Westside redevelopment area set for designation
Lolita Harper
Planning commissioners are expected to designate almost half of
the Westside for possible redevelopment Monday following the
recommendations of consultants who studied blighted regions of the
city.
Commissioners are charged with the preliminary task of outlining
specific boundaries to be added to the existing Downtown Costa Mesa
Redevelopment Project Area, originally created in 1973.
City-hired consultant Urban Futures Inc. has recommended a jagged
border that encompasses 434 acres along the length of West 19th
Street and portions both north and south of the major thoroughfare
between Anaheim and Whittier avenues, according to a staff report.
Commissioners must give the initial endorsement for the proposed
added territory, before passing it on to the Redevelopment Agency --
also known as the City Council -- for official approval.
Planning Commission Chairwoman Katrina Foley said it is likely the
commission will follow their suggestions.
“It is our impression that there is support on the council level
and it is our job to move the process along,” Foley said.
At the direction of City Council, consultants surveyed almost the
entire Westside -- 1,008 acres -- in introductory steps to the
redevelopment process.
Properties were scrutinized for blight, which includes
deteriorated structures, residential overcrowding, poor maintenance
and lack of parking.
“It is a very limited area if you consider the entire survey area
that was studied,” Foley said. “If the preliminarily proposed area is
approved to proceed, that is as big as the redevelopment area can
get. “It can get smaller, but it can’t grow.”
Some residents have pushed for the redevelopment area to include
the entire Westside and parts of north Costa Mesa, but officials warn
the process is stringent and exact.
Areas that were not studied in the initial “survey” cannot be
included without starting the entire process over, experts said.
Also, properties that are borderline blighted, or on the cusp, are
problematic because they could be legally challenged.
“It is somewhat subjective, but they are trying to make it
withstand legal challenge,” Foley said.
If just one owner succeeds in proving his or her property is not
truly blighted, it would invalidate the entire redevelopment process
and city leaders would have to start from square one, officials said.
Judging by the number of calls that have been flooding city
Redevelopment Manager Mike Robinson’s office, property owners will
fight tooth and nail to make sure their properties don’t get taken
over by the city.
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