Ruling will ease process
- Share via
Dave Brooks
The conversion of condominiums sold before June 1 will be
fast-tracked, but owners will have to pay an affordable housing fee,
council members decided Monday night.
In a 4-0 vote, with council members Gil Coerper, Jill Hardy and
Pam Julien Houchen absent, the council approved the final reading of
a ordinance allowing a special process to clear up the property
titles of residents who bought condominiums that were converted from
apartments without proper permits.
The ordinance only applies to condo owners who bought their homes
before June 1, 2004, and allows them to go through an expedited
permitting process. Those who cannot meet strict landscaping and
parking requirements will have to pay into an affordable housing fund
that will be used to replenish the city’s residential stock.
Approval of the law marks a major step for the ordinance, which
went through four separate public hearings because of amendments. The
ordinance has drawn the scorn of condo owners who feel the affordable
housing fee is excessive.
Houchen, whose involvement in the controversy has come under
increased scrutiny, has missed three City Council meetings and left
another one early, avoiding recusing herself from a vote on the
ordinance. Several condos sold by Houchen are being looked at by
police and federal agents to determine whether the condos were
converted from apartments without permits.
But the conversion issue is not over. Now the council has to
approve the affordable housing fee assessment, which could be as high
as $20,000 a household, Councilwoman Debbie Cook said. An exact
figure will be available sometime later this year when a consulting
firm hired by the city releases a report outlining the impact of the
conversions on the city’s affordable housing stock.
In the meantime, owners are stuck in legal limbo, unable to sell
or refinance their condos because of title problems, but forced to
pay hefty fees when they are eventually allowed to move forward.
“What the council is concerned about right now is helping these
people get on with their lives,” Boardman said.
Approving the fees will not be the end of the council’s dealing
with the conversion issue, Cook said, because many new issues that
the council never anticipated are beginning to pop up.
“One thing we have to look at is what if we have a four-plex with
three people who want to convert right away and one doesn’t,” she
said.
A federal investigation of the condo conversion controversy is
also moving ahead. Members of the FBI and the U.S. Attorney’s office
are investigating the matter, and a federal grand jury has been
convened to look into the matter.
“This is really far from over,” Boardman said. “Nobody feels like
we’re done yet.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.