Plan stirs fairly negative response
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Alicia Robinson
A week after 70th District Assemblyman John Campbell proposed moving
the Orange County Fair to Irvine’s Great Park development so the
state can sell the fairgrounds, local residents are approaching the
idea with caution.
“I think that, you know, like any other great idea the devil is
always in the details, so if those were addressed it might be a
really great proposition,” said Jeff Teller, president of the Orange
County Market Place, a profitable weekend swap meet that has been at
the fairgrounds for 35 years. “I’m very open-minded and I’m very
interested in hearing more about John’s plan.”
Campbell reported getting only two completely negative responses
out of more than 150 e-mailed to him since he pitched the idea last
week. Selling the 170-acre fairgrounds could raise as much as $300
million, of which $100 million could be devoted to relocating the
fairgrounds facilities and the remainder could help fill the hole in
the state budget, Campbell suggested.
But some people in Costa Mesa are balking at the plan because they
think it would take away an educational and recreational asset to the
community.
“I think it would be a great shame,” said Jeff Wilcox, president
of the Mesa del Mar Homeowners’ Assn., whose home is separated from
the fairgrounds only by TeWinkle Park. “The fairgrounds affords the
city with great entertainment venues and I think it would be
absolutely a travesty to have it move [to the Great Park].”
Noise complaints and lawsuits that led the fairgrounds’ Pacific
Amphitheater to close for eight years and perform extensive
renovations were driven by a couple people from his Mesa del Mar
neighborhood, Wilcox said. But most of the residents have no problem
with the fairgrounds now.
“It provides a great service to our children, to the residents
there,” he said. “The schools benefit from it.”
The Newport-Mesa Unified School District hasn’t taken an official
position, spokeswoman Jane Garland said. But Davis Education Center,
which sits across the street from the fairgrounds, uses its
facilities for various programs.
“I think it’s a wonderful opportunity that we have with the
fairgrounds so close,” Principal Cheryl Galloway said. “We would have
to find ways to replace all that. That’s not to say that we can’t.
It’s just convenient having it so close.”
The city also has gotten feedback from residents, which has been
mixed or negative, Costa Mesa City Manager Allan Roeder said.
“I can’t say that I’ve heard anyone say, ‘Boy, this is a great
deal for Costa Mesa,’” he said.
The city stands to lose sales tax revenue from fairgrounds
operations, which in 2002 netted nearly $566,000 of the $37 million
in sales taxes collected that year, Roeder said. The city already is
short on recreational facilities and open space, and if the
fairgrounds are sold they likely would go to developers who would add
homes or commercial property, he said.
“I think it really goes totally the opposite direction of what we
hear regularly from the community,” Roeder said.
Campbell said some of the negative responses to the plan are from
people who still want an airport at the closed El Toro Marine Air
Base, where the Great Park will be located. The airport plan was
voted down by county residents in 2002.
Having the fairgrounds at El Toro, on the other hand, is viable
and could benefit everyone in the county by expanding fair facilities
and increasing people’s access to them, Campbell said.
“There is sufficient interest in this idea from a number of
quarters, and there’s sufficient support that we’re going to proceed
to do more investigation,” he said.
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