DeVore charges cottage misuse
- Share via
Alicia Robinson
After putting himself on the firing line with two bills to preserve
homes at El Morro Village, 70th District Assemblyman Chuck DeVore has
taken aim at a state parks employee for what he alleges is improper
use of state facilities.
In a letter sent Friday to Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, DeVore
charges that Crystal Cove State Park Supt. Ken Kramer “managed to
obtain rent-free use of one of the renovated historic cottages [at
Crystal Cove], allowing him to rent out his home for several thousand
dollars per month since last summer.”
Such an arrangement would be inappropriate, DeVore said, because
Kramer has been involved in decisions that led to the eviction of
residents from the Crystal Cove cottages, and he is a party to
ongoing efforts to evict residents at the nearby El Morro Village
mobile home park.
The cottages and the mobile home park are on state-owned land
designated for park use. DeVore recently introduced two bills that
would allow residents to remain at El Morro for up to 30 years, while
the state collects the rent money to reduce its budget deficit or for
state park use.
DeVore also sent a letter regarding Kramer’s residence to
California State Parks Director Ruth Coleman. At press time DeVore
said he had not received responses to his letters.
“I’d like to know the policy within the parks department as to how
they discourage or prevent the appearance of impropriety or breach of
the public trust,” DeVore said. “My main point was to register my
concerns as quickly as possible that it might get into the system,
and we might work to put a stop to these evictions.”
Kramer referred questions to the state parks director’s office. A
state parks spokesman said providing housing to park rangers and
maintenance workers is a long-standing practice and is widely done at
parks across the state.
“[Kramer] is not, nor are any park employees, living there
rent-free. They have to pay rent, but there’s more to it than that,”
said Roy Stearns, deputy communications director for the state parks
department. “They’re on call 24 hours a day, and being on call 24
hours a day, they’re not entitled to any type of extra pay.”
On-site employees pay $148 a month in rent, plus taxes and
utilities, and Kramer is trained as a peace officer and lifeguard and
provides park security, Stearns said.
When former tenants first began leaving Crystal Cove, the parks
department hired a private firm to provide park security for about
$90,000 a year, so having employees on-site is cheaper, he said.
“It’s a little like having the firemen live in the fire station
next to the truck, because we can do our job better,” Stearns said.
But DeVore thinks the fact that Kramer had a part in decisions to
evict other people from state property where he’s now living is a
conflict of interest.
Because Kramer is providing the state with services, the reduced
rent would appear to be a form of payment as opposed to a
questionable gift of public funds, said Matt Parlow, a professor of
property law and state government at Whittier Law School in Costa
Mesa.
“The problem, of course, is that if legitimately under the lease,
these people [in the cottages] were supposed to move, the state had
the right to move them,” Parlow said. “The fact that he’s moved into
one [of the cottages] does raise eyebrows in terms of whether he got
a sweetheart deal.”
Stearns said he doesn’t know if Kramer is renting out a home he
owns, but he doesn’t see an issue with that.
“We don’t put them [in the parks] because it’s a plum; we put them
there because we need their skills there,” he said. “My feeling about
his private home is if he’s managed his personal finances well enough
to have a private home before he moved here to this site, that’s his
business.”
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers government and politics. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4626 or by e-mail at alicia.robinson
@latimes.com.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.