Condo squabble not violent but heated
- Share via
Dave Brooks
Angry residents waylaid City Council members after their meeting
Tuesday night to chastise them for approving a law that will charge
them as much as $30,000 to clear the titles on their illegally
converted condominiums.
Most council members hurried away as the small mob honed in on
Councilwomen Connie Boardman and Debbie Cook. Boardman also took off,
but Cook stayed and responded to irate homeowners.
The loud display might not have won any points with council
members, but it did catch the attention of one city employee -- the
meeting’s sergeant-at-arms who called in reinforcement from the
Huntington Beach Police Department in case the exchange got out of
hand.
The confrontation was quickly diffused without any police
intervention, but it underscores the increasing frustration of about
120 Huntington Beach residents who unknowingly bought illegally
converted condominiums.
“How could they do this to us?” Renee Tarnow said. “We’re the
victims in this. We shouldn’t have to pay a thing.”
Owners have had difficulty trying to sell or refinance illegally
converted condominiums, and because of parking and landscaping
requirements under a strict 20-year-old ordinance, they are difficult
to rezone.
At Tuesday’s meeting, the council approved a special process for
rezoning the condominiums, which included a fee to deal with
affordable housing.
“The illegal conversions created a loss of the city’s rental
housing stock,” Cook said, so condo owners will have to pay as much
as $20,000 apiece into a special affordable-housing fund to make up
for it.
The final figure for the fee is being calculated by a consulting
firm.
“The difficulty of this situation is trying to craft a solution
that is global in nature,” Planning Director Howard Zelefsky said.
Condo owners Tim and Laurel Talbert said the affordable-housing
fee, on top of the nearly $10,000 in processing costs they could have
to pay, is simply unaffordable.
“I was seriously hoping for them to waive the whole thing,” Laurel
Talbert said. “I don’t see why we should have to pay any of this.”
Tuesday’s decision was a slightly watered-down version of the
original ordinance introduced by the Planning Department.
Councilwoman Jill Hardy asked staff members to devise an
alternative to an expensive parcel-mapping component of the plan,
which could take months to complete.
The council also directed staff members to draft an ordinance that
would require the collection of various fees only after the property
was sold.
“Typically, when someone sells their home, they come into a
surplus of cash,” Boardman said. “This provision makes paying the
[affordable-housing] fee much more affordable.”
Mike Adams, a consultant from Stewart Title, the company that
insured most of the improper titles, suggested his company may issue
a bond to cover all costs until the problem is resolved.
But condo owners, like Aaron Frankel, said they’re frustrated that
the city is asking them to pay anything at all. Frankel wants the
city to file a class-action lawsuit against the people who illegally
converted the homes and go after the Realtors. He added that the only
time he was hopeful during the entire meeting was when Councilman Gil
Coerper made a failing motion to waive the affordable-housing fee
altogether.
“That was pretty cool,” he said. “I finally felt like someone was
listening to us.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.