Westside group wants to continue debate
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Deirdre Newman
Disgruntled members of a Westside redevelopment committee want to
forge ahead on their own without facilitators after the group
presents its final recommendations.
Tonight, the Community Redevelopment Action Committee expects to
finish creating those suggestions, which the city’s Redevelopment
Agency and City Council will ultimately consider. The committee,
which has shrunk to about 30 members from its original 80, has met
since June to create a blueprint for the Westside.
Although facilitators have focused on consensus throughout the
entire process, members of the splinter group say they are not
satisfied with the expected results.
“They’re not letting us do anything we want,” said Janice
Davidson, who has been involved in other Westside improving
movements. “It’s worse than the Westside Specific Plan because we’re
not allowed to do anything in this one.”
The Redevelopment Agency, the City Council wearing another hat,
created the Community Redevelopment Action Committee in January 2002.
The goal was to engage competing factions of the community to find
common ground for the future of the neighborhood.
Those aching for a chance to do more work say the facilitators
just repeated what had been done before.
“The city wasted over $100,000 of our scarce tax dollars on a
facilitator that didn’t do much but conduct an elementary set of
meetings to redefine the problems that we, on the Westside, already
identified to the city at least a decade ago,” said committee member
Paul Bunney.
“So, where are we? We have just continued the problem we live with
on our side of town, and the City Council just pushes off the hard
decisions needed to fix our problems,” he added.
John Douglas, project manager for the facilitator team, said he’s
not surprised that some members are not satisfied with the results so
far. But he emphasized that the desires of a few are usually
subjugated to the consensus of the larger committee. Early on, the
committee decided that anything that moves forward for more
discussion had to garner 70% approval, he said.
“Our job is to help structure the process so that the committee
members can reach their own conclusions in an efficient and effective
manner,” Douglas said.
A lack of community consensus has thwarted previous attempts, such
as the Westside Specific Plan, at redevelopment in the area.
In February, the committee created a tentative vision statement
for the Westside, with adjectives such as physically attractive,
safe, socially vibrant, economically desirable and accessible. At its
March meeting, the committee began devising action statements to
achieve these attributes.
Tonight’s is expected to be the last committee meeting at which
members will vote on the action statements.
The breakaway group, which includes at least five members, would
like to rezone the bluffs to residential; extend streetlights on 19th
Street to Pomona Avenue; and remove some industrial businesses that
they say have a negative effect on the neighborhood, Davidson said.
Mike Robinson, the city’s redevelopment manager, said he felt the
group’s complaints are premature since the entire committee has yet
to release its final recommendations. Any group that continues
without the facilitators would need the authorization of the
Redevelopment Agency, Robinson said.
Councilwoman Libby Cowan, an advocate of the facilitator-led
process, said she believes any request for a continuation would have
to come from the entire committee. There are now about 30 active
members.
“I’m not sure who the small group is or if there’s a larger
group,” Cowan said. “I have people who have talked to me about
continuing. I think it’s a positive idea. [Davidson] hasn’t talked to
me about it, so I don’t know if it’s the same small group. I think
that anytime we can create an opportunity for community dialogue and
community input into the City Council in the process ... it’s
valuable.”
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa and may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or
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