Fate of swap meet on the table
Lolita Harper
Finally armed with a detailed parking management plan for the
Orange Coast College Swap meet, council members will strive tonight
to make a decision on whether to grant the venue an additional day to
sell its wares.
Planning staffers and outside consultants scrambled last week to
ensure the City Council could review a detailed traffic, parking and
management program before tonight’s meeting.
Director of Development Services Don Lamm said his staff worked
diligently to answer the many questions from council members about
the swap meet’s business license, parking plan, earnings,
registration strategies, tax information and insurance.
While Lamm is confident in the answers, he could not ensure a
resolution from the council.
“It will be up to the City Council to make a decision Monday
night, if there is sufficient information to make a decision, or
whether they’ll have more questions,” Lamm said. “Or if it’s
insufficient and we have to do something else but I believe we’ve
addressed all their needs.”
Mayor Karen Robinson said last week she was not comfortable making
decisions on short notice and warned of a possible continuation.
“It makes it difficult to vote on something we are seeing for the
first time,” Robinson said. “All of our questions will have to be
answered from the dais.”
George Blanc, OCC’s administrative dean of economic development
and community education who oversees the swap meet operation, said
the college simply continues to adhere to the city’s wishes and hope
for the best.
While time is still critical, vendors have already missed any
opportunity to capitalize on holiday sales, he said with a resigned
tone.
Swap meet vendors have been running a Sunday-only swap meet for
almost eight months, since college officials agreed to scale back its
operations because of traffic problems on Fairview Road.
In that time, city and college officials have worked together, a
private consultant was hired, options were proposed to the Planning
Commission and a new swap meet was approved with an average of 260
vendors per day.
Then, an 11th-hour appeal by resident Paul Wilbur brought the swap
meet under the intense scrutiny of the City Council and prompted more
questions and criticism.
That scrutiny continued during Monday’s council study session of
the swap meet.
Council members vowed they would not endorse another day at the
swap meet until they saw tangible plans to alleviate the traffic
problems.
While the major concern revolved around traffic management,
Councilmen Chris Steel and Allan Mansoor had more general concerns
about swap meet operations.
Steel insisted college officials verify the legal residence and
state tax numbers of all vendors. He suspects many college swap meet
vendors are taking away clients from “legitimate” Costa Mesa
businesses because they can offer lower prices by skirting various
laws.
Mansoor asked officials to reserve the possibility of changing the
venue from a flea-market-type swap meet to a farmer’s market or art
fair.
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