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Rehab suits nearing $250K

Newport plans to budget $500,000 in rehab home legal fees for next fiscal year, says Dave Kiff, assistant city manager.

March 27, 2008|By Brianna Bailey

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.

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Local activists claim the city has spent too much money enacting a new ordinance to curb the spread of the homes that please neither residents nor the homes.

“From our perspective, there was absolutely no reason for the city to spend that amount of money on the development of the ordinance,” said Denys Oberman, a leader of the group Concerned Citizens of Newport Beach. The group claims Newport Beach officials have not listened to residents’ concerns about rehabilitation homes and is suing the city and several local rehab centers to the tune of $250 million.

The Concerned Citizens group spent about $250,000 of its own money over the past year on attorneys and planning experts to address the rehab home issue which city officials largely ignored, Oberman said.

“We felt the ordinance could have been done in several months for a fraction of the expense, but primarily due to political resistance in the city, it went round and round and round,” Oberman said.

Newport Beach has paid Richards Watson and Gershon more than $231,000 since it hired the firm last fall to replace the Los Angeles-based law firm Goldfarb and Lipman on the rehab homes issue. The city paid Goldfarb and Lipman more than $150,000 to draft new laws before breaking ties with the firm in September 2006.

Some Newport Beach residents accused Goldfarb and Lipman of a conflict of interest, claiming the firm had previously represented some of the same rehabilitation homes the city hired it to draft laws to regulate.

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