Two second-story rulings are separate from one another
Walt Davenport
I believe your Thursday editorial (“Home-addition options must be
kept open”) missed the mark with regard to the Planning Commission’s
denial of a second-story addition on Sumatra Place at Monday’s
meeting.
I don’t believe that any of the five votes to deny this addition
was a vote against second-story additions in general or specifically
against the concept of a second-story at this location.
In my 22 years as a planning commissioner, I have frequently
defended homeowners’ rights to add a second story to a single-story
home. In casting my vote against this particular project, I made it
clear in my comments that the vote had to do with the mass and
placement of the proposed addition and not with the issue of it being
second story.
At least two other commissioners made comments specifically
stating that their votes for denial were not votes against the right
to build second-story additions.
It was even suggested to the homeowner that the commission would
be willing to review an alternative plan which, while still being
two-story, would reduce the impact on adjacent properties.
I believe your editorial chose two recent, unrelated actions --
one by the City Council and one by the Planning Commission -- and
extrapolated these to be a policy shift with regard to a homeowner’s
right to add a second story. I don’t believe this to be the case.
These were simply two unrelated items, dealing with issues that went
well beyond the single issue of two-story additions, that happened to
occur close together in time. Don’t blow it out of proportion.
* WALT DAVENPORT is a Costa Mesa planning commissioner.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.