Council to reconsider restrictions on group home
Elise Gee
COSTA MESA -- Yellowstone Women’s First Step House will have a second
chance to convince the City Council that it should be permitted to treat
more recovering alcoholics to make the best use of the group home.
Earlier this month, the council granted Yellowstone a conditional-use
permit for just seven residents, although the group home had requested
one for 14 people.
The reduction came as a surprise to Yellowstone supporters, who said they
had been negotiating in good faith with the city to address their
neighbors’ concerns about noise and traffic.
“It had never been a question before,” said board member Petr Norman
Walker. “The number of occupants had never been an issue on the
conditions. It seemed underhanded. We spent a month working out the
conditions, never having the occupancy being one of them.”
The council decided to rehear Yellowstone’s case at its Monday meeting.
Yellowstone, a nonprofit organization run solely by volunteers, applied
for a permit to operate a “first step” home for 14 women just starting
their recovery. The women would stay for up to 10 days.
Residents who live near the house at 154 E. Bay Street raised concerns
about traffic, parking and noisy Sunday meetings. Yellowstone agreed to a
number of concessions, including restricting Sunday meetings to once a
month for two hours. It also agreed to stop publicizing open Alcoholics
Anonymous meetings, to limit street parking and to appoint a community
member to its board of directors.
After Yellowstone representatives agreed to those conditions, the public
hearing was closed and Councilwoman Libby Cowan proposed allowing just
seven residents at the home. Cowan said she still believes seven is an
appropriate number, but supported the rehearing because procedurally the
council did not give Yellowstone a chance to respond to the reduced
permit.
Yellowstone also applied for a rehearing because it challenged the
legality of the council’s limit. Yellowstone’s lawyer, Robert Break,
argued in a letter to the council that it should not even be subject to a
conditional-use permit because it is not a boarding house and does not
operate as a business.
“What we at Yellowstone are doing is within the boundaries of the law,
and to restrict our numbers goes against the law,” Walker said.
Mayor Gary Monahan said he supports a rehearing and would support an
increase in the number of residents allowed at the home. The way it
stands now, Yellowstone is allowed one resident for each of its seven
bedrooms.
“The law says you can’t treat them any different from any traditional
family group,” Monahan said. “You look at it from a reasonable
standpoint. I have three bedrooms in my house. What am I going to do,
ship my kids off someplace?”
Walker said since the number of residents was restricted to seven,
Yellowstone has had to turn numerous women away.
“We’re trying to be part of the solution,” Walker said. “I’m talking
about doing the right thing. This is a philanthropic deal here. Nobody’s
making any money.”
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