Neighborhood protests treatment home expansion
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Jennifer Kho
COSTA MESA -- Signs on more than two dozen Willow Lane homes make it
clear that controversy abounds on this otherwise quiet street.
“Wrong direction for New Directions,” the signs state.
The three New Directions for Women group homes on Willow Lane include
two plain cottages that house up to six women each and a big brown one
that accommodates up to 18.
The homes have been part of the New Directions for Women alcohol and
drug rehabilitation program since 1977, but now residents on the street
are saying that enough is enough.
New Directions for Women is in escrow to buy a fourth home on the
street, and a group of Willow Lane residents plan to ask the City Council
to intervene.
“Our problem is that New Directions for Women is a business,” said
Jennifer Crandall, a Willow Lane resident. “This is a neighborhood of
single-family houses, a small, quiet street with a ton of kids. We
believe this type of facility is not safe in a permanent single-family
residence. Suddenly we have a neighborhood filled with strangers, and we
feel the neighborhood is saturated.
“The home needs to be in a commercial zone. They charge for their
services so they are a business.”
According to the Addiction Resource Guide, an online guide for people
seeking treatment, the facility charges $8,000 for a three-month stay.
The rehabilitation program now has seven homes on three streets in the
area -- Willow Lane and Redlands and University drives, according to a
New Directions for Women brochure.
Those homes are for women only. The new home that is proposed at 2596
Willow Lane would accommodate women with children, said Jan Christie,
executive director of New Directions for Women, adding that there is a
great need in the county for rehabilitation centers for women with
children.
The new home would house a total of up to 12 people, including
children, she said.
“We think it is important to establish a facility for women and
children because right now there are less than 50 beds available in all
of Orange County for women with alcohol dependencies and their children,”
Christie said. “Women with children often don’t get treatment for
alcoholism because they don’t have child care and then they end up losing
their children.”
Further complicating the issue is the fact that Willow Lane is in
unincorporated county land, proposed to be eventually annexed into Costa
Mesa.
Christie filed a county application for a permit for the new group
home Friday.
Crandall said the group of neighbors opposed to another group home is
hoping that the council will be able to persuade the county Board of
Supervisors not to review the application, because the area is expected
to be incorporated into Costa Mesa.
Councilwoman Linda Dixon said she is concerned about the possibility
of an over-concentration of rehabilitation homes in the city.
“I don’t think a lot of people realized, when they voted for
Proposition 36 to send people to rehabilitation instead of jail, that
rehabilitation homes of six or less are going to be popping up all over,”
she said.
But Christie said the women and children will be part of the
community.
“The children will be going to school in the school district,” she
said. “These women are making a contribution to the community by holding
their families together. They will continue to come to after-care and
stay involved with New Directions. They will not stay in that
neighborhood for years, but we will. And we want to be good neighbors. We
feel that is resolvable.”
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