Dock rentals will get scrutiny
June Casagrande
NEWPORT BEACH -- City officials want to know how many residents rent
out their private docks and whether the practice is so widespread that
the city should levy portions of the rental fees to pay for tidelands
preservation and improvement.
City Council members will examine the issue in a upcoming study
session, and it’s likely that the soon-to-be-formed Harbor Commission
will take on the issue as one of its first tasks, Assistant City Manager
Dave Kiff said.
“We need to find out more about what the law says,” Kiff said. “We
need to tackle the question of how we would measure the practice.”
Local ordinances, as well as the city’s agreement with the California
State Lands Commission, are unclear whether the practice is improper or
possibly illegal. City ordinances distinguish commercial from private
piers, designating only multi-slip piers as ones that can be rented for a
fee.
The private piers also are in state-owned tidelands. Most of the time
when tidelands are used for profit, the city is required to collect a
portion of the proceeds and put the money in a tidal fund. The fund is
used to pay for environmental preservation and improvements, such as
dredging the waterways.
A lands commission representative has said it’s not clear whether the
situation in Newport Harbor constitutes a violation of the spirit of the
city’s agreement with the state.
Those are the types of questions the city will look into, Kiff said.
While no one has advocated prohibiting the practice, it’s possible the
city would want to regulate it, perhaps with lease agreements, and charge
a fee.
“That’s just one possibility,” Kiff said.
Owners of waterfront homes pay a fee to the city for their private
piers -- usually $75 a year.
A January 1999 report that came into public view just this month
estimates that homeowners who rent out space at their docks could be
getting between $5,000 and $9,600 per year per boat. Estimating that 50%
to 60% of the boats docked at the city’s 1,200 private piers are in
rented space, that would mean that between $4 million and $7 million a
year could be changing hands in Newport Beach between private pier owners
and renters
Some in town say these figures are greatly exaggerated. The study
checked ownership records on 63 boats docked at 33 private piers and
found 62% of them were not registered to the dock owners. Estimating that
the average boat size was 40 feet, the report arrived at $5,000 a year
rental fees based on a rate of $10.42 per month per foot. At $20 per
month per foot, the annual receipts are $9,600. Space at a city-owned
rental slip is about $17 a foot for a 40-foot boat.
“I’d say the 62% estimate is probably pretty close,” said Sean Acosta,
owner of Newport Slip Rentals, whose business is matching up boat owners
with private pier owners. “I feel it was inevitable that this was going
to fall under some scrutiny and some regulation eventually. So it doesn’t
surprise me that the time has come.”
Acosta added that his business, which has about 10 private docks available for rent in Newport Beach at any given time, could benefit from
regulation because his expertise would be in greater demand.
The report suggests that 10% of rental fees should be put into the
tidelands fund. The document was never sent to the council or called to
the public’s attention because it was produced just as a reference: The
Harbor Committee was looking into the question of whether mooring rates
should be changed and used dock rental rates as comparison.
* June Casagrande covers Newport Beach. She may be reached at (949)
574-4232 or by e-mail at o7 june.casagrande@latimes.comf7 .
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