Volunteers may clean Dover Drive home
June Casagrande
Plans are in place to clean up a junk-strewn Dover Drive home, but
even the people who will do the work have said that it’s too early to
be sure that the 40-year problem will soon be solved.
An independent hearing officer in December declared Elmer
Thomassen’s home at 1918 Dover Drive to be a public nuisance. The
officer ordered Thomassen to clean up the property. The deadline for
the cleanup was Monday, but Thomassen has appealed to the Newport
Beach City Council to overturn the ruling, claiming he needs more
time. The council is expected to consider the matter on Feb. 10.
In the meantime, local charity Go and Do Likewise has offered to
clean up debris from the yard, paint the house’s exterior and perform
other work.
“It’s our understanding that we will be starting the work,” said
Terry Debay, spokesman for the organization.
The decision was arrived at in a meeting with Thomassen and city
officials, Debay said.
Members of Go and Do Likewise have set aside the first three
weekends in March to perform the work.
“At this point, we’re moving forward with the plan to be there,”
Debay said.
Thomassen could not be reached for comment on Monday.
Though Thomassen has resisted cleaning up the property for years,
at times becoming defensive and belligerent, Assistant City Atty. Dan
Ohl said he’s hopeful that Thomassen will let Go and Do Likewise
volunteers perform the work.
“He’s been very receptive so far,” Ohl said. “So we’re hopeful
that that receptive attitude will hold true.”
Complaints about Thomassen’s house -- and city efforts to resolve
them -- date back to 1961. In the latest public hearing on the
property, officials documented a number of code violations and other
problems that blighted not just the house but the whole neighborhood.
Tires on the roof, roofing tiles on the lawn, chairs, lumber cooking
pots, buckets, discarded doors, electrical cords and garbage have
been documented as littering the yard.
After the hearing in December, officials gave Thomassen a list of
items that needed to be cleaned up at the property and a deadline to
dispose of them. After Thomassen reported that he was in Reno, Nev.,
receiving medical treatment for a number of problems including
lymphoma, city officials extended the deadline to Monday. But because
he filed an appeal, the City Council will now decide a deadline for
cleaning up the property.
If Thomassen doesn’t comply, the city will go to court to request
the authority to go onto Thomassen’s property and clean it up for
him.
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