COMMUNITY COMMENTARY -- Robin Leffler
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It’s time for a reality check.
There is a great misrepresentation floating around about the type of
development that Costa Mesa’s current general plan allows for Home Ranch.
Proponents of the huge Segerstrom proposal perpetuate the misinformation
that “current zoning calls for the property to be used primarily for
warehouses” and that those warehouses would be ugly eyesores serviced by
exaggerated numbers of “18-wheelers” (Letters to the Editor, “Home Ranch
outperforms the general plan,” Forrest Werner).
Let’s get back to reality. The zoning on the approximately 62.5 acres
of lima bean field in question is planned development industrial.
According to Costa Mesa’s general plan, this industrial park designation
permits “a wide variety of industrial and compatible office and support
commercial uses. Industrial parks are characterized by large parcels and
landscaped setbacks which lend to the creation of a spacious
environment.” Corporate headquarters, low-rise offices, research and
development facilities and attractively designed, landscaped warehouses
could all be part of the mix on the Home Ranch. Not only is this what our
general plan actually says about the Home Ranch zoning, city staff
provided a chart confirming that any of these uses are allowed on Home
Ranch, at the proper density. Our current general plan for the site is an
excellent lower-density, lower-traffic plan.
Furthermore, any development plans would first be reviewed by city
staff for conformity to the industrial park design standards. In any
planned development zone, plans also must have a public hearing prior to
approval. Between city and public scrutiny, and the Segerstroms’ usual
quality control, there is no way any junky, unsightly development would
take place.
Under current general plan guidelines, to control the amount of
traffic in our city, an office-type building in the industrial park zone
would be built at a lower density than a warehouse because an office
generates more traffic than a warehouse.
It is extremely unlikely that the traffic from a planned industrial
park would ever include as many “18-wheeler” trucks as the fear-mongers
are touting.
In any case, it is important to keep in mind the Segerstroms want to
double the traffic allowed under our general plan. On Home Ranch, a trip
budget is in place that supports low density development. This is of
great benefit to the community as a method to limit traffic and preserve
open space. In fact, that seems to be the developer’s main problem with
our current general plan. If Costa Mesa honors its own general plan,
there will be too little traffic and too much open space. Wouldn’t that
be a shame.
* ROBIN LEFFLER is vice president of Costa Mesa Citizens for
Responsible Growth.
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