Car enthusiasts rev speeches for council meeting
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Lolita Harper
COSTA MESA -- A group of self-proclaimed “local gear heads” plan to
storm City Council chambers tonight to persuade city leaders to loosen
the existing laws regarding inoperable vehicles.
The Costa Mesa Cruisers, a group of car enthusiasts and hobbyists,
have launched a citywide campaign -- which includes peppering local
establishments with fliers, taking out ads in the Daily Pilot and forming
a Web site -- designed to motivate the public to encourage the council to
change the current codes regarding cars that cannot be driven.
“The City Council has graciously suggested relaxing these draconian
restrictions and has asked to hear from the public,” reads the Cruisers’
Web site that calls for car enthusiasts to make their voice heard at the
meeting. “Keep this in mind when making your statements: this is not a
threat, it is an opportunity.”
The Cruisers’ site also asks speakers to “be polite” when speaking to
council members.
The manner-promoting group has already won the favor of Councilman
Gary Monahan, who supports lesser restrictions of inoperable vehicles.
The councilman, who has a paved section of his side yard -- shielded by a
fence -- where he used to house a couple of race cars, said the existing
codes that regulate storage of a car in the backyard are far too
intrusive.
“Whether [a car] is in good shape or bad condition, if it’s in my
backyard, it can’t be hurting anybody,” Monahan said. “My backyard is my
business.”
Before the summer of 2000, city codes allowed residents to store cars
that didn’t run on a driveway leading to a garage -- provided it was
covered with an acceptable cover -- or in a yard area that was screened
by a six-foot high wall or fence, a staff report states.
New codes passed in 2000 banned those options and made it legal to
store an inoperable vehicle only in a garage or another enclosed
building.
When minor revisions to other parts of the same property maintenance
code came before the City Council in March 2002, Monahan asked the
Planning Commission to review the law and consider lessening the
restrictions.
In May, planning commissioners voted unanimously to uphold existing
property maintenance requirements, which mandate that inoperable vehicles
be stored in an “enclosed building” -- most likely a garage. Planning
Commission Chairwoman Katrina Foley said she was responding to community
feedback that junky, inoperable cars make horrible eyesores and drive
down the appearance of the neighborhood.
Sandi Benson, chief of code enforcement, has said inoperative cars can
be an eyesore and are the basis of many complaints to her department.
Cars that have sat in a driveway for a long time, have flat tires,
cobwebs or are up on blocks contribute to blight in the community, she
said.
Benson also defended the backyard enforcement provision, saying if a
car can be seen from a second-story window, it is technically in public
view.
Monahan agrees that junky cars sitting in driveways are ugly but
argues an ordinance can be written to specifically target those cars and
not punish car enthusiasts who have project cars, which may or may not
run.
An inoperative vehicle is defined as “mechanically incapable of being
driven” or prohibited from being operated on a public street for reasons
relating to expired license plates, registration or equipment, according
to a staff report.
FYI
What: Costa Mesa City Council meeting
When: 6:30 p.m. today
Where: City Hall, 77 Fair Drive
Information: (714) 754-5223
* Lolita Harper covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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