Editorial
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It would be a shame if a Costa Mesa City Council decision on Monday
puts an end to a housing project that would have replaced the rundown El
Camino Shopping Center.
When the council voted Monday to require that all home lot sizes be a
minimum 4,000 square feet and an average 4,500 square feet, the project
may have bit the dust.
In March, with no opposition present, the council paved the way for
Jeff Pratt to build 19 to 29 homes at the site. Monday’s decision,
however, may have jeopardized that.
Pratt, owner of the triangular shopping center in Mesa Del Mar, said
the new guidelines will kill his project. After all, when the council
rezoned the shopping center from that of commercial to medium-density
residential, his homes were to be built on minimum-sized lots of 3,000
square feet with average lots of 3,500 square feet.
Pratt told the Planning Commission in January that it would be
impossible for him to go forward with his project if the commission
adopted codes calling for 3,500-square-foot minimum and 4,000-square-foot
average sized lots. So, it recommended the council adopt standards
requiring lot sizes of 3,000 square feet and 3,500 square feet.
Councilwoman Karen Robinson suggested those numbers be upped, and
Councilwoman Linda Dixon and Councilman Chris Steel followed suit with
their approving votes. Not once at that meeting did the council, nor
anyone, discuss the El Camino project. That in itself is a shame.
However, a day later, Steel learned that the council’s decision could
kill the El Camino project, and he told the Daily Pilot he would ask the
council to rectify its decision to somehow allow the project to continue
with the smaller lot sizes.
Surrounding the El Camino Shopping Center are both low- and
high-density residential areas. Those neighbors looked forward to the new
project, knowing all too well that the shopping center’s days are
numbered. Now, they may be stuck with their rundown neighbor, as Pratt
says he’ll skip town and build his project in a city that doesn’t turn
around and approve a decision contradictory to the previous one given
him.
In the past, we at the Pilot approved of Pratt’s housing project and
we continue to do so. It would be a shame if the council doesn’t rectify
its decision in a way that would allow Pratt’s homes to be built on the
lot sizes he desires. After all, the shopping center has indeed seen its
days.
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