District to sell off surplus land
The Fountain Valley School District unanimously approved a
controversial plan to sell a popular Little League park, paving the
way for a financial tug-of-war with the city over the fate of the
property.
At a Feb. 10 meeting, Fountain Valley trustees declared three
former school sites -- two in Huntington Beach and one in Fountain
Valley -- surplus property. Each valued at approximately $25 million,
the properties will be first offered for a fraction of their value to
the cities of Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley and the Orange County
Board of Supervisors and then at full market value to residential
developers.
For weeks, parents rallied to save the Wardlow field site at the
intersection of Magnolia Street and Pioneer Drive. The 14-acre site
holds a city park, the Huntington Valley Chapter of the Boys and
Girls Club and a Head Start office.
Wardlow field is also home to the Huntington Valley Little League,
which with the help of former slugger Mark McGuire and the Major
League Baseball Players Assn. dumped more than $300,000 into building
the baseball diamonds for league play.
The crux of the deal is money. The school district only gets about
$250,000 for leasing all three properties, Assistant Supt. of
Business Services Barry Blade said. Blade is recommending the school
district, which had to make $2 million in cuts in 2002, sell the
school sites and collect money from the interest.
With the school site now declared surplus, homeowners are
petitioning the city to buy the land. According to state law, the
city has to be offered the land at 25 % of its total value and
homeowners hope Huntington Beach will take the opportunity to buy the
land at a discounted rate.
Not likely, said Mayor Pro Tem Dave Sullivan, who called the
school board’s decision “callous and irresponsible.” He said the city
too faced tough budget times and would have to raise the money
through a taxpayer bond and costly special election, which he
predicted would ultimately fail.
“[Supt.] Ekert owes it to the parents to put a bond issue on the
ballot in the district to let the voters decide if they want to
preserve the sites,” he said in a prepared statement. “But he is
obviously trying to shift the responsibility and $100,000 cost to the
city. A bond issue in the district has a chance. We would have to
have a citywide vote and it would fail.”
Blade said the city could borrow the cash and repay the loan using
money from its general fund. He said his staff would consider any
proposal the city put forward.
“We’re not looking to put a gun to the city’s head,” he said.
“It’s not like we needed this money yesterday. There are other ways.”
City reaches agreement
The city has settled a long-standing lawsuit with the Southern
California Water Company.
In an attempt to block the water company from providing service to
a controversial housing project slated for the upper portion of the
Bolsa Chica Mesa, city officials had refused to grant a franchise
agreement to the water company and appealed a court order mandating a
franchise be given out.
Development of the Bolsa Chica wetlands has been a decades-old
battle between environmentalists and developers. Once planned to
include more than 5,000 homes and a major residential and commercial
development, the project was eventually carved down to a 347-home
neighborhood that could go before the Coastal Commission in March.
Facing the possibility of an eminent domain lawsuit and the
overturning of its appeal, the city opted for a settlement with the
water company.
Under the terms of the agreement, the water company will be
granted a 15-year franchise for at least $3,000 a year, along with
$126,000 payment to the city to settle its legal fees.
The pipeline will run alongside the southbound lane of Bolsa Chica
Avenue from Rancho Road to Los Patos Avenue, leaving one lane closed
for no farther than a quarter-mile at a time.
Restaurant opens with benefit
The newest component of the Huntington Beach Mall remodel is set
to open.
On March 3, the new California Pizza Kitchen on Edinger Avenue
will open its doors to Surf City, followed by a special fundraiser on
March 9 to benefit KOCE-TV.
Two new menu items will be introduced in restaurants nationwide
the day of the grand opening. “We are excited to open our newest
location in Bella Terra, Huntington Beach’s newest shopping and
entertainment destination,” restaurant co-founder Larry Flax said in
a press release.
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