Newport Beach has spent almost $250,000 on legal fees since November dealing with drug and alcohol rehabilitation homes in the city, according to billing information obtained by the Daily Pilot.
The city also plans to budget about $500,000 next fiscal year to deal with the homes, Assistant City Manager Dave Kiff said.
The city’s large legal bills are the result of “a lot of effort and a lot of hours in a very compressed amount of time,” said attorney Jim Markman, who represents Newport Beach in the city’s ongoing battle to curb the spread of rehabilitation homes within the city. The city hired Markman’s private law firm Richards Watson and Gershon in September 2007 to research and draft new city laws to regulate the homes in response to residents’ claims that for-profit sober living homes for recovering addicts generate crime and other nuisances in their neighborhoods.