Possibly staying put
Lauren Vane
As evictions loom at El Morro Village in Crystal Cove State Park,
residents of the scenic mobile home park have been thrown a last
minute life-preserver -- if they can catch it in time .
Last week, Assemblyman Chuck DeVore proposed two similar bills
that could allow the El Morro residents to remain in their homes for
30 years.
If approved by the legislature, the bills would require that the
residents pay a total of $50 million to the state to extend their
leases -- funds that would either help reduce the state budget
deficit or work off a backlog in parks department maintenance costs.
DeVore says the mobile home tenants could help fill the
$8.6-billion gap in the state’s budget deficit by paying increased
rents, and that the state would also save $12 million by not
developing the site with a 60-unit campground, a 200-space parking
lot and nature trails, restrooms and a lifeguard tower.
“If we in Sacramento are serious about getting a handle on our
runaway deficit, then we have to take concrete steps to improve the
state’s financial situation,” DeVore said.
Fern Pirkle, who spearheaded efforts that led to the creation of
Crystal Cove State Park, opposes the bills.
“Definitely it’s against the best interests of the people of
California and against the best interests of most of Mr. DeVore’s
constituents, who I’m sure would like to be able to go to the beach
there and would like to be able to spend the night camping there,”
Pirkle said.
DeVore does not want to give residents false hope that their homes
may be saved, but he does hope one of the bills will pass before the
evictions take place -- or that Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger will act
to halt the evictions.
“I’m hoping that by putting forward my bill, the governor’s office
will put forward a stay because this is a valuable resource they’re
going to lose pretty soon,” DeVore said.
False hope or not, the El Morro residents are hanging on to the
possibility that DeVore’s proposal could save them from having to
uproot their homes -- and their lives.
“We’re gratified that someone else is interested in our plight and
that we have an assemblyman who has some fiscal responsibility,” said
Jeanette Miller, Chairperson of the El Morro Community Assn.
“Its all dollars and cents to me and I just think it’s fiscally
irresponsible,” DeVore said.
As the bills propose, the tenants will pay a minimum of $50
million to the state. The money will either help fill the state
deficit hole or go toward the backlog of parks department maintenance
costs. The $50-million payment would raise El Morro tenants’ rent
considerably, DeVore said. Tenants would pay market rates, totaling
$4.2 million, which would net an estimated $3.2 million to the state,
after maintenance costs.
The El Morro mobile home park has been in operation since the
mid-1950s, and homeowners first signed a 20-year lease with the state
in 1979 when the Crystal Cove Park land was purchased by the parks
department.
An additional five-year extension on the lease was granted in 1999
because the state did not have sufficient funds to proceed with
construction of a park at the site. Now that the lease is up and the
state has the money to begin the project, construction of the new
public facility is set to begin in Spring 2005.
In December, residents were given an option to sign a three-month
lease extension along with a payment of $3,000, which will go toward
the cost of removing the mobile homes.
To date, 26 residents have signed the three-month lease extension
agreement and therefore may legally remain in their homes until April
1, said Ken Kramer, superintendent of Crystal Cove State Park. The
remaining 268 tenants could be served with eviction notices in the
coming weeks, Kramer said.
In the meantime, Miller said that residents are anxious about what
the future will bring.
“We’re just hoping that the state will have the time to consider
this possibility before we’re evicted,” Miller said.
Many El Morro residents who have not signed the extension
agreement intend to stay until they are forced to leave, Miller said.
“We’re going to hang on until the last possible minute,” Miller
said. “No one is making plans to move.”
David Flores, a local resident and parent of a child at Top of the
World elementary school, received a flier in the mail Tuesday
featuring nonlocal newspaper headlines about crimes that had occurred
in RV parks and campgrounds.
The flier read: “The 300 families of El Morro Village have been
great parents and neighbors to El Morro Elementary for over 50 years.
Those good neighbors will be evicted in the next few weeks . Don’t
let this happen to our community.”
Flores said he thinks the flier is a scare tactic to get local
residents to support the El Morro tenants.
Miller said she was not aware of who mailed the flier, but said
she knows that local parents are concerned about the RV park and what
it could mean for the nearby school.
For now, state parks legislative staff are in the process of
reviewing both of DeVore’s proposed bills, after which they will make
a recommendation to the governor, Kramer said. An unlawful detainer
motion is making its way through court, and if the court finds in
favor of the state, Orange County Sheriff’s deputies will soon post
eviction notices at El Morro trailer park , Kramer said.
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