State OKs renting cove cottages to vacationers
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Paul Clinton
The state’s Parks and Recreation Commission took the first step
toward opening up 46 beachfront cottages in Crystal Cove State Park
for public use on Friday, almost 25 years after the state bought
them.
The commission, during a three-hour meeting at the Radisson Hotel
Newport Beach, unanimously approved renovation plans for the cove’s
historic district, which has been the focus of interest, and much
controversy, for the past three years.
“We are thrilled Crystal Cove will be available so people can
enjoy this amazing place,” Commission Chairwoman Caryl Hart said
after the meeting.
The commission, with Paul Junger Witt absent and Robert Shriver
casting his vote in absentia via a conference phone, approved both
the state’s public use plan for the district and an amendment to the
1982 General Plan, the state’s first planning effort for the pristine
area.
As part of the plan, the state will spend $12.5 million to
rehabilitate 40 cottages, 29 of which will be available to the public
to rent in the fall of 2004. The plan next heads to the California
Coastal Commission this spring. Work is expected to begin during the
fall.
The state bought the land from the Irvine Co. for $32.6 million in
1979, the same year that the historic district was placed on the
National Register of Historic Places.
Hart and her fellow commissioners, who include movie icon and
coastal activist Clint Eastwood, listened to a string of public
speakers at the meeting. It was indicative of the state’s dogged
effort for more than a year to collect public input on a plan to use
29 of the existing cottages for overnight rentals, eight for state
personnel and another handful for educational uses and a snack stand.
Eastwood, former mayor of Carmel-by-the-Sea, toured the cove
Thursday. It was not his first trip to the secluded area, which he
said “looks like a movie set.”
In the early 1950s, while he was a student at Los Angeles City
College, Eastwood he visited the place with a girlfriend, he said. It
hasn’t changed much since then, he said.
“It still looks the same, but there is now development on the
hills,” Eastwood said. “From a state point of view, [opening the
park] is a service the state can offer the public.”
During public comments, Jim Turner, the lifeguard operations
captain with the Newport Beach Fire Department, said he supported the
plan, but asked the state to move the district’s lifeguard station
closer to the beach.
Former Costa Mayor Sandra Genis, who is also active with the
Sierra Club, said she supported the plan for the most part.
“I’m delighted to see where we’re at,” Genis said. “I’m really
happy about where we are today.”
* PAUL CLINTON covers the environment, business and politics. He
may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
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