Q&A; -- Costa Mesa Citizens for Responsible Growth
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Lolita Harper
1. Who are the members of Costa Mesa Concerned Citizens for
Responsible Growth and what is the group’s main goal?
A. We’re a group of Costa Mesa residents which grew out of
long-standing organizations and coalitions working since the 1980s to
preserve and improve the quality of life in Costa Mesa. We include
teachers, doctors, engineers, contractors, retirees, renters, homeowners
and owners of small businesses.
2. What are the main objections to the Home Ranch project as it is now
proposed?
A. The proposed general plan amendment to allow the Ikea project at
Home Ranch will result in twice the traffic from the site as the existing
general plan, contribute significantly to basin-wide pollution, increase
demand for public services and infrastructure, exacerbate the serious
imbalance of jobs and housing in Costa Mesa, and define a major city
gateway with a big-box store. We’ll have more overcrowding as workers
double up and triple up to afford housing, leading to further
deterioration of our housing stock and increased pressure for higher
densities in our existing neighborhoods citywide.
3. Why is traffic such a concern when the developers have agreed to
fund more than the required road improvements?
A. Their traffic analysis assumes construction of the Gisler-Garfield
bridge in order to make intersections function with the project. This
would create pressure to build the bridge, directing traffic through a
residential area, past TeWinkle and California schools. The project uses
up what little excess roadway capacity we might have to deal with other
issues, such as eliminating the bridges from the master plan of highways.
Further, this question assumes they are doing more to improve traffic
than required. Except for their own personal offramp into the Ikea store,
the project provides only those improvements required by the city to
improve intersections adversely affected by the project. The developers
aren’t fixing anything they didn’t help break. While the applicant is
paying more than just the standard city trip fees paid by all developers,
these fees typically recover only about two-thirds of the cost of new
traffic and address only improvements needed to serve growth under the
existing general plan. The proposed general plan amendment increases
growth and increases the need for more roadway improvements, hence the
need for more mitigation.
4. Residents can’t assume that the land will remain undeveloped, so
what would you support at the Home Ranch site? A. The existing general
plan, or better yet the balance of uses provided in the 1990 general
plan, would be preferable to the proposed project. An increase in
residential acreage could help address our need for more quality housing
in Costa Mesa and still result in economic benefits for the landowner.
5. If the City Council votes to approve the project, what is the next
step?
A. Options available include litigation and a petition drive to take
the project approval directly to the voters in a referendum, as was done
in 1987 and 1988. The citizens’ groups won both the litigation and both
referenda -- decisively, with 60% of voters opposed to the proposed
developments.
6. Any other thoughts?
A. The developers claim massive financial benefits to the city, but
their analysis is flawed. They assume an optimistic, undocumented rate of
sales to calculate future sales tax revenues and a pessimistic value for
housing to calculate property tax revenues. They so underestimate
commercial costs and overestimate residential costs that, using their
methodology and assumptions, South Coast Plaza would generate about the
same demand for city services as only 308 single-family homes. The
project approval would be locked in for 20 years. So, if additional
problems occur, or the proposed fixes don’t work, we’re stuck with the
mess. Even if critical new issues arise, project approvals remain in
place. The developer proposes to mitigate project traffic with
improvements along Fairview Road, which will require separate
environmental review. If this review discloses serious impacts resulting
from the road improvements, we will be forced to build them anyway or
live with traffic congestion. But Home Ranch construction will go on,
regardless.
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