Inside CITY HALL
WHAT HAPPENED: The Planning Commission on Monday approved a tentative
plan for a cooperative housing development for low-income families.
WHAT IT MEANS: The development, a collaboration between Habitat for
Humanity of Orange County and the city’s Redevelopment Agency, will
include the subdivision of two Del Mar Avenue lots into four.
The lots are owned by the Redevelopment Agency, and Habitat for
Humanity would select the owners, who would be required to fulfill
low-income qualifications and abide by maintenance and occupancy
agreements.
Three houses ranging from 2,859 square feet to 3,621 square feet will
be on three of the lots, and the remaining lot will be used for a common
driveway, guest parking spaces and part of the frontyard.
The project was approved in a development review June 22.
The City Council in June approved a moratorium prohibiting small-lot
developments, but the moratorium does not apply to project applications
filed before May 15.
The Habitat for Humanity project was submitted May 5.
WHAT THEY SAID: “I’m excited about the project,” Commissioner Katrina
Foley said. “I think other Habitat for Humanity homes built on the same
street are good examples of homes that are very well maintained and
contribute to the community.”
VOTE: 5-0 to approve
WHAT HAPPENED: The Planning Commission postponed a decision on
Lighthouse Coastal Community Church’s plans to use part of its parking
lot as a play yard on weekdays and to establish a new early childhood
development center.
WHAT IT MEANS: City staff will use the time to meet with residents,
church representatives and Commissioner Bill Perkins to try to resolve
disputes about the site.
Neighbors at the meeting expressed concerns about traffic, parking and
noise.
The preschool would be in the same location as the former Southcoast
Early Childhood Learning Center, where two children -- Sierra Soto, 4,
and Brandon Wiener, 3 -- were killed and several others injured on May 3,
1999, when Steven Allen Abrams, 39, drove his 1967 Cadillac into its
crowded playground.
The Southcoast Early Childhood Learning Center was privately run and
was open for long hours, Chairman Walt Davenport said.
The proposal includes having the church run the new learning center
with limited hours, from 9 a.m. to noon.
WHAT THEY SAID: “They are neighbors, they are going to be living
there, and they need to live in harmony, not in conflict,” Foley said.
“Hopefully everyone will make compromises to allow that to happen.”
VOTE: 5-0 to continue
NEXT MEETING:
WHAT: Regular Costa Mesa Planning Commission meeting
WHERE: Costa Mesa City Hall, 77 Fair Drive
WHEN: 6:30 p.m. March 5
INFO: (714) 754-5245
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