City readies for Home Ranch money
Lolita Harper
COSTA MESA -- As time ticks off the clock in anticipation of the Ikea
groundbreaking, city officials are making sure they are prepared to
receive and then distribute $2 million promised to city schools in the
Home Ranch development agreement.
City Manager Allan Roeder said the City Council will hold a study
session July 8 to consider the possibility of placing conditions on the
funds before handing them over to school officials.
The Home Ranch development agreement, adopted last year, calls for the
Segerstroms -- the dynasty family that owns the site of the massive
development -- to give $2 million in a lump sum to Costa Mesa high school
and middle school students when the first building permits for the
project are drawn. Costa Mesa High School, which serves those grades,
will receive $1 million, and Estancia High and TeWinkle Middle schools
will split the other $1 million.
Ikea is expected to begin construction first, marking the end of a
20-year battle to develop the final 93-acre piece of farmland held by the
Segerstrom family.
Upon pulling the permits, the Segerstroms will cut a check for the
lump sum to the city. The city will, in turn, distribute it to the
appropriate foundations set up by the receiving school officials.
Roeder said the council will discuss next week the possibility of
placing a council member on either, or both, of the foundations or
mandating that any foundation meeting be held in a public setting.
“There are some points we want to make sure the council is comfortable
with before we turn [the money] over,” Roeder said.
Council members negotiated the development agreement, which makes them
the custodians of those funds, Roeder said. Roeder said he and his
staffers want to discuss all options.
Councilman Gary Monahan said he believes the foundations should be
“watchdogged” but does not think it is the council’s role to do so. He
said a committee of residents would be better suited to monitor the
money.
“Last thing I want to do is stick someone from the council on there to
constantly interject city opinion,” Monahan said.
Talks about disseminating the funds are preliminary as building
permits for the site -- just north of the San Diego Freeway, between
Harbor Boulevard and Fairview Road -- have not yet been pulled. Roeder
said the Ikea portion of the development is in the “plan check” phase.
Construction activity on the site so far has consisted of trucks
scraping and drying out the soil before it is replaced as a base for the
new store, city planners said. The grading and building permits are
anticipated in the next few weeks.
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