Planning Commission vetoes low-income housing
- Share via
Eron Ben-Yehuda
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- Despite the need for affordable housing, the Planning
Commission rejected plans Tuesday for a low-income residential project
considered too risky for the surrounding community.
“I just don’t feel comfortable risking this area,” Commissioner Connie
Mandic said.
Local developer Amwest Environmental Group Inc. proposed building a
three-story, 107-unit apartment complex on Ellis Avenue by Beach
Boulevard. Only individuals who meet the federal criteria for making low-
and very low-incomes would have qualified to rent the single-room studios
for about $500 per month.
But concerns that traffic and crime would ruin what some consider a
stable pocket of the community led the commission to reject the project
by a 4-3 vote. Chairman Gerald Chapman and Commissioners Ed Kearns and
Tom Livengood dissented.
About a dozen nearby residents showed up for the meeting. Most argued
that the facility would be a magnet for drug addicts, alcoholics and
prostitutes, even though the developer agreed to check the criminal
background of prospective tenants.
“That tells you who got caught, not who is doing what,” said resident
John Craney, who lives across from the site.
Other safety measures the developer intended to implement included
posting a guard on the premises at all times, installing 24-hour
closed-circuit television monitors in the common areas and requiring
visitors to check in with management.
But these precautions failed to satisfy Commissioner Fred Speaker, who
said he doubted the city could enforce these security arrangements.
“Our history in this city is that we haven’t been able to control
anything,” he said.
The decision stunned James Lu, the development company’s president, who
said the type of tenants he planned to rent to included students, nurses
and the elderly. These people are being discriminated against, he said.
“Are we saying low-income people should live in a bad area?” he asked.
And Kearns dismissed concerns about the area taking a turn for the worst.
“I believe the fear of crime is just that, a scare tactic,” he said.
The city’s principal planner, Scott Hess, warned the commission that its
decision hurts the city’s goal of providing affordable housing.
“The biggest loser is not just us,” Lu said. “It’s the whole community.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.