EDITORIAL
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Sometimes, the only way to fix bad planning is to change it from the
ground up.
Last week, the Costa Mesa Planning Commission took the city’s first
step toward remedying such a problem in the Mesa del Mar area by
recommending the El Camino Center be replaced by single-family homes.
The City Council should follow that lead, but with some caution.
The reason for the renovation is clear. The area surrounding the
now-rundown center is all housing, which leaves it out of place and, in
the words of one commissioner, well past its usefulness to the community.
Neighbors almost uniformly support the housing plan. But the change is
not going to be easy on the businesses in the center or the patrons who
frequent them. To ease the transition, it is imperative that the the city
ensure the businesses forced to move are given aid in landing somewhere
else, as was done when Harbor Center was redone.
Unfortunately, there isn’t much that can be done for customers of the
center, many of whom are Latino and say they will be inconvenienced if
the businesses move.
With most of the neighbors in support, there is little reason for the
council to balk at the plans, which still must be worked out in detail
but are expected to include about two dozen homes.
Those customers did raise troubling issues after the Planning
Commission’s decision, however, saying that while many attended the
commission meeting, they don’t understand English well and didn’t know
they could speak out against the plan. Others suggested the businesses
are being pushed out because they are owned by Latinos.
The first of these is relatively easily remedied.
The council simply needs to do whatever it can to ensure its meetings
are understandable, and not just for an English-Spanish language barrier.
The council would be smart to remember that much of its meetings are
conducted in “government-speak,” which is often undecipherable to just
about everyone in the audience, even fluent English speakers.
The second charge is more disturbing, and while difficult to prove or
disprove, the council needs to reassure residents that there is no
unseemly motive behind the plan.
Having done so, it should then support the best project possible.
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