Code proposal triggers debate
Lolita Harper
The City Council on Monday unanimously endorsed a move to redirect
the priorities of code enforcement officers to target substandard
rental housing, saying it was about time the city took aggressive
action to weed-out slum lords.
Council members approved a minor wording change in city codes that
places eliminating unhealthy living conditions as the No. 1 goal of
the building department.
Councilman Gary Monahan said he was sparked to take aggressive
steps after attending a housing seminar hosted by a local faith-based
organization -- a conference he was not initially invited to. The
councilman ended up replacing the vacationing Councilwoman Libby
Cowan at the Aug. 25 forum --hosted by the Orange County Congregation
Community Organization at St. Joachim’s Catholic Church.
The issues discussed generated a desire to do something about
substandard housing, he said. Monahan said he met with Rick Brown,
the city’s building department head, and asked him about the best
course of action.
Monahan said he is willing to let Brown and his staff put together
that plan, but preliminary ideas include knocking on the doors of the
red-flag apartment complexes and asking tenants for permission to
inspect.
“We would literally knock on doors and ask: ‘Does your heater
work? Are there leaking pipes? Do you have insect problems?’†Brown
said.
Councilwoman Karen Robinson, who also attended the housing
conference, was concerned that the proposal relied too heavily on the
tenants and feared they might suffer retaliation from the property
owners in the way of raised rents or evictions.
“I was hoping for something that targeted the landlords in the
same way rather than putting it on the tenants,†Robinson said.
Her uneasiness was ultimately quelled once Brown explained that
the city would make the first move and knock on every door in the
complex -- rather than sit back and wait for complaints -- therefore
diverting the focal point from the occupant.
Council colleagues supported Monahan’s proposal, but Mayor Linda
Dixon couldn’t help but notice that it was similar to a program the
Planning Commission was working on.
Without taking away from Monahan’s sincerity to alleviate
dangerous housing problems, some would argue that his motives were
equally political, given his reelection campaign, she said.
Planning Commission Chairwoman Katrina Foley, who is vying for a
City Council seat, has been pushing for a program to eradicate
substandard housing for almost a year. The program, pushed by the
Planning Commission as part of its community objectives, is more
detailed than Monahan’s suggestion and would require new enforcement
officers to police it.
Foley said she was surprised to hear of Monahan’s proposal, given
he ultimately voted to approve the commission’s goals. She was even
more shocked to walk out of a Planning Commission study session
Monday in the City Hall conference room, where she and her colleagues
had just spent an hour fine-tuning their housing proposal with Brown,
to find him giving a presentation in council chambers about Monahan’s
suggestion.
Politics aside, Foley said she is happy the council was taking
definitive steps to improve the rental housing situation in the city,
but said Monahan’s program would serve as an interim program, at
best.
“It is not sufficient to take the place of the comprehensive plan
we’ve been working on,†Foley said.
Monahan disagreed, saying adding layers of bureaucracy is not
always the best way to combat an issue.
“All I’m doing is refocusing,†Monahan said. “There is no new
staff, no new bureaucracy. Rick is the expert, I’m just giving him
direction to fix the cancer rather than the outside.â€
* LOLITA HARPER covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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