Police cleared to expand department
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Lolita Harper
Police officers will have more room to work, investigate, store
evidence and fight crime thanks to an overwhelming approval of an
expanded headquarters Monday by the City Council.
Without any discussion, council members voted 4 to 0 to approve
plans for an 11,000-square-foot Police Department expansion that
calls for a change to the city’s master plan. Councilwoman Libby
Cowan was late to the meeting and missed the vote.
The sizable project proposes renovation of 75% of the existing
police facility, including a seismic upgrade, construction of an
additional single-story building, a new parking lot and changes in
landscaping.
The expansion project will make room for additional office space,
storage and a new emergency operations center. Officials have placed
a high priority on the project, given that the current facility,
built in the mid 1960s, has been overcrowded for years.
The development falls 90 parking spaces short of the city’s
general requirements and increases the building density on the
9.4-acre Civic Center site by about 9%, according to a staff report.
The existing Civic Center already exceeds the maximum floor area
standards by 28%, and the additional 11,000 square feet would stay
consistent with that nonconformity, the report states.
Planners also justified the parking by pointing out that most of
the employees at the new building already work for the city and park
in the existing lot. While the plan falls short of the required
number of spaces for a building of its size, it would increase by 28
the number of parking spaces. Further parking needs could be met by
restriping the older lot, officials said.
Audience members were not convinced the plan would satisfy future
needs.
Resident and City Council regular Beth Refakes said the council
should demand a project that plans further than 10 years out. Land
and construction costs will be much higher in a decade if the city
once again realizes it has outgrown its digs, she said.
Her sentiment was echoed by resident Joel Faris, who urged the
city to revamp talks with Vanguard University about the sale and
possible relocation of City Hall.
“City Hall isn’t for sale right now,” Mayor Linda Dixon told
Faris.
“I know it’s a far-out thing, but it could be win-win for both
sides,” Faris said. “Costa Mesa is very famous for not looking down
the road.”
Planning Commission Chairwoman Katrina Foley shared Refakes and
Faris’ sentiment when she unenthusiastically supported approval at
the Planning Commission level. The endorsing vote was unanimous, but
Foley said the proposed designs barely meet the existing parking and
space needs at the overcrowded police facility, and less sufficiently
provide room for growth at the Civic Center as a whole.
Foley said she only supported the proposed designs because she
realized it was the best project for the resources allocated.
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