Community Commentary -- SANDRA KASZYNSKI
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I live on a very nice street in West Santa Ana Heights. One day, a
Costa Mesa code enforcement officer happened to be on our cul-de-sac. My
neighbors have a nice house with a nice boat in their front yard. It has
been there for years. They take it out to play, clean it up and leave it
for the next time. It does not bother anyone. A code enforcement officer
wrote them a ticket because the boat was partially off the driveway.
We don’t want to be part of Costa Mesa -- or actually Newport Beach
for that matter -- because it means more invasion in our lives. We don’t
live in Irvine or a gated community because their laws are, frankly,
Communistic. Other folks make that choice and God bless them because this
is America and that is their right. You know when you buy there, those
are the rules.
Costa Mesa has adopted new rules governing what I can do on my
property. My husband cannot work on our car and leave it overnight, we
cannot leave screens off our windows even though I like to view my garden
through a clear window.
I can’t have dead plants in my yard. What will happen if a code
enforcement officer sees them going to seed for next years spring
extravaganza?
When many of us brought these questions up at a fall meeting at Monte
Vista School, we were told we were not who those rules were put into
action for.
The city wants teeth to get those who criminally neglect their
neighbor’s property values. We did not buy into a gated community, though
some on the council want it retroactively that way.
If Costa Mesa wants to clean up residential areas, the laws should
clearly be directed at people who make a profit renting to others. Some
landlords do not live in the city and put nothing back into their
properties.
Health and safety should be the concerns of code enforcement and that
is all. Whether a nice boat in a nice neighborhood has a wheel off in its
own private driveway should be none of the city’s business.
* SANDRA KASZYNSKI is a West Santa Ana Heights resident.
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