Costa Mesa has high number of group homes, report says
Elise Gee
COSTA MESA -- A report submitted to the City Council on Monday
confirmed what has long been suspected by residents and community leaders
here: Costa Mesa has a higher ratio of group homes than any of its
neighboring cities.
The report provides an inventory of the known 86 group homes for
children, the developmentally disabled, recovering drug addicts and
alcoholics, the homeless, abused women and senior citizens in the city.
Council members requested the information after two group homes --
Yellowstone Women’s First Step House and Newport Harbor Recovery --
applied for conditional use permits to operate in the city.
The applications, which are still pending, raised questions about how
much a city could regulate group homes and whether there was an
overconcentration of group homes in certain neighborhoods.
“It told me just what I thought -- that we’re a very socially
responsible community,” Councilwoman Linda Dixon said of the report.
Dixon said she would like to see more regulation of group homes,
which, she said, in some cases operate as businesses and change the
character of the residential neighborhoods they operate in.
In a comparison of group homes in Costa Mesa, Fountain Valley,
Huntington Beach, Irvine, Newport Beach and Santa Ana, Costa Mesa had the
highest ratio of group homes per 100,000 people with 83. Fountain Valley
and Santa Ana followed respectively with 51 and 39 group homes per
100,000 people.
The majority of group homes in each city cater to the elderly.
However, Costa Mesa had more alcohol and drug recovery facilities (9) and
more homes for minors (16) than every other city except Santa Ana, which
only had one more home for each category. Also, Costa Mesa had the only
halfway house in the six cities. The halfway house provides transitional
living for up to six female former convicts.
Three residents in favor of more regulation spoke at the council
meeting, including Trudy Ohlig-Hall, who said she has four group homes
within her immediate neighborhood.
“We’re noticing an erosion of our R-1 and R-2 zones,” said Diane
Gomez, a second resident who spoke.
Cities are limited by the state when it comes to regulation of group
homes. If a group home is state-regulated and has six or fewer residents,
it is exempt from local controls.
Dixon said she wants to push for more local control especially when
residents are suffering effects from group homes such as traffic, noise
and parking problems.
Don Ward, who helped found Newport Harbor Recovery for recovering
alcoholics and drug addicts, had a different view of the homes. Looking
at a map compiled by staff that shows the locations of the 86 group homes
in the city, he said, “Every one of those dots means somebody’s getting
help.”
Dixon said she is not opposed to helping people but wants to make sure
that Costa Mesa residents don’t carry an unfair share.
“Other communities need to be equally responsible,” she said.
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