READERS RESPOND -- Readers pose Crystal Cove solutions
Your Nov. 3 article regarding California State Parks and Crystal Cove
was interesting and instructive (“Money crunch affects cottages”). I, for
one, am glad that our local elected official, Assemblyman John Campbell,
is paying attention to the cost of the project.
It would seem that the people at California State Parks obviously are
not. In spite of the fact that Gov. Gray Davis has asked for a 15% budget
reduction by all departments, Parks Director Rusty Areias is going to
find the money. If he does so, it will obviously mean projects must be
delayed or canceled. It might be interesting to all of the citizens of
California to be told which projects will be affected.
More importantly, we should observe that State Parks just seems to be
obsessed with the notion of evicting the residents of Crystal Cove and El
Morro Village. That obsession has led to a series of bad ideas from them,
including the premature eviction of Crystal Cove residents, plans to
build a transient RV park adjacent to the El Morro school and spurning
the millions of dollars paid to State Parks by the residents of El Morro
Village. State Parks has repeatedly used the buzzwords “public access” in
order to gain public support for these bad ideas.
The residents of El Morro Village are also interested in the public
having access to the beach and parklands. Indeed, El Morro Village has
attempted to work with State Parks to improve public access to the beach
while still keeping the park and their homes intact. State Parks,
however, seems to be on a mission to kill its own cash cow (the millions
the residents are paying in rent) and to thrust a multitude of families
into an already overcrowded and highly inflated housing market. All this
in the middle of a recession.
What could be more irresponsible? Isn’t it time for the people at
State Parks to understand that they are public servants with safety and
fiscal responsibilities? Hopefully, there are like-minded members of the
Legislature, such as Campbell, that can halt the State Parks steamroller
so that reasonable and responsible solutions can be achieved.
JANICE FAUST
Laguna Beach
It is time to tear down the Crystal Cove cottages. For the state to
even consider spending $12 million to $20 million to restore them is
absurd. By the time these shanties are brought up to fire and building
codes and meet Americans with Disability Act requirements, they will not
resemble the historical cottages they repute to be. With a diminishing
state budget, any money that becomes available should benefit Crystal
Cove State Park as a whole.
For those members of the public who have not visited the cottages
recently, I suggest you take a trip to the cove. If you choose to visit
the cove, you will not find a quaint seaside village, but a shanty town
complete with leaking septic tanks. Of the 46 shanties, fewer than a
dozen are habitable. These shanties are built out of everything
imaginable in every way imaginable. There are rooms with 6-foot ceilings
and 18-inch doorways.
Electrical wiring and outlets run exposed and overloaded. The
plumbing, if you can call it that, dates back to the Roman Empire. Some
fixtures drain into outside yards. The septic tanks leak into the creek
that empties into the ocean. Let’s not fail to mention these rundown
dumps are infested with rodents and bugs.
If you think that $12 million to $20 million sounds high to restore
these cottages, consider that not one of them meets current fire,
building, or health and safety codes. Not to mention ADA requirements.
For these shacks to ever be used as commercial accommodations, major
improvements will have to be made.
In the alternative, the cottages can be simply removed and the cove
restored to a more natural state. Improvements can be made with a goal of
lessening the environmental impact. Any available funds should be used to
improve beach access, public facilities and public safety in the park.
As for those concerned with the historical significance of the
cottages themselves, several could be relocated to the trailer park at
Coast Highway and the Santa Ana River, where they would fit in nicely.
Crystal Cove should become the public gateway to the park that its
name adorns.
BRENT JACOBSEN
Newport Beach
Assemblyman John Campbell is correct. We can have our cake and eat it
too. Since there’s no money to reconstruct and maintain our cottages at
Crystal Cove, give me one really good reason not to use El Morro to
finance this project?
We’re not giving up ownership of the land; we are just taking a
pragmatic approach to managing our resources. Let’s face it, the campers
in the proposed transient RV park at El Morro are not going to fix and
maintain the cottages. And which is more important right now, campsites
or cottages?
JEANETTE MILLER
Laguna Beach
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