass the bill to know what’s in it”– this is the call from nearly all of the Newport Council candidates when you ask them about Measure Y.

I asked the question to candidates: “Have you read Measure Y?”  All but two said they have not.  Yet every single one of them has formed an opinion on it.  How?  Certainly they are not flipping a coin to come to a decision, and if they haven’t read the bill themselves, then from where are they getting their positions?  More importantly: from who?

To their credit, Kevin Muldoon and Scott Peotter told me that they did both read the staff report on Measure Y.  That’s better than nothing, I suppose.  However, our current council already suffers badly reading merely the staff reports without reading the actual details.  This results in our council being a representative of the CITY to the PEOPLE, rather than a representative the PEOPLE to the CITY.   This is absolutely the wrong approach to government.  “Reform” candidates should know better.

Englebrecht– the only council candidate who takes a “NO on Y” position– certainly knows this.  Engelbrecht is one of just two candidates who has actually read Measure Y and has come to his own, independent conclusion on it.

Supporters of Measure Y claim that it preserves property rights and reduces traffic.  None of this is true.  Here are the reasons why:
1) The Irvine Company does not tend to build to completion.  They then use the remaining land grants, package them all up together, and tell people that they have grand total of X amount of land they’d like to trade, in exchange for the rights to build in a consolidated fashion at location Z.  This is both deceptive and effective.
2) The Irvine Company stated to the city that they have *no intent* to build on the land that was used to bargain.  This was revealed in their annual reports in public documents sent to the City of Newport in September of 2013.  This is further supported by the fact that they have not begun to build on any of the land… HOWEVER…
3) The irony is that Measure Y does not actually restrict them from building on the land that they are “trading”.  They will retain rights to build on the land, and ALSO gain new rights to build in Fashion Island.  In fact, more than 350 housing units are completely unaccounted for in Measure Y’s “limiting” of existing building rights.
4) Measure Y will trigger “green” building guidelines.  We already have a “green building” in Newport: Our City Hall cost us $250,000,000.00.  Building “green” has a nice ring to it, but is prohibitively expensive in many instances, and it reduces the building rights of property owners to build on the land that they own.   This increases the size of government.
5) Measure Y has no text.  What’s that?  Yes.  There is no comprehensive text amendment to the general plan.  There are several (5) “sections” that are being “passed”, but none of them are comprehensive, and none of them are sensical.  Two of the sections are filled with graphics and maps, many contain icons without legends, leaving the wildly ambiguous documents open to interpretation in the future.  The remaining pages contain things like “Page 7 of Document X” but have no other pages associated with it.  This is a hodgepodge body of work to put it nicely, and an embarrassment of a bill for those who seek good governance.

Measure Y is set to both grow government and also increase ambiguity.  The measure is unreadable, indecipherable, and non-comprehensive.  It will increase traffic in Newport Beach due to the capacity of Fashion Island already being worn-thin.  If you support property rights, small government, or readable bills, vote NO on Y.

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About Mike Glenn

Mike is the founder and publisher of Save Newport and Chair of Government Relations for the Elks Lodge. He writes, shoots photos, and edits, but much of the time, he's just "the IT guy". He can be reached at: Google+, Facebook, or via email, at michael.glenn@devion.com