Not condoning condo plan
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Hello? Am I missing something here (“Rehearing pushed back,”
Tuesday)? Does the Costa Mesa City Council represent the residents of
the city or Rutter Development?
Costa Mesa voters placed the members of the council in their
seats, right? Is Rutter based in Costa Mesa? I think not. David
Eadie, president of Rutter, is not listed in the phone book as living
in our city. He can go bully his own City Council, right?
So who calls the shots? The answer is -- (Ben Franklin knows!) --
“We, the people” of Costa Mesa. Council members voted according to
their constituents’ interests. Come election time, we, the voters,
will remember.
FLO MARTIN
Costa Mesa
I believe that the decision to reconsider 1901 Newport was correct
(it is almost twice the density allowed in the city’s master plan),
but was the subsequent flawed process a much deeper problem?
I attended the last two City Council meetings and was amazed that
three of the council members voted to continue the issue to some
future council meeting without any public comment allowed. The
residents were denied a right to speak on the issue in “public
comment” since it was on the agenda and then were again denied the
right to speak on the issue once it was removed from the agenda.
One council member said that “people were too emotional” to allow
public comment. I did not realize that one’s emotional status
determined their 1st Amendment rights. Why vote to re-hear an issue
and then refuse to hear it?
JUDITH BERRY
Costa Mesa
The granting of a new hearing on the Plaza Newport project was
appropriate and proper. The Costa Mesa municipal code provides for
rehearings, and the residents proceeded in good faith in accordance
with the code.
One of the major issues for this project is shading the massive
structure will create in the surrounding area. Information presented
verbally by the consultants on this issue was in direct contradiction
with written information provided by the same consultants. Other
verbal statements made by the consultant on the issue were just plain
inaccurate and reflected a poor understanding of the principles
involved in shade/shadow analysis. The result was considerable
confusion at the public hearing.
On this basis alone, a new hearing was warranted. Numerous other
issues also remain outstanding. Another hearing is not only
appropriate, it is essential.
The city of Costa Mesa should not join the project developer in
trying to cheat Costa Mesa residents of the opportunity to
participate fully in shaping their city’s future.
SANDRA GENIS
Costa Mesa
* EDITOR’S NOTE: Sandra Genis is a former mayor of Costa Mesa.
Yes, the council made the right decision to rehear the 1901
Newport condo project.
DAVID J. STILLER
Costa Mesa
The question was asked regarding whether or not the Costa Mesa
City Council made the right decision to rehear the 1901 Newport Condo
project. On the surface, I would say that they did make the correct
call to rehear the case.
However, one could also ask why they are even in a situation where
this topic has come before the council again, and since it has and
they have granted a new hearing, one could conclude that they may
have acted in haste by granting the project with approval on June 2
in the first place. This process of decision-making has become
somewhat of a painful process for the Costa Mesa city councils in
recent years.
Two examples come to mind, the first being the much discussed
skateboard park. For several years, where to put the park has created
such a stir that to my knowledge we still do not have a skateboard
park.
The second example would be the historical Huscroft House and the
city’s desire to take possession of it at a considerable cost to move
only to have it sit and decay due to the council’s inability to
decide what to do with it after all.
Perhaps there is light at the end of the tunnel for these two
examples. I hope so.
As for 1901 Newport, well, hold on for a long, drawn-out process
of decision-making as timely decisions have come painfully hard for
this council. I know all these council members have their heart in
the right place for our city, but pulling the trigger on a decision
and moving forward to the next issue takes way to much time.
My bottom-line fear regarding this trend would be posing the
question of: What kind decision will be made when a really important
issue comes before council?
TOM NETH
Costa Mesa
Amazing. Try to add 15% to your house size in the way of a
second-story approved by your neighbors and watch bureaucracy at its
finest.
Extra costs, extortion, unreasonable requirements, unrelated
required details, unheard of delays and departments that do not
communicate with one another. But if money is waived in front of our
City Council, they buckle and change the rules for a building which
is four times the building mass per code, and two times the density
code.
CRAIG BELMONT
Costa Mesa
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