New compromise good for the city and homeowners
Costa Mesa residents have been given the runaround and forced to leap
hurdles for far too long because of the city’s generic home-expansion
rules.
But the City Council and city staff may have finally found a sound
solution that should appease those who want to expand their homes and
their neighbors who want to protect their privacy.
Put simply, the changes simplify the design standards so that
those who want to add a second-story addition that doesn’t exceed 50%
of the first-story floor area can do so without seeking permission
from the zoning administrator. They can instead gain permission from
the city’s planners. They also will only have to notify the immediate
neighbors of the plans.
Previously, many seeking the zoning administrator’s OK ended up
before the Planning Commission and, quite often, the City Council.
The new changes will make the process easier and quicker in many
cases.
Those projects that seek exceptions or are located in the Aviemore
Terrace/Glen Eagle Terrace neighborhood will have to notify more
homeowners in the neighborhood and, in many cases, will end up at a
Planning Commission meeting.
But all of these moves aid basic property rights. Homeowners who
wish to add onto their residences for either their growing families
or to send their home values upward should be able to do so. It’s
their right.
At the same time, if the homeowners ask for something beyond their
right -- an exception to the rules -- their neighbors’ rights, too,
are preserved.
The laws have been too friendly to the neighbors in the past and
have forced residents to reconsider expanding their homes for fear of
a drawn-out battle with their neighbors before the entire city at
public meetings. There’s no need for that.
All in all, the city, the Planning Commission and the City Council
have reached wise compromises that should appease many. At the very
least, even those who oppose the changes should applaud and welcome
their efforts to create a balance of rights on each side of the
fence.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.