Property owners off the hook for $2.5 million
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Bryce Alderton
Property owners in a 545-acre section of Huntington Beach will not
have to foot the $2.5-million bill for the addition of traffic lanes
fronting their property and improvements made to water reservoirs and
storm drains, the City Council decided Monday.
After much debate between property owners, council members and city
staff lasting for nearly an hour, Councilman Peter Green made a motion
Monday night not to require 83 property owners to reimburse the city and
developer PLC a total $2.5 million.
The area under fire was the commercial and residential district
bounded by Central Park and Ellis Avenue in the north, Huntington and
Main streets on the east, Yorktown and Clay avenues in the south and the
city’s boundary line on the west.
The developer and the city sought reimbursements for improvements made
to curbs, gutters and sidewalks and the costs of creating an extra lane
on each side of a street to provide for right-of-way traffic flow.
The original 1990 agreement called for the developer, Pacific Coast
Homes to provide infrastructure for the development. The city agreed to
reimburse the developer for excess.
In 1996, PLC purchased the project and assumed the obligations to
construct public facilities as required under the development agreement.
PLC made $35.3 million in street improvements and spent another $11.2
million to construct a reservoir.
The company claimed it should be reimbursed for these costs, but the
city claimed the improvements made didn’t improve traffic flow near the
properties.
In a settlement the city agreed to reimburse PLC for improvements made
to storm drains and water reservoirs, with the property owners only
incurring the costs of street improvements.
Residents have fought this agreement.
Several commercial property owners in the affected area spoke up
during the public hearing claiming that they did not want to be charged
for improvements made to the front of their property, which they said
didn’t bring any added traffic to their businesses.
They also claimed improvements had already been made when they bought
their property.
The council was divided on the issue. Council member Grace Winchell
opposed Green’s motion, saying the city would be losing out on added
revenue and that the improvements made to the streets, curbs and gutters
benefited the property owners. “Those streets benefit the whole city of
Huntington Beach,” argued Michael Leifer, attorney for some of the
property owners. “Why should [the burden of reimbursement] fall on this
isolated group?”
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