Resident continues fight against Target
Andrew Glazer
COSTA MESA -- A resident fighting a developer’s plans to build a shopping
center near homes he owns will try Monday to convince the City Council to
reverse its approval of the project.
“I won’t be bringing up a lot of new issues,” said Al Morelli, who said
the Target store, restaurant and garden center planned for the site will
increase the neighborhood’s traffic and noise, from slamming car doors
and chirping alarms. “But the city appears to be dancing around the old
ones.”
The council will decide if Morelli and his attorney, Jack Lee, present
enough evidence to warrant a rehearing.
Morelli first appealed the Planning Commission’s March decision to
approve the project earlier this month. But the council voted this month
to allow the Dayton Hudson Corp., Target’s parent organization, to
continue with its plans for the site.
Without Morelli’s appeals, the Target project would never had required a
hearing. City planners determined it met all of the city’s requirements
for the site.
But in the prior hearings, Morelli said he believed the city had put the
project on a “fast track.”
“They’ve been going through the formalities,” Morelli said Friday.
“They’ve wasted my time.”
Jim Theusch of the Dayton Hudson Corp. said opposition to new
developments is nothing new.
“When we open any store, we’re going to encounter obstacles and go
through the city’s processes,” he said.
The City Council will meet at 6:30 p.m. Monday at City Hall, 77 Fair
Drive.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.