City hustling to develop Fairview Park plan
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Andrew Glazer
FAIRVIEW PARK -- Costa Mesa parks officials are scrambling to put
together a plan to convert weedy Fairview Park to the shrubby grassland
it was 100 years ago.
The city last week asked the state-run California Coastal Conservation
for about $200,000 to help fund the park planning, said Dave Alkema of
the city’s parks department.
He said he wants a detailed plan for restoring native shrubs, chaparral
and grasses to the park before next month, when California voters will
decide on Proposition 12, which, if approved, would free the state to
release $2.3 billion in bonds for cities to improve, expand and purchase
local parks.
Costa Mesa could receive at least $1.3 million if Prop. 12 passes,
according to a report prepared by the state Department of Parks and
Recreation.
But before Costa Mesa would see any of the money, it would need to prove
to the state it was committed to spending it on legitimate parks
projects, said Bill Corcoran, the Sierra Club’s public land conservation
coordinator for Orange County.
“They need to make sure they show the Legislature the project would
benefit the neighborhood’s sense of community, safety and quality of
life,” he said.
Alkema said improving the 210-acre Fairview Park should be one of the
city’s priorities if it did receive state funding for parks. He said
having a detailed plan should prove the city’s commitment to the park,
which had been destroyed by decades of grazing and farming.
“We’d be ready to go, and in good position to get the funds,” Alkema
said.
Alkema slipped and slid through the mud in Fairview Park on Wednesday
afternoon, pointing out the low-growing weeds that have strangled
scraggly native chaparral.
He trudged over mounds of dirt that were dumped in the park years ago to
cover archeological digs. He tread gently along a cracked mudflat. The
tiny pools that will be there after a few more days of rain are one of
the last places in the state where pinky-sized fairy shrimp can breed and
flourish.
Alkema then walked to the bluff and looked at the flat Talbert Regional
Park, which the county recently replanted with native California grasses
and shrubs.
“That’s what we want it to look like,” he said. “But things move really
slow. It would help if Prop. 12 passed. But I’m not holding my breath.”
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