City drops grant funding into downtown center
Elise Gee
COSTA MESA -- Under pressure to use or lose the federal grant
funding it has had for three years, the City Council this week approved
$1.7 million in additional funds for the Downtown Community Center
construction project.
The city was in jeopardy of losing the federal grant funding, which would
pay for the majority of the project, because deadlines for spending the
money were either near or had passed.
The $1.7 million in additional funding accumulated because the council
had asked to add amenities and redesign the center a number of times in
the last year.
The entire cost of the project to rebuild the World War II-era building
at 1860 Anaheim Ave. is estimated at $4.7 million.
“It started out kind of as a rebuild of what was there. Then we added the
pool, we expanded the gym, we added this, we added that,” said Mayor Gary
Monahan. “I think it’s a good investment overall. I think it’s very much
a center that needs to be redone.”
There was very little debate Monday about the amount of additional
funding needed because the council has been approving the various
additions to the project for the past year.
As of May 1998, construction costs were expected to be $2.2 million.
Construction costs now are estimated to be $3.8 million.
Some of the increases in cost are due to the following changes:
* Increasing the center by 4,000 square feet for a separate room to house
the city’s gymnastics program and additional space for Childs-Pace, a
child-care program that has been at the center for 22 years.
* Adding a new swimming pool.
* Adding sidewalks to meet federal requirements for wheelchair access.
* Completing a redesign to meet new earthquake safety standards.
* Landscaping, gutters, curbs and an altered parking lot.
When construction costs are combined with costs for services and
contingencies, the total estimated price tag comes to $4.7 million. The
city will pay for 25% of the project, with the remainder being paid
through state and federal grant funding.
“Part of it has to do with (Community Development Grant Funding), and if
we don’t spend the money, we’re going to lose it all,” said Councilwoman
Heather Somers.
Somers said adding the sidewalks was mandatory and that she supported
increasing the size of the center to accommodate the gymnastics and
Childs-Pace programs, both of which are “incredibly good.”
But she questioned installing a swimming pool and said she would have
preferred investing the city’s effort and money in one at Costa Mesa High
School.
Monahan noted the center was designed in response to what users said they
wanted the center to look like.
John Levere, director of Childs-Pace, said the city made a good effort to
involve him in the planning process.
“We’ve been part of it since they started, and even narrowing it down to
programs that would be in the building -- we were part of that process,
too,” Levere said.
The city has set an ambitious goal of having the center built by
September 2000, but it’s probably more realistic to expect it to be
completed in February of 2001.
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