-- Compiled by Lolita Harper SENIOR VILLAGE...
-- Compiled by Lolita Harper
SENIOR VILLAGE
Planning commissioners approved a one-year project extension for
the Newport Senior Village despite consistent resident complaints of
discrimination and mismanagement at the site.
Edna Nunn, of the 71-unit senior housing center, and another woman
who refused to give her name opposed the owner’s request for a time
extension on proposed expansion plans and alleged poor maintenance
and tenant abuse at the current facility.
Planner Mel Lee said he visited the village and found no evidence
to support Nunn’s claims. Lee also said they checked with the Police
Department and building code division to see if any other reports of
mismanagement were reported and there were none.
Ronald Berggren, the owner of the senior center at 2072 Newport
Blvd., was given a conditional-use permit last year that allowed him
to demolish the apartments on a parcel to the south of his property
to expand his existing 71-unit building by 20 units. Berggren was
unable to close escrow on the adjacent apartment complex where he had
planned for construction and asked for an extension for his project.
Nunn’s allegations of discrimination and harassment are outside of
the city’s scope of influence but can be reported to the Federal Fair
Housing Act. Planning Commissioner Bruce Garlich asked Lee to make
sure Nunn had the appropriate contacts so she could properly pursue
her concerns.
WHAT IT MEANS
Berggren will have a year to follow through with his previously
approved plans.
SANTA ISABEL PROJECT
The third time was the charm for the owner of a large Eastside
lot, as the Planning Commission approved a scaled-down housing
project that calls for four two-story homes on a 27,800-square-foot
lot.
City leaders had told him his previous proposal was too dense for
the single-family area.
Owner Fharad Khosravi had originally submitted a proposal for five
single-family houses at 258 Santa Isabel Ave. but was unanimously
turned down by the Planning Commission and the City Council, which
refused to grant him a deviation from the city’s new lot size
requirements.
Councilwoman Karen Robinson said Khosravi had “done a nice job” on
the project but that the proposed lots were simply too small for the
neighborhood. She encouraged him to return with 6,000-square-foot
lots.
Khosravi’s new plans call for two lots at 6,203 square feet and
the other two at 6,366. The houses will be configured around a common
driveway and only two would face the street, a staff report reads.
WHAT IT MEANS
Khosravi has the green light to build four new homes.
MONTE VISTA PROJECT
The Planning Commission unanimously approved plans for three
two-story houses on a 15,159-square-foot Eastside lot.
Joe Cephalic, the owner of 373 Monte Vista Ave., proposed
construction of three single-family homes each with an average lot
size of 3,990 square feet. According to a staff report, each home
would have three bedrooms, a bonus room and a two-car garage.
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