Change made to Greenlight sample ballot
- Share via
NEWPORT BEACH -- Responding to an activist’s allegation that a map to
be included in a sample ballot for the first Greenlight election is
biased, city officials have changed the map and given residents an extra
10 days to review it.
In a letter to the City Council, Greenlight representative Phil Arst
protested the city’s decision to include in November’s Measure G election
materials a map of the proposed Koll Center expansion.
He said the map, which came from the developer, made it appear that
the project is in Irvine instead of Newport Beach. Arst also said that,
because the map was not submitted with other ballot materials until after
a 10-day public review period had passed, it is unauthorized.
“Because this map doesn’t have a scale of miles, it doesn’t clearly
show voters just how close this project will come to Newport Beach
homes,” he said, noting that the nearest house is just a half mile from
the site.
In response, the city has in fact made some changes to the map, said
City Manager Homer Bludau.
City officials moved the word “Irvine” on the map and added the name
“Newport Beach” to make the city’s proximity to the project clearer,
Bludau said.
He added he did not support Arst’s request to remove the map entirely
from the sample ballot that will be in the mail to about 50,000
registered voters in the city by Oct. 30.
“I believe the map is useful in terms of its purpose to educate
voters,” Bludau said. “A map showing where the project is located is
helpful information.”
Arst’s allegation that the map is in violation of the election code
casts light on some gray area in those rules. The only place in the
election code that mentions maps is in its section governing state
elections. For this reason, the city clerk used this section as a
guideline.
“I don’t believe it’s an illegal map,” City Clerk LaVonne Harkless
said. She added that the choice was also guided by advice from the city’s
election consultant and city attorney Bob Burnham.
Though ballot materials have already been submitted to the county’s
board of elections, the sample ballots have not yet been printed. In the
interim, city officials added an extra 10-day review period, which began
Sept. 20, for residents to consider the ballot materials.
Arst said that guidelines for state elections don’t necessarily apply
to a municipal election.
“We feel the whole handling of the ballot pamphlet is biased and we’re
protesting,” said Arst, who led an unsuccessful fight to include
rebuttals to the pro and con arguments in the sample ballot.
The Nov. 20 special election on Measure G, which will determine
whether the Koll Center expansion moves forward, is a result of the
Greenlight initiative. That initiative requires voter approval for
developments large enough to require an amendment to the city’s general
plan.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.