Mobile homes on her mind
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LOLITA HARPER
Irene Shannon knows she makes an unforgettable first impression.
She extends a frail left hand that shakes just slightly, cocks her
head and smiles while cupping her left hand over the top of yours.
Her short gray hair bounces slightly as she tries to muster the
strength it she once had to give her usual firm handshake.
Her grip may have weakened, but her will has only gotten stronger
with age.
“People look at me and say, ‘She is skinny as a rail and has no
teeth, but,’” Shannon said.
It’s the “but” that has gotten the city shaken up.
Shannon is one of the foremost experts on the Costa Mesa mobile
home conversion ordinance. The what? Exactly. It didn’t exist until
Shannon got involved.
“I admit it,” she said. “I started this whole thing. It’s all my
fault.”
The 81-year-old woman lives in an 1958 mobile home in El Nido
mobile park. For a couple of years, her neighbors have feared losing
their homes because the owner of the park -- and the park next door,
Snug Harbor -- has been trying to convert his property from
residential to industrial to sell the land for shiny new medical
buildings.
Shannon isn’t worried. She relaxed Saturday in her light blue
home, surrounded by books, papers, newspaper clippings, city staff
reports, boxes of memorabilia, playing cards, letters, fliers, empty
bottles of water and various boxes of cigarettes. She sliced a banana
for a mid-morning snack.
“People always ask, ‘Why do you live here?’” Shannon said. “It is
in the middle of everything. This is the most convenient place to
live in the whole city.”
When she was able to walk, she would head down the road to the
beach. The market is next door, and the park on 16th Street provides
plenty of shady, grass areas to read.
Although others may not see it as such, Shannon is not ready to
give up her slice of heaven.
“I have been an activist since before you were born and then
some,” she said.
The commotion she has caused has made its way into official city
business.
On Monday, the Planning Commission took a look at a draft
ordinance on mobile home conversions. The issue was continued to Nov.
10, but at least it is on the city’s radar.
Various rules apply when trying to convert mobile home parks,
including relocation and displacement costs. The state mandates that
any mobile home park owner apply for a conversion permit and then
supply a report on how they will, um, “make it up” to the folks they
are about to evict.
The city cannot deny a mobile home conversion request, staff
reports say, but city officials can rule on whether the adverse
effects to the residents have been “properly” taken care of.
This means the property owners -- who can clearly make a lot more
money leasing their land to wealthy doctors who need medical office
space to provide Botox injections to the affluent community than they
can from 80-something retirees in 45-foot mobile homes -- could have
to make a lot of concessions to appease the ruling party.
Either that, or they can just shut down the park.
“It’s a dangerous loophole that is affecting a lot of people,”
Shannon said.
The funny thing is, Shannon does not really consider herself one
of them.
“Sure, I have my reservation at Bethel Towers like everyone else,
but,” her sentence trails off. “You know what they say, 90% of the
things we worry about never even happen.”
So why work so hard to get this ordinance through? Simple. Because
it may be too late for Shannon and her neighbors, but there are
hundreds of other residents in the 20 other mobile home parks in
Costa Mesa that could be helped through the ordinance, she said. If
she can help them, then it is all worth it.
Shannon will worry herself with the 10% of things she knows will
happen.
“I am losing my eyesight, and it scares me to death,” Shannon
said. “I read at night until there are tears streaming down my face.
Losing my vision is what scares me more than anything.”
The spirited woman said she has survived “two and a half heart
attacks and a couple of strokes.” A comment that was backed up by the
various bottles of prescription medication at her bedside and strewn
on the floor.
“This is my last hurrah,” she said. “I have been living minute to
minute for the last 10 years with increasing problems. Whatever
happens, happens.”
* LOLITA HARPER writes columns Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays and
covers culture and the arts. She may be reached at (949) 574-4275 or
by e-mail at [email protected].
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