Planning Commission adopts certification program
Lolita Harper
COSTA MESA -- The city has one more weapon in its limited arsenal
against problematic sober-living homes after planning commissioners
unanimously approved on Tuesday a county certification program designed
to monitor the clean-living environments.
The county certification program -- four years in the making -- was
developed by a multi-jurisdictional task force in the hopes that it will
help officials more closely monitor sober-living facilities. The Planning
Commission wholeheartedly endorsed the guidelines, saying the program
would benefit everyone involved.
“It gives us a measure of control over operations, to see that they
are clean and decent and reasonably safe places to be,” Planning
Commissioner Eleanor Egan said of the program.
The Board of Supervisors approved the Orange County Adult and Alcohol
and Drug Sober Living Facilities Certification process in December, and
it will take effect in October, officials said.
Some of the recommended guidelines outlined in the county’s program
include specific requirements regarding staff, admission and intake,
building and grounds, monitoring and review and a good neighbor policy.
Planning Commission Chairwoman Katrina Foley said it was an easy
decision because the county had already done the preliminary analysis.
“It was all or nothing,” Foley said. “If the city wants it, we have to
vote for it. And we want it.”
The program requires county certification for any sober-living
facility that wants business from the county -- from the courts or
probation department. Certification is voluntary, but without it homes
will lose out on business, Foley said.
“The idea is that everybody will want to be certified because a
referral from the county ensures that you stay in business,” Foley said.
Although it is a county-sponsored program, cities would share the
burden and monitor their own sober-living homes. Data collected by city
staffers would be transferred to the Orange County Sheriff’s Department,
where additional positions have been created to administer the program.
The idea that the city would be required to monitor the homes pleased
Egan because the city would otherwise not even know they exist, she said.
Under existing state law, sober-living homes that don’t offer medical
treatment and have six or fewer people on the premises are not required
to carry any permits for operation.
Perry Valantine, Costa Mesa’s director of planning, said city
officials are anxious for the program to kick in.
Costa Mesa hosts 106 “group homes,” a designation that includes foster
and elder-care facilities, sober-living homes and drug and alcohol
treatment centers, according to a 2001 report.
Sober-living homes have been an especially sore spot for city
officials in recent years. Costa Mesa houses 21 sober-living homes, the
2001 report shows, all of which offer no medical treatment and are
therefore exempt from state licensing.
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