City Council sets annual community goals
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Lolita Harper
COSTA MESA -- Among the list of top priorities for the City Council
over the next few years will be the preservation of city art, cracking
down on loiterers and figuring out how to rezone the Westside bluffs.
Those decisions came as the council met this week to narrow down what
it hopes to accomplish during the coming years.
At the Monday meeting, council members approved 18 goals that were
outlined and discussed at a special Saturday meeting last month. During
that meeting, the council, the Planning Commission and the Parks,
Recreational Facilities and Parkways Commission identified the issues
they want resolved.
Finance Director Marc Puckett said there have been 202 community
objectives outlined, with 138 completed.
City leaders also will focus on guaranteeing the use of half the
anticipated revenues from the future Ikea furniture store -- slated to be
built on the Home Ranch site just north of the San Diego Freeway -- to
fund a bond to place utilities underground citywide.
This was the first year the two commissions joined the council in
creating community goals.
All goals laid out by council members were approved, except those from
Councilman Chris Steel. Only one of Steel’s three community objectives
survived the scrutiny of his colleagues. The council agreed to support
incentives to developers who wish to convert various Westside properties
to owner-occupied housing.
Councilman Gary Monahan questioned Steel’s suggestion to regulate
charitable organizations in the city. The objective was too broad and
opened up the city to a variety of legal trouble, Monahan said.
“What size charities are we talking about? Where are they located?”
Monahan asked. “I think we would be sending staff on a huge wild goose
chase.”
After explaining his opposition, Monahan made a motion -- which was
immediately seconded -- and just as Mayor Linda Dixon began calling for a
vote, Steel finally got a word in.
“Wait a minute!” Steel interrupted. “We have problems here, and they
are one of the big causes of the problems in this city. There is no
question in the eyes of most people that [large charities] are a magnet
for many of the problems.”
His last-minute plea was dismissed, as his colleagues voted down his
proposal by a 4-1 vote. Steel dissented.
Although Steel had no support with the previous goal, he found an
unusual ally in Councilwoman Libby Cowan when his community objective to
more strictly limit some kinds of commercial uses on 19th Street and
Placentia Avenue was scrutinized.
Steel wanted to limit the number of businesses such as liquor stores,
check-cashing outlets, pawn shops, nightclubs and massage parlors along
portions of the two streets.
The majority of the council reasoned that the proposed redevelopment
for the western part of the city would cover the issue without having an
additional goal outlined.
“I support what council member Steel is trying to do, but this is just
another layer,” Monahan said.
The vote was close, but again the majority voted to drop the
objective. Cowan and Steel dissented.
Steel’s weren’t the only goals under fire. The water conservation
effort suggested by the Planning Commission -- suggesting an ordinance to
encourage conservation from local hotels -- barely earned a majority
vote.
Resident Tom Egan suggested that all the revenue created by the
recently approved development be devoted to “improving the quality of
life” for Costa Mesans. The loud outcry against the project made it
evident that people were not necessarily dissatisfied with the specific
project but with growth and development in general, Egan said. He
suggested the money be used to plant trees and support slower growth
methods.
* Lolita Harper covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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