Future bleak for Crystal Cove resort
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Stefanie Frith
CRYSTAL COVE -- In what residents and community activists are calling
a giant step for the beach cottage community, park officials announced a
decision to end a contract for a $35 million hotel resort, Sierra Club
spokesperson Jeannette Merrilees said Saturday.
However, the state must still reach a final settlement to buy out the
60-year contract with developer Michael Freed, who is in Fiji and could
not reached for comment. State parks officials were also unavailable
Saturday.
“I called the park to confirm when I found out [the news] from sources
in Sacramento, and I spoke to Roy Stearns with the parkand he told me
that their lawyers were huddling and working out a settlement with
Freed’s lawyers,” Merrilees said.
Yet even if the contract is bought out, Merrilees said the cottages at
Crystal Cove could still be turned into a resort.
“Once it’s over, [the state parks department] can still consider
another proposal. They can accept another contract,” she said. “The
Sierra Club and other groups just think that the beach is a public place
and decisions for the public should not be made behind closed doors.”
Many residents declined to comment, stating that the parks department
decision would be talked about during a press conference at 10 a.m.
Tuesday in front of resident Doug Falzetti’s home.
In 1997, Freed received the right to restore the 46 historic cottages
in the cove and convert them into an environmental resort. Residents and
environmentalists, however, were against the idea, stating that despite
the fact that many of the buildings were falling apart, the charm of the
1920s-era cottages would be lost. They also said that the prices of the
resort, up to $375 per night, would keep the general public away.
For Crystal Cove tenants, who lease their cottages on a month-to-month
basis, the news that the parks department plans to buy out Freed’s
contract was a bright spot in a dark couple of weeks. Residents are
expecting to receive 30-day eviction notices on Thursday, making way for
a $10 million project to tear out old septic tanks, install sewer lines
and eliminate urban runoff. Out of 46 cottages, 40 are currently
occupied.
Deenie Newland, a Crystal Cove resident, said she is afraid of the
eviction, stating that she doesn’t know where she and her husband, Walt,
who is on a oxygen tank, will go.
“I am still hoping that they will let us stay,” she said, perched on a
bed in her cottage. “This is the last of this kind of colony. I know
people who started living in this area in tents. And now they want us to
leave. That’s a lot of money they are going to lose.”
Tenants pay $750 to $1300 per month for their cottages.
Laura Davick, spokesperson for the Alliance to Rescue Crystal Cove and
a longtime resident, said that the eviction may not even occur at this
point.
“I think that with the decision by [the state parks department] to end
the contract, that they will reevaluate the evictions,” she said. “But
the decision [to end the contract] was the right decision. It needs to be
turned back to the public.”
But Newland said that the state’s indecision on what to do with the
cottage colony has made it difficult to stay on top of the upkeep.
“No one knows anything. They tell us something new all the time,” she
said. “Because we don’t know how much longer we will all be here, we
can’t put money into our homes so they continue to deteriorate. Which is
what they want I think. Then they will have an excuse to tear them all
down when we are evicted.”
For now though, Newland and other residents said they will take things
day to day.
“I know artists who are coming down here more than ever because they
are sick at the thought that it might not be here any longer,” Newland
said, watching her husband enjoy the view from their deck. “It’s all so
sad. It’s the most amazing and beautiful, historic little area you will
ever see.”
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