Westside needs true improvements and proper zoning
In “What the Westside means to Costa Mesa’s economy,” (From the
Chamber, Aug. 26), Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce President Ed
Fawcett sets up a straw man in the form of a premise that seems to
say that those of us who are asking for proper zoning on the Westside
bluffs want to “remove,” presumably overnight, businesses from all
over the Westside.
In the first place, I don’t think anyone has been saying that we
should remove the businesses from the bluffs overnight. What we have
been saying is that the bluffs should be rezoned for residential uses
to take advantage of the beautiful views and ocean breezes. With such
a rezoning, our free market economy, composed of willing sellers and
willing buyers, would start to be freed from heavy handed and
improper government regulations -- this case, improper zoning and
land-use designations.
Once freed from these artificial restrictions that are keeping
this land in its lowest and worst condition, the land would naturally
seek its highest and best use on the open market. Or, to put this
more succinctly: Views and ocean breezes are worth something to
homeowners, but they’re worthless to industrial users. Let’s let
those who are willing to pay for the views and ocean breezes pay for
them.
This will improve the demographics of the area and will contribute
to an upward trend on the Westside instead of the present downward
trend. It will also help relieve the housing shortage in the area.
Such a zoning change will not force people to sell their industrial
properties or to change their uses. They will be grand-fathered in.
However, as properties change hands, we will see a gradual switch
to residential uses.
Secondly, Fawcett’s premise blurs the distinction between the
bluffs in particular, and the Westside as a whole. Never fear, no one
wants to put view homes where there isn’t a view. There will still be
industry on the Westside, but as the proper zoning kicks in, the
industrial users will gravitate to areas without views while homes
will gravitate to the land with views.
Some of us also think that an artist colony complete with
work/live artist’s lofts might be a good transition zone between
homes on the bluffs and the more inland industrial area. Artist
colonies, by their nature, tend to flourish in industrial low-rent
areas. Such a colony on the Westside, mixed in with industrial uses,
would be a perfect location to draw customers from Newport Beach and
would help revitalize the Westside, bring in sales revenue and make
the area an eclectic and fun place to spend an evening.
Other cities, Santa Ana is one, are trying to establish artist
colonies, but some are having a hard time of it for a number of
reasons that we need not go into here. Suffice it to say that Costa
Mesa has a much better chance of developing a flourishing artist
colony than many of these other cities.
Those of us who have been trying to improve Costa Mesa aren’t
anti-business, and many of us own businesses. What many of us do
want, however, is a proper balance between residential and business
uses and a nice city where we can raise our families. And, no, most
of us do not want Costa Mesa to become a new Irvine. At the same
time, we don’t want Costa Mesa to become a new Santa Ana, either.
The Westside as a permanent skid row full of functionally obsolete
apartment buildings, charities, liquor stores, improper zoning and a
downwardly mobile population is not a good option for Costa Mesa.
When the most famous “restaurant” on the main street in the area
is a free soup kitchen, you know you have a problem that needs to be
corrected.
Let’s work together to truly improve Costa Mesa, but let’s not be
deceived into thinking that planting a tree in front of a slum
building or cleaning an alley is true improvement. That’s just
routine maintenance that should be done all the time. It is insulting
to the citizens of Costa Mesa when such routine maintenance is
trumpeted as improvement. Obstructionists who are trying to keep the
Westside from improving, often because they profit off a skid row
economy, need to be told that Costa Mesa isn’t buying it anymore.
MARTIN MILLARD
Costa Mesa
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