Swap meet proposal tries again tonight
Lolita Harper
One man, who says he is acting on behalf of all city residents,
stands in the way of the return of a Saturday swap meet at Orange
Coast College, which he claims the Planning Commission had no right
to approve.
Eastside resident Paul Wilbur demanded a formal public hearing for
tonight when he filed a last-minute appeal of revised campus swap
meet plans, which the Planning Commission unanimously endorsed Oct.
28.
Wilbur, who filed his appeal and a check for the $248 fee five
minutes before the Nov. 4 deadline, said he challenged the previous
approval of the restructured venue because city officials did not
follow proper procedure.
“This is an issue I am taking on for staff because they are too
busy having a love fest and aren’t monitoring the [government
codes],” Wilbur said.
The swap meet, which unknowingly grew to double its permitted size
over the past 20 years, was cut in half in May after city officials
researched traffic complaints on Fairview Road. The flea market-type
shopping venue has been operating at half its previous capacity for
seven months.
Planning commissioners agreed to reopen the swap meet on Saturdays
with an average of 260 vendors per day as long as college officials
worked on a more advanced vendor reservation process and prohibited
parking in the Coast Community College District parking lot, which is
across the street from where the meet is held.
Commissioners also ordered a six-month review to track the
college’s progress.
Wilbur has the uncanny ability to rattle off myriad government
code sections and could quickly recite the precise code he said names
the City Council as the only municipal body with the authority to
grant a business license to the swap meet.
Campus swap meet supporters say Wilbur’s attention to detail is
excessive. While his action may be well intentioned, it may result in
a lean holiday season for many vendors and their families.
The college’s administrative dean of economic development and
community education, George Blanc, who oversees the swap meet, said a
Saturday operation is essential for many merchants for financial
survival. The booming shopping season provides an economic cushion
for the trifling months that generally follow.
“Look at what he is doing to the community and the college,” Blanc
said. “I just pray it will go through.”
While Blanc is looking to the heavens for an increase in holiday
sales, nearby church officials are asserting their own powers to stop
the swap meet’s expansion.
Richard Cook, property and finance director for The Presbyterian
Church of the Covenant, wrote a letter to the city Oct. 23 asking
officials to prohibit the swap meet’s return to Saturdays because of
the parking and litter problems experienced at the church, which is
directly across the street from campus.
“We are not looking forward to the holidays as usual,” Cook wrote.
“Even though the swap meet is only on Sunday, we expect the overnight
campers to still be a problem, as we are just too convenient for
them. We are presently planning to chain our lots so we don’t have to
deal with the mess.”
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