Bethel Towers to stay the same -- only better
Jennifer Kho
WESTSIDE -- Bethel Towers is up for sale and intended buyer Steadfast
Properties and Development has good news for seniors -- no one will be
kicked out.
“The plan is to rehabilitate the property but to continue its use as
senior housing,” said Terry Freeman, the national director of affordable
housing finance for Klein Financial Corp., who is the financial
consultant for Steadfast. “Steadfast wants to purchase the property to
preserve its affordability.”
The tall building on 19th Street, full of apartments for low-income
seniors, is in escrow for sale to Steadfast.
Escrow is expected to close in the fall, Freeman said.
Steadfast, a Newport Beach property management and development
company, is also applying for tax-exempt bond financing from the
California Debt Limit Allocation Committee to buy and renovate the
apartments, she said.
The Orange County Board of Supervisors had a public hearing about the
proposed financing Tuesday to satisfy a federal tax requirement, said
Faye Watanabe, senior analyst for the county.
The public hearing, which allowed county residents the chance to speak
on the proposal, was the only county involvement, however, and the board
is not making any decision about the financing, county spokeswoman Diane
Thomas said.
Allan Roeder, Costa Mesa city manager, said Steadfast is requesting
tax-exempt state bond financing to allow it to renovate the building
without raising rents.
“The new owners are every bit as much interested in keeping seniors
who are there as we are,” he said. “There should be no concern that rents
are going to be increased or that seniors are going to be moved out.
There should be some pleasant surprises in terms of improvements to the
building.”
Although details have not yet been decided, the renovations that will
be proposed include upgrading the building, particularly to increase
safety measures.
“They’ve talked about maybe adding sprinkler systems and other
life-safety measures to make sure the building is as safe as it can be,”
Roeder said. “Also, the building hasn’t undergone a wholesale upgrade for
some time, so they are interested in kind of freshening it up.”
The city will review the terms of the project and its financing before
any renovation begins.
Michael Clifford, a Bethel Towers resident who ran unsuccessfully for
City Council last year, said he approves of the renovation.
“It will be nice to see it looking better,” he said.
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