Use of eminent domain being seriously mulled
- Share via
June Casagrande
City officials say the land isn’t worth more than $33.75 a square
foot. The owners reportedly want about $37 a square foot for the site
of two Santa Ana Heights homes.
It may take a judge to say who’s right.
The city is considering using eminent domain to take control of
land officials say they need for a new fire station. The adjacent
parcels at the corner of Mesa Drive and Acacia Street are now the
homes of Laurie Davis and her parents, Alva and Mary Spann Davis.
However, the area has been undergoing a slow conversion from a
residential to a commercial area since the county rezoned the area
for a business park.
City officials have been negotiating with the Davises since last
summer to buy the land at the price recommended by a city-hired
appraiser: $33.75 a square foot: $3.09 million for the 2.1-acre
parcel.
“We have a valid appraisal that shows the property value is about
$33.75 a square foot,” City Manager Homer Bludau said. “We made an
offer, and they came back with a counter offer of $37. We weren’t
able to reach an agreement.”
Agreement, however, isn’t imperative.
The City Council tonight could vote on whether to acquire the
property by eminent domain -- a court-enforced purchase of private
property at fair market value.
Asked whether the eminent domain move was a bluff or even a
bargaining chip in the negotiations, Bludau said, “We wouldn’t bring
an eminent domain action to City Council unless staff was very
serious about it.”
Mary Davis referred a call for comment to her daughter. Laurie
Davis did not return phone calls Friday or Monday.
City officials say that the property is the ideal site for a fire
station to serve the newly annexed Santa Ana Heights and nearby
areas. It was selected because it would allow the new fire station to
cover the largest area of the city possible within the city’s
seven-minute response time goal for fire emergencies.
Since the city annexed Santa Ana Heights last summer, it has been
providing fire service from a temporary fire station on Zenith
Avenue. The new fire station would include a separate firefighter
training facility with a tower. Under the pre-annexation agreement
with the Santa Ana Heights Redevelopment Agency, the city can use up
to $2.5 million of the redevelopment money to purchase the land. The
remaining $592,000 would come from the general fund. The
redevelopment agency will also pay for up to $1.6 million for
construction of the new fire station.
“This will fill a great hole for fire service in Santa Ana Heights
and adjacent areas in Newport,” Fire Chief Tim Riley said.
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.