Redevelopment an open book for residents
Lolita Harper
COSTA MESA -- In the spirit of back-to-school night, the city is
offering to school residents on the various aspects of redevelopment.
City officials will host a Community Redevelopment Workshop -- also
known as Redevelopment 101 -- tonight at the Neighborhood Community
Center.
The goal of the workshop, City Manager Allan Roeder said, is to
educate residents about what redevelopment is, what redevelopment
agencies can do -- or not do -- and how sections of the city are chosen
as possible study areas.
Eric Bever, a member of the Westside Improvement Assn, said the
meeting will be helpful in informing the public and relieving any
misconceptions people may have about redevelopment.
“Redevelopment is really technical, so many people seem to get the
wrong idea,” Bever said. “Misconceptions create a lot of unnecessary fear
and unnecessary resistance to many projects.”
Sixteen areas have been suggested for study by the City Council --
acting as the city’s Redevelopment Agency. They include the 19th Street
commercial corridor, industrial and apartment neighborhoods south of 19th
Street, the industrial corridor on Placentia Avenue between Industrial
Street and 19th, and various apartments around Baker Street and Mendoza
Avenue, said Mike Robinson, planning and redevelopment manager.
Bever said the main goal of redevelopment is to improve an area so
property values rise. For residents who have voiced concern about blight
or “slums,” the workshop will provide more facts, he said.
The concept of blight, and the true definition, will be discussed
during the meeting, Roeder said.
There are very specific criteria given for blighted areas that may not
fall in line with what some residents see as rundown areas, Roeder said.
Educating the public is a necessary first step, Mayor Libby Cowan
said.
“These are concepts that must be understood prior to us going any
further in the redevelopment process,” Cowan said.
The redevelopment study was originally proposed as a Westside study,
but the council voted in March to add areas outside that part of town.
The workshop is the first step in the redevelopment process,
Councilman Gary Monahan said. The project areas will be narrowed and
feasibility studies are expected to be completed by October.
FYI
What: Community Redevelopment Workshop
When: 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. today
Where: Neighborhood Community Center, 1845 Park Ave., Costa Mesa
Call: (714) 754-5245
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