Residents to fight for park
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Jenny Marder
Residents of the Cabrillo Mobile Home Park have banded together to
hire a lawyer in an attempt to buy and take over their parcel by the
sea.
Their plan may hit a legal roadblock, however, since its former
owner, Mills Land and Water Co. has first dibs if owner Caltrans
decides to sell.
For 40 years, the California Department of Transportation has
owned and served as landlord of the 24-acre property that includes
the mobile home park, the Action Boat Sales boatyard at the corner of
Beach Boulevard and Pacific Coast Highway and a strip of degraded
wetlands. Now, Caltrans wants to sell.
In 1965, Caltrans acquired the land from the Mills Land and Water
Co. by eminent domain with plans to build a freeway. When the freeway
fell through, Mills Co. sued Caltrans for a delay in severance
damages from the acquisition and for leaving them landlocked.
“As a result of that lawsuit, the state legislature adopted a
special legislation called the Mangers Bill, which granted Mills
certain rights to purchase the Caltrans property,” said City Planning
Manager Scott Hess.
The Mangers Bill was passed by the California legislature and
signed by then-Gov. Jerry Brown in August 1978. Under the terms of
the bill, the legislature directed Caltrans to sell the land back to
Mills Land and Water Co.
Homeowners at the park fear that Mills Co. will send rent sky high
and impose stringent rules on the community.
“They’ve told us that they’re going to redo the whole
infrastructure and then charge us for it,” Cabrillo resident Cindy
Kelber-Ackley said. “Rent is going to go up.”
Robert Moore, owner of the Mills Land and Water Co., said
residents were “reasonable in their anticipation that there would be
a rent increase.”
As landlord, Caltrans has always had little involvement in the
resident’s affairs. Over the years, tenants have reached into their
own pockets to spruce up the mobile home park. They built a community
pool, a clubhouse and a basketball court and lay down asphalt and
built fences where needed.
Led by Cabrillo resident and one-time City Council candidate Joey
Racano, park tenants are now mobilizing to save their park from a
sale to Mills Co.
Residents have transformed their pool-side clubhouse into an
office with a large oak desk, a phone, a donated computer and framed
wetland-themed photographs for the walls. They assembled a team of
public speakers to rally support at the City Council and Planning
Commission meetings. They’re also backing Jeff Ackley, one of their
own, to run for president of the city’s Mobile Home Advisory Board.
Residents have even chosen a new name for the park: Cabrillo
Wetland Village.
“Saving Cabrillo Mobile Home Park is nowhere near as endearing as
saving Cabrillo Wetland Village,” Racano said.
Their next job is to figure out how to front the bill. Right now,
park residents are looking into the option of municipal bonds to buy
the land. They also hope to choose a lawyer by the end of the month.
“Here at Wetlands Village, we’re seizing the day, and we’re going
to do what the leaders are not doing,” Racano said, “We’re trying to
make a better community.”
Racano says that the park, which offers low-income housing, is the
best use of the land and vows to fight Mills Land and Water Co. for
ownership.
“I’m going to make it so that it will not be commercially viable
for them,” Racano said, but would not specify how he plans to do
this.
Moore, who was unaware of the residents plans to make an offer on
the land, said it was too early to weigh in on resident’s plan.
“I can’t comment on something I don’t know about,” Moore said.
What the residents lack in money and political muscle, they make up
for tenfold in passion and a fervent commitment to their home.
“It’s a scary situation,” Kelber-Ackley said. “We have little.
This is lifesavings for people. This is their life.”
* JENNY MARDER covers City Hall. She can be reached at (714)
965-7173 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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