NEWPORT BEACH CITY COUNCIL WRAP-UP
Here are some of the decisions coming out of the Newport Beach City
Council meeting Tuesday.
WHAT HAPPENED:
A $25,000-a-year pay increase was approved for City Manager Homer
Bludau. Bludau was hired at a reduced salary, officials said.
“We had to see whether he could do the job, and he has,” Councilman
Dennis O’Neil said.
City officials conducted a survey of city manager salaries in 16 other
Orange County cities and determined that a substantial increase was
necessary to bring Bludau’s salary up to competitive rates.
WHAT IT MEANS:
Bludau’s salary will go from $145,000 to $170,000. A $3,600 car
allowance will continue unchanged.
WHAT THEY SAID:
“I think he deserves a raise,” said Santa Ana Heights resident Russell
Niewiarowski.
Vote: 6/0 (Councilman Gary Proctor absent)
WHAT HAPPENED:
Work on San Miguel Drive has been completed but not to everyone’s
satisfaction. As the council considered a routine item to formalize
completion of $550,000 in road work there, one resident said the road
surface isn’t level and that it’s hard to drive on. Public Works Director
Steve Badum said there were some minor grading problems, but that it had
been determined that the problems were too minor to justify starting the
work over. Further, he said, contractor All American Asphalt Inc. does
not accept blame for the imperfections, so it would be difficult to
assign responsibility for repairs.
WHAT IT MEANS:
Councilman John Heffernan, whose district includes the repaved
roadway, encouraged residents to register their feelings about the
roadway through his link on the city’s Web site at
www.city.newport-beach.ca.us/council.html. Ultimately, the council
approved the motion to receive and file the paperwork, but if enough
people say the city got a bad deal, the issue could come back.
WHAT THEY SAID:
“No way should we pay $550,000 for this road in the condition that
it’s in,” resident Dolores Otting said.
Vote: 6/0
WHAT HAPPENED:
Council members agreed that a proposed deal with the Orange County
Transit Authority to provide more senior transportation was a good deal.
The council approved a motion to enter into an agreement with the agency
to accept $10,777 in county funds to pay for an administrative person and
a driver for the senior transportation program. The city also agreed to
buy a new van out of funds already available and earmarked in the budget
for the Community Services Department.
WHAT IT MEANS:
Transportation for seniors in the city will grow along with the city’s
aging population.
Vote: 6/0
SOUNDING OFF
“Can we please keep the ficus trees on Main Street in Balboa?” --
Elaine Lindhof, one of about a half-dozen peninsula residents and
merchants who spoke during the public comment period about plans to
removed ficus trees in the area.
NEXT MEETING
WHEN: 7 p.m. April 9
WHERE: City Council chambers at City Hall, 3300 Newport Blvd.
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