Westside activist plans council run
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Deirdre Newman
Whether the City Council’s approval of a contentious housing project
at 1901 Newport Blvd. will lead to lawsuits or ballot measures is far
from clear.
At the least, though, it is beginning to fill out the field of
council candidates.
The decision so angered one activist, Mike Berry, that he said
he’s been inspired to declare his candidacy, which he had been
mulling over for a while. The council’s approval is just the latest
example of city leaders’ ignoring the will of the people, he said.
“There have been, in the last two to three years, a dozen major
issues that seriously affected Costa Mesa -- on every one of them,
the council has voted against the people,” the 58-year-old said.
After months of delay, the council approved the condominium plan
with 145 units, 415 parking spaces and a subsidy of about $1.5
million. The original project proposed 161 units and 415 parking
spaces.
Berry, a Westside activist, supported Councilman Allan Mansoor in
his successful council campaign. He is a member of the Westside
Improvement Assn., which tackles what members consider to be the
deteriorating quality of life in that part of town, and the Westside
Revitalization Oversight Committee, which is overseeing the council’s
implementation of the recommendations made by the Community
Redevelopment Action Committee.
He is a frequent speaker at City Council meetings and recently
persuaded the city to reexamine how it will replace a fence along the
Joann Street bike trail.
Another issue that Berry thinks city leaders handled poorly is the
decision of whether to add a 400-plus acre chunk to the downtown
redevelopment zone. The council -- acting as the Redevelopment Agency
-- opted to redevelop a much smaller portion of the commercial
corridor along 19th Street between Maple Street and Federal Avenue,
as well as five parcels to the south of the major thoroughfare.
Berry accused city leaders of not adding a larger portion to the
zone because they would rather spend redevelopment funds on the 1901
Newport project. The agency offered Rutter a $1.5-million subsidy to
lower the density for the modified project that was approved.
“Had they expanded the redevelopment area, they not only would
have received additional income, they would have spent additional
income to redevelop,” Berry said. “But they didn’t want to do that.
They wanted to spend it on this project.”
He also doesn’t think the city is trying hard enough to create
homeownership opportunities for residents. He was one of the vocal
opponents against the city providing land at a cheap price to Habitat
for Humanity for its development at 1925 Pomona Ave.
“We had six new homes that were built, and no one from Costa Mesa
got one of those homes,” Berry said.
He said he would have liked to see the Redevelopment Agency make
an effort to ensure the low-income units required for the 1901
Newport project be reserved for city residents.
“This is the redevelopment agency, and they have different laws
and different ways they can set this property aside, and whether they
can do it or not, they’re not trying,” Berry said. “Because they’re
not trying, we’ll never know if they can.”
The city’s handling of CenterLine is another issue that riles
Berry.
“No one that I have talked to wants this train running through the
city, but the City Council approved it,” Berry said. “They did not
have an agendized public hearing for the city of Costa Mesa.”
All these examples illustrate an unhealthy trend toward
“uncontrolled urbanization,” Berry said.
“It’s happening in all of Southern California -- all the cities
are going through the same thing, but some of the cities are managing
it better than others,” Berry said. “My personal feeling is that
Costa Mesa is allowing situations to occur that foster this but
aren’t controlled.”
Kathleen and Christian Eric, who have worked with Berry on
improving the Westside, said his background in finance and management
and dedication would qualify him well for the council.
“I am disappointed in the direction that the current council is
going in respect to 1901 Newport and concur with Mike Berry’s
viewpoint that we need less density, less traffic and better parking
for this project,” Kathleen Eric said. “I think that he will stick to
the spirit of the general plan in a way that will give Costa Mesans a
higher quality of life.
“Mike does his research and homework and is the kind of person who
asks the hard questions,” she said. “We need that in a councilman to
arrive at the good answers.”
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