Here are some of the decisions...
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Here are some of the decisions coming out of the Costa Mesa City
Council meeting Monday.
HOME RANCH MONEY
The City Council appointed two council members to serve as an ad
hoc committee and meet with various players involved in the
distribution of $2 million that was negotiated in the Home Ranch
development agreement for Costa Mesa schools.
Council members appointed Councilman Gary Monahan and Councilwoman
Karen Robinson to serve on the committee, designed to forge a
consensus on how the educational grant from the Segerstrom family
will be handed over to school officials.
As part of the Home Ranch development agreement, the Segerstrom
family agreed to donate $2 million to area middle and high school
students. The money will be split evenly between Costa Mesa High
School -- which serves seventh- through 12th-grade students -- and
Estancia High and TeWinkle Middle schools. According to the
development agreement, the money must be transferred to an
educational foundation that will ultimately decide how the money is
spent.
WHAT IT MEANS
Monahan and Robinson will work with city staffers, Segerstrom
representatives and probable foundation members to hammer out various
questions. City Council members want to know how foundation members
will be chosen, what the money should be spent on and whether the
foundations will be governed by state open-meeting laws.
RV ISSUE
Council members put an end to the lengthy mobile home debate by
giving final approval to a law that represents a compromise between
the police, politicians and residents.
The City Council gave official endorsement to an ordinance that
allows recreational vehicles to be parked on city streets for only 48
hours -- for loading or unloading purposes only -- unless previous
permission is granted by the Police Department. The rigs must also be
parked adjacent to the home to which it is registered.
The decision marks the end of a nine-month saga in which dozens of
residents flooded City Hall on both sides of the issue -- with some
residents asking that unsightly motor homes be restricted from their
streets and others demanding that rig owners not be unfairly
discriminated against.
On Monday, representatives of both camps commended the council and
police staff for working with residents to reach a compromise.
WHAT IT MEANS
In 30 days, it will be illegal to park an oversized vehicle on any
city street for longer than 48 hours to prepare for trips unless rig
owners call the Police Department and ask for an extension, which
cannot exceed 72 hours.
-- Compiled by Lolita Harper
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