Newport - To Surf or Die?
Clive Summers
May 3, 2020
Newport Beach Defies Governor's Orders © CJN 2020 |
With another red tide of litigation treading water for
seemingly compliant Huntington Beach beachgoers this weekend, Newport Beach was
on the beat with surf and sunning. On
Friday the Hunting Beach city council sued the state seeking a “Temporary
Restraining Order,” (TRO) to prevent Gov Gavin Newsom from closing the Orange
County Beach line, from Huntington to San Clemente. But the wave of justice didn’t break for
Huntington beach-bums, who were left kicking sand at the end of the day with
Newsom’s order still standing, and the SOS HB TRO sank. Yet, while Huntington beaches remain naked
and lonesome burning in the sun, Newport Beach arrivals were alive, on shore and
“getting tubed.”
The legal riff between Huntington, and Newport Beach for
that matter, has been ongoing while Newsom and the state have been attempting
to bring more “affordable housing” into local municipalities to reduce the
massive homelessness problem California faces. But Huntington and Newport are not feeling it,
which is understandable given the median home price average ticks in well above
$ 900,000. Hence, residents believe they are being held hostage to Sacramento’s, perhaps
unrealistic, interest. Yet, each of
these two cities do provide thousands of service industry jobs, in food and
beverage, tourism, among countless others. Yet no workers in any one of those industries
could ever afford rent in either Newport or Huntington, unless it was allowable, very inconceivable, within either localities
to overcrowd 6 tenants in a 2 bedroom apartment.
The zoning of these affordable housing units if being
overseen by the Southern California Association of Governments (SCAG) and they
are seeking to provide 1.3 million new homes across the counties. But Newport Beach city council members find
the task of their meeting the number of units they’d be responsible to procure
for the “affordable housing” program untenable, if not impossible given the
deadline, among other things.
Meanwhile, as certain of these costal cities fail to be
compliant with affordable housing initiatives, Newsome has threatened to hold
or delay on various much needed state funds non-compliant cites desperately
need.
Additionally, Huntington Beach has long pushed back on
California’s “sanctuary law,” and sued the state in 2018 to make it “exempt”
from the “California Values Act,” SB 53, via it’s status as a “charter city.” That failed recently in April when the
California Supreme Court declined to hear the case. No US federal court intervention has been
sought, but HB city council and constituents have intimated further federal
remedies may well be on the table soon, if not very likely.