City will look into stabilizing canyon
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June Casagrande
Residents around Morning Canyon should pay a portion of the $2
million needed to stop the erosion and slope failure threatening
their homes, some City Council members have said.
The council on Tuesday approved a $250,000 contract with RBF
Engineering to study what work needs to be done to the deteriorating
canyon that stretches from Pelican Hills Golf Course to the ocean.
But the assumption that the city should foot the bill for the
work, estimated at about $2 million, was called into question.
“If we don’t own the land and we didn’t cause the damage, then why
are we expected to pay for it?” Councilman Steve Rosansky asked.
It wasn’t a rhetorical question; it was a practical one. And City
Atty. Bob Burnham offered a highly practical answer.
“It’s my sense that we could be named in a lawsuit if one were
filed,” Burnham said.
In 1995, one landowner there sued another after a landslide in his
backyard damaged his patio and pool. The suit alleged that
construction upstream had affected the flow of water through the
canyon in a way that caused erosion to the slope.
Residents of the 22 homes in Cameo Highlands and Corona Highlands
that line Morning Canyon have told the city they would support
allowing the city to go in and do the work. Their permission is
required because the canyon is private property, owned by homeowners,
with very little access except through people’s lawns.
“The erosion problems in Morning Canyon directly impact my
property and that of my neighbors,” said Bob Patterson, who was
reading a letter attributed to his elderly mother, whose home on
Rockford Road backs up to the canyon. “Morning Canyon is a ticking
time bomb of declining property values and potential lawsuits.”
Council members worry that support for the work may evaporate when
and if they start asking homeowners to chip in.
Council members who voted for the engineering study on Tuesday
have asked staff members to come up with ways that the city can share
the cost of the work with the residents, including possibly creating
an assessment district.
“I think we need to figure out what the problem is and what needs
to be done about it and figure out who pays for it later,” Councilman
Gary Adams said.
Colleagues agreed, voting unanimously to move forward.
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
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