Costa Mesa looking at redevelopment areas
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Jennifer Kho
COSTA MESA -- The City Council unanimously agreed this week to take
the first step toward redeveloping rundown areas in the city.
“There are a lot of variables that have to be looked at and, quite
frankly, we’ll need to consider where we can get the best improvement for
the limited funds we will see that we have,” Councilman Gary Monahan
said. “With the economy the way it is and the conditions we know of in
certain areas in town, I personally believe now is the time to pursue
this.”
The council, acting as the city’s Redevelopment Agency, asked city
staff to come up with four or five target areas that could benefit from
redevelopment.
Such redevelopment could include the city using the area’s property
taxes specifically to improve the area and taking over some of the land
using eminent domain.
Laws governing eminent domain, the city’s right to take possession of
land, would require the city to reimburse owners for any property it
takes and to relocate occupants.
Monahan, who is the Redevelopment Agency’s chairman, said he supports
using eminent domain if it turns out to be feasible.
“If we were to go forward with forming a redevelopment area without
the authority of eminent domain, there isn’t much we can do,” he said.
“It would just focus the revenue of taxes from that area into that area.”
Mayor Libby Cowan has previously said she does not support eminent
domain on the Westside and thinks there are other ways to improve the
area.
Westside residents are split on the issue. Some say eminent domain
could be the only way to really clean up the area; others say they are
concerned they might be displaced.
To qualify to be redeveloped, areas must be considered blighted.
At the next meeting, tentatively scheduled for 4 p.m. March 12, the
agency is expected to review the recommended areas and to consider hiring
a redevelopment expert to analyze the costs and benefits of redeveloping
the different areas, as well as to determine if the areas fit the legal
description of blight.
Monahan said he expects city staff to figure out “where the city can
make a difference, how much it’s going to cost and what we can get out of
it.”
Although the study could include areas anywhere in the city, Monahan
said the majority of the target areas are on the Westside.
Since 1998, the city has focused on the aging, rundown Westside for
intense revitalization.
After two years of meetings and studies, the council voted in November
to use the Westside Specific Plan as a resource for developing a new one
-- which could be put on hold until the council can first agree on a
vision for the entire city.
Eleanor Egan, chairwoman for the Westside Improvement Assn., said the
agency’s unanimous move is a good sign for the future.
“I’m in favor of considering redevelopment,” she said. “We need a
plan, and that is one way of getting a plan.”
Cowan said she sees the agency’s decision as the beginning of an
“educational process about what redevelopment really means.
“It is the first step of many that must be taken to establish a
redevelopment project area,” Cowan said. “We will be making decisions
about whether to go forward at various points along the way, but right
now everybody on the council seems willing to learn more. I think it will
be a really interesting process to hear everyone out as we decide whether
to go forward with it.”
Councilwoman Linda Dixon said she is eager to learn about the
redevelopment process because the council “may have to resort to
redevelopment to move forward with the expectations that we’re looking
for on the Westside.”
Council members Karen Robinson and Chris Steel were not available by
press time.
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