Center for seniors in need of a city hand
Deirdre Newman
The city’s community objectives are like a huge to-do list, and
tonight one of the items on the list will be crossed off: the
decision on whether the city should take over the senior center.
The objectives, established in 1995, serve as clearly delineated
blueprints that the community can use to measure the city’s
performance and progress.
The council also will get an update on other priorities still
being worked on, such as improving 17th Street and analyzing the
rezone of the Westside bluffs area.
When the Costa Mesa Senior Center was struggling financially last
year, center officials asked the city about the option of its taking
over operations of the center, City Manager Allan Roeder said. The
center was having trouble providing essential maintenance services,
such as heat, and city crews came to the rescue, getting the
situation under control and doing a lot of refurbishing and
landscaping, Roeder said.
After city staff members did a study of the feasibility of taking
over center operations, they suggested that the city take over only
management and maintenance of the building.
The priorities for improving 17th Street include enhancing
intersections on the street, finding creative ways of improving
traffic through the downtown area and creating a plan to increase
walkways linking access to the Courtyards and Triangle Square.
“When you’ve got 100,000-plus vehicles on Newport Boulevard, it is
anything but pedestrian-friendly,” Roeder said. “We’ve looked at
grade-separated structures and it will be part of further study and
analysis tied in with the environmental work being done on Newport
Boulevard.”
Finally, the Westside Revitalization Oversight Committee is
exploring a residential overlay zone for a portion of the
industrially zoned bluffs. The committee is slated to give its final
report and recommendations to the Redevelopment Agency in August on a
host of issues, including rezoning. There is divided opinion about
whether to rezone the bluffs, and if so, how much to rezone,
committee member Mike Berry said. He believes any overlay area has to
be fairly large.
“When it’s an overlay, you have to have enough area to attract
some people,” Berry said.
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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