COMMUNITY COMMENTARY -- Janet Remington
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In the 1980s, C.J. Segerstrom executives saw Costa Mesa as the future
“downtown Orange County.” But the city’s 1990 general plan showed nothing
so urban.
That plan was laboriously, painstakingly worked out, with persistent
disputes between developers and residents. Other cities began preparing
general plans long after Costa Mesa did and completed them while Costa
Mesa’s feuding parties were still at it. Former Mayor Mary Hornbuckle
lamented at one council meeting that the wrangling had gone on for so
many years that it was embarrassing.
During that knockdown, drag-out fight, the community locked horns with
developers over differing numbers for traffic and air pollution, and over
acceptable zoning, densities and commercial intensities. No one could
call the process careless or frivolous.
The ferocious fighting abated at last when compromises by both sides
enabled the city to produce its 1990 general plan. Segerstrom
representatives participated at every stage of the process and took part
in the final compromises. Now they want to trash them.
Why would residents want to go in that direction? They made
compromises just as the developer did. Why should one party to the deal
be permitted to renege?
Costa Mesa may no longer be a village, but within the city are a
number of communities with village-like qualities and cohesion. It is an
atmosphere most residents cherish. Why would we want less quiet and
safety, worse traffic and worse air?
Why would we want to bring back the threat of a
neighborhood-unfriendly Gisler Street bridge extending across the Santa
Ana River? With the prospect of 6,000 more cars packing a number of Costa
Mesa and Fountain Valley intersections, the city of Fountain Valley is
again talking of a need for a Gisler bridge.
One more point. I live between Baker Street and the San Diego Freeway,
an area described in an older general plan as a low spot -- a basin where
smog collects. This vision for Home Ranch sounds no better than the two
that were approved by Costa Mesa city councils in the 1980s and promptly
thrown out by residents.
JANET REMINGTON
Costa Mesa
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