Land takeover fight gathers steam
Eron Ben-Yehuda
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- With the City Council inching ever closer to
reinstating the city’s power to buy Downtown residential property by
force, a group of residents vowed last week to let the voters make the
final decision.
“This is going to have to be put on a referendum ballot or we’re going to
lose our way of life,” Main Street merchant Jinx Verona said to a crowd
of about 50 people who gathered at the Shed restaurant and bar last week.
The council plans to redevelop major swaths of Downtown, including the
400 and 500 blocks of Pacific Coast Highway, where a multimillion-dollar
hotel, retail and restaurant complex has been approved, to the dismay of
many in attendance.
“The heartless people that run this community are saying ‘Screw you
guys,’ ” said Bob Bolen, a resident and local businessman.
But a referendum could stop the city from moving forward even if the
council, as expected, passes an ordinance reinstating residential eminent
domain authority next month, said resident Jim Lane. The power expired by
law in 1994.
To qualify for a referendum, 10,000 signatures must be gathered within 30
days after the council approves the ordinance, said Bill Westermeyer, of
Santa Monica-based Progressive Campaigns, a company hired to help with
the petition drive.
The fact that so many signatures must be gathered in so little time
shouldn’t discourage anyone, he said.
“I’m not saying this is easy,” he said. “(But) it’s definitely doable.”
To pay for the estimated $50,000 cost of the referendum effort, Lane
collected about $20,000 in donations so far, he said. For a campaign
headquarters, resident Billy Stade offered his store on 116 1/2 Main St., where he used to run the Closet.
Volunteers, though, will determine the group’s success and support will
come from residents who gathered enough signatures for a ballot
initiative against plans to build a Wal-Mart on Talbert Avenue, said
resident Barbara Boscovich, a leading opponent of the retailer.
“This is not just your fight, it’s the city’s fight, it’s the people’s
fight,” she said.
By the end of the meeting, the crowd seemed ready for the challenge
ahead.
“When we’re done and we win, we’re going to have the best party,” Verona
said.
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