Slope ordinance gets slippery
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The Planning Commission on Tuesday directed staff to rewrite a zoning
ordinance that would make it difficult for property owners to expand
their backyards onto rear hillsides once used as neighborhood
easements.
Several weeks ago, residents living in Huntington Harbour asked
the commission to consider a ban on rear expansion of hillside,
double-fronted lots -- homes that are bordered in the front and rear
by nearly parallel streets. Residents like Randy Fuhrman and Carole
Garrett asked for an ordinance because they said they were tired of
property owners pushing their backyards onto rear hillsides and
constructing 14-foot retaining walls to hold the expansion in place.
An ordinance is needed to save the remaining patches of hillside,
they argued.
“Zoning is a restriction of personal property rights for the
benefit of the community,” Fuhrman said. “Somebody is going to get
restricted and the benefits often seem kind of nebulous.”
The pair’s homes face several concrete walls, blighting their
view, and changing the character of the neighborhood, Fuhrman said.
Instead of drafting a ban on such expansion, Commissioner Tom
Livengood recommended staff members draft a compromise bill, allowing
several smaller retaining walls spaced out along the hillside.
The Planning Department will be charged with drafting the
compromise, but City Planner Paul Da Veiga said staff members will
not recommend the commission pass it, because they feel the
ordinance in place is sufficient. The ordinance will be studied by
the Planning Commission again on Aug. 10 and then possibly approved
on Aug. 24. After that, it will go before the City Council for a
final vote.
Hillside homeowner Darrach Taylor, who opposes development
restrictions, said he was weary of any compromise.
“The commission thinks it has to come up with some alternative for
the City Council, and it seems like they’re being pressured from some
outside group,” Taylor said.
Fuhrman disagreed and characterized the compromise as an attempt
by the commissioner to appease the vocal homeowners opposed to the
amendment.
Water use during drought a concern to city officials
Water usage in Huntington Beach has increased dramatically, and
city officials are worried about its effect on local reserves.
Despite being the sixth year of extended drought, Orange County
water consumption continues to rise. Orange County water usage in May
saw the highest increase in the last 10 years, the Public Utilities
department reported.
The problem is particularly pronounced in Huntington Beach, where
water consumption for May was nearly 18% higher than last year, the
Public Utilities department reported. Water consumption for June was
an astounding 30.5% higher than last year.
Even with the growth in housing and population, water consumption
hadn’t changed in more than 15 years, said city utility division
manager Howard Johnson, who is still trying to determine the reason
for the increase.
“We’re struggling with that ourselves,” he said. “We’re seeing the
highest in residential uses, so that kind of takes out the argument
that the tourist industry might be causing the increase.”
To control this escalating water raise, residents are asked by the
Public Utilities Department to do their part to conserve, especially
when landscaping and irrigating home gardens. Johnson recommended
homeowners reevaluate their irrigation systems, consider watering
every three days and only water in the morning when temperatures are
lower. Homeowners are being asked to consider planting native plants
that require less water.
For more information, visit www.bewaterwise.com
Army Corps to dredge Santa Ana River
The Army Corps of Engineers and the Orange County Department of
Resources and Development Management plan to begin an intensive
dredging operation to remove sediment from the Santa Ana River before
control of the river is handed over to the County of Orange.
The project will go from the river mouth at the Pacific Ocean,
2,000 feet upstream of Adams Avenue. Engineers plan to excavate about
400,000 cubic yards of sediment to help restore the river’s soft
channel and design depth.
Most of the excavated sand will be moved to the West Newport Beach
shoreline and an offshore disposal area. About 25,000 cubic yards
will be placed on Least Tern Nesting Island. Workers will also
attempt to remove all vegetation from the island.
“The original dredging was done in 1994, and after it was
completed they moved on to other reaches of the river,” county
official Don Murphy said. “That design condition was no longer
available because so much sand had built up.”
Work on the project is expected to begin around Aug. 15 when the
least tern nesting season has ended. A bike trail on the east side of
the river will be closed until the project is completed in December.
Walk raises money for children of 9/11
Volunteers are organizing a 5K walk along Bolsa Chica State Beach
to raise money for the 9/11 Children’s Fund.
The scenic beach-walk route will be on Sept. 11 to commemorate the
victims who died in the terrorist attacks of that day.
Money raised in the event will go toward the 9/11 Children’s Fund,
which provides educational support to children from low-income
families that lost a parent on Sept. 11. Funds will also go to the
Afghanistan Relief Organization, Homes for Kids in South Africa and
arts group Be The Cause.
For more information or to register, call 714-636-3067 or e-mail
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