A measure billed as taking back local control could, if it passes, hand the city exactly the loss of control its backers fear.
Newport Beach has put a citizen measure — the “Responsible Housing Initiative” — on the November 3, 2026 ballot. It would replace the council-adopted housing plan (capacity about 8,174 units, more than the state requires) with one zoning roughly 2,900 units, restricted to lower- and moderate-income households.
The city's state housing target (its RHNA allocation) is 4,845 units, 3,436 of them affordable. The adopted plan over-delivers against that; the initiative would fall under it. On June 18, 2025, an Orange County Superior Court judge upheld the city's housing element against lawsuits arguing the changes required a public vote.
Here's what's easy to get wrong: the state isn't the adversary in Newport. The Attorney General and California's housing department filed briefs supporting the city's compliant plan against the anti-housing challengers — the opposite of suing it.
After extensive legal analysis and public outreach and workshops and hearings and meetings and more meetings, this council approved an updated general plan to bring Newport Beach into compliance and avoid serious penalties, including the loss of local land use control.
Robyn Grant, Newport Beach City Councilmember
Backers see it differently — as a check on overbuilding.
We're against the city building more market rate than the state required.
Charles Klobe, President, Still Protecting Our Newport
If the initiative passes, legal analysts warn the city would fall out of state compliance — and a noncompliant city is exposed to the builder's remedy citywide, where qualifying projects bypass local zoning entirely, plus potential fines and loss of state grants. A measure meant to control growth could remove the city's control over it.
A vote to take back control could hand over the keys to the builder's remedy.
My read for clients: if you own or are buying in Newport, watch this one closely. The outcome swings between a planned, orderly build-out and a legal limbo that invites exactly the kind of development the measure's supporters are trying to stop. I'll be tracking it through November.