Council to discuss sale of park-side land
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Deirdre Newman
The City Council tonight will debate whether to ask the county for
permission to sell slivers of Fairview Park to property owners who
have been using the land as extensions of their own backyards.
The council has not yet voted on whether to sell the slivers.
Tonight’s discussion is just one of the first steps of the process
necessary to do so. The council will also consider asking the county
to allow the city to keep the proceeds from the sales to buy
additional park property elsewhere in the city.
Tim Cromwell, one of the residents whose land has encroached on
the park, said he’s glad the council is at least starting the process
to sell the slivers.
“We were expecting this,” Cromwell said. “I’m not surprised. This
is what’s been planned from the time when we first met with the
council.”
The encroachments by Swan Drive homeowners, west of Placentia
Avenue, include block walls, wooden and chain-link fences, planters
and other landscaping. Seventeen homeowners have exceeded their
property limits, from less than a foot to more than 22 feet.
When the city bought the parkland from the county in 1986, the
purchase agreement required the city to get the county’s approval if
it ever wanted to sell any of that land.
For the city to even consider selling the swaths, all the
encroachers have to agree to buy them. Otherwise, there could be
land-locked parcels that would be impossible to reach or maintain.
On Feb. 4, public services staff members met with 15 of the
property owners. All were agreeable with the series of events that
have to take place before any property can be sold, according to the
staff report.
Former mayor Sandra Genis said she is disappointed that the city
is considering selling the slivers.
“I’m trying to figure out what in the world could motivate the
city to do that,” Genis said. “To me, it’s horrendous. We’re always
looking for more open space. Granted, it’s not the best, but there
have been plans in the past to create a natural channel there. Once
the people take that land, it’ll never happen.”
Public Services Director Bill Morris anticipates that it will cost
$93,000 and take about two and a half years for staff members to
provide the council with all the information it will need to decide
whether to sell.
Councilwoman Libby Cowan said she is surprised this issue is even
on the agenda given the council had not yet voted on whether to sell
the land. She said she was not interested in pursuing the sale of
this land.
“I am not interested in selling the property. I’m not interested
in whether or not the county will let us sell,” Cowan said. “I’m
hoping to convince my fellow council members that this is a very bad
precedent to set for the city to be selling land of such a valuable
property.
“And I think that to ask the staff to make this a priority project
and expend all the time and energy, which costs money in this time of
fiscal constraint, is irresponsible with our budgetary money,” she
said.
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