Annexation could turn into battle
June Casagrande
NEWPORT BEACH -- City officials have taken an important step toward
expanding the city’s borders to include parts of Santa Ana Heights and
Bay Knolls.
On the heels of Costa Mesa filing an application to annex parts of the
same two unincorporated areas, Newport Beach staff met Tuesday with
county officials to nail down some details of the application process.
The Orange County Local Agency Formation Commission, the agency that
oversees annexations, has asked that the two cities apply at the same
time for the annexation. In February or March, the commission is expected
to hold a hearing to make a decision on the two cities’ requests.
Though Newport Beach officials have been careful not to get into
territorial disputes with neighboring Costa Mesa, controversy is visible
on the horizon.
“Annexations are never really peaceful,” Newport Beach Assistant City
Manager Dave Kiff said.
Current plans are for Newport Beach to absorb 190 homes in Bay Knolls
and 460 in east Santa Ana Heights. Costa Mesa plans to annex the western
area.
For a bevy of reasons, many are unhappy with this arrangement. Newport
Beach, many agree, is the place to be.
“We feel we have more in common with Newport Beach, and as part of
Newport Beach we would have much better representation,” said Russ
Niewiarowski, a resident of Santa Ana Heights’ Pegasus Tract, which is
slated to become part of Costa Mesa. The tract is a cluster of about 84
homes, plus some apartment buildings, between the Delhi Channel, Mesa
Drive, Irvine Boulevard and Santa Ana Avenue.
“Every time we ask Newport Beach to send a representative to one of
our meetings, they’ve been there, but three times we’ve asked Costa Mesa
to attend and they didn’t show up,” he said.
Property values are another concern. A swankier Newport Beach address
could be measured in dollars on the assessed value of many homes.
The decision about which city will annex which area was made decades
ago when the county was helping cities define their “spheres of
influence.”
Some, like Niewiarowski, want officials to reconsider these
theoretical boundaries.
“We know that the residents have some issues, though, and that’s
something LAFCO gives weight to,” said Carolyn Thomas, the commission’s
project manager overseeing the annexation.
Unlike the Newport Coast annexation, on which the commission is
holding its hearing today, Santa Ana Heights and Bay Knolls will be money
losers for Newport Beach and Costa Mesa, which will spend more to provide
services such as fire and police than they will get in property taxes.
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