A plan to save the bluffs
Mathis Winkler
CORONA DEL MAR -- What good is a policy if there’s no way to enforce
it?
That’s a question Edward Selich, the chair of the city’s planning
commission, raised last September when he and his colleagues reviewed
plans for two new homes on the bluffs in Corona del Mar.
The Breakers Drive residents wanted to build their houses taller than
allowed and had to get permission from the commissioners.
Jay Cowan, who proposed a new 6,800-square-foot residence, eventually
succeeded with his plan after making some changes. The other applicant’s
12,299-square-foot home didn’t make the cut.
Alarmed that the proposed mansion would not have required their
approval if the applicant had remained within height limits,
commissioners began looking for a way to protect the city’s bluffs from
vanishing under such large, new homes.
After all, a council policy that’s been on the books at least since
1988 states that new buildings “shall be controlled and regulated to
insure, to the extent practical, the preservation of public views, the
preservation of unique and natural resources and to minimize the
alteration of natural land forms along bluffs and cliffs.”
“We have a policy . . . but we have no teeth,” said Commissioner
Michael Kranzley, adding that “people are building bigger and bigger
houses” as a result of the economic boom of the last few years.
“We either eliminate the policy or provide some basis for us to have
some oversight,” he said. “Right now, we got nothing. It’s kind of
scary.”
At their April 5 meeting, commissioners unanimously recommended that
council members adopt a process that would require a so-called site plan
review for all projects on the village’s coastal bluffs.
Properties affected would stretch from just north of Avocado Avenue to
just south of Poppy Avenue. Council members will have to hold two public
hearings before they can make a decision. At the earliest, the new rule
could become effective June 7.
While some applauded the commission’s proposal, several residents,
including Cowan, adamantly opposed the idea at the April 5 hearing.
“I believe that preventing us, as private property owners, [from
building homes that follow city regulations] is a taking of private
property for public use,” said Cowan, who is also the president of the
Breakers Drive Assn. “We believe taking private property for public use
is illegal.”
Others told commissioners that the proposal would jeopardize their
projects and result in the loss of money they’d already spent.
“We have invested over $150,000 [in design plans],” said Daniel
Leonard, whose property would be affected. “We’re not asking for a
variance. We only ask that our building permit be issued as everybody
else’s.”
Lawrence Tabak, who had bought his Ocean Boulevard home with the plan
to build a new house two years ago, agreed.
“It’s extremely unfair that we’re working with the building department
in good faith, only to be told at the last minute that this was coming
down the pipe,” he said.
But commissioners rejected the notion that the proposed review was
illegal and made it impossible for property owners to build on their
land.
“This ordinance doesn’t prevent development,” Selich said. “It just
brings projects before the commission.”
Mayor Gary Adams said Friday that he’d not looked carefully at the
issue and added that his “natural tendency has been to resist” reviews
such as the one proposed.
But “I kind of softened on that,” he said. “There may be some areas
where it’s appropriate and [Corona del Mar] might be one area.”
Council members are expected to discuss the proposal at their April 24
meeting.
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