DeVore withdraws two El Morro bills
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Alicia Robinson
* EDITOR’S NOTE: This week, Daily Pilot government and politics
reporter Alicia Robinson is in Sacramento to provide a firsthand look
at Newport-Mesa’s elected representatives. She will be checking in on
freshmen Assemblymen Chuck DeVore and Van Tran and see how state Sen.
John Campbell is adjusting to life in the Senate. Pilot photographer
Kent Treptow is also on the assignment in the state capital.
SACRAMENTO -- Hoping to avoid a politically costly defeat, Newport
Beach Assemblyman Chuck DeVore has pulled the plug on two bills that
would have extended the leases of residents at the El Morro Village
mobile home park.
The controversial bills were scheduled for a hearing today in the
Assembly Water, Parks and Wildlife Committee. One bill would have
extended El Morro residents’ leases for 30 years in exchange for a
$50-million payment that would go toward the state’s projected $8
billion deficit. The other would have put leases on the mobile homes
up for public bid and earmarked the profits for the state parks
department, which has reported a $900-million backlog of parks
facilities and maintenance projects.
El Morro Village sits on state-owned, beachfront land at Crystal
Cove State Park that is slated to become public parkland and
campgrounds once the mobile home residents are gone.
DeVore has said he wrote the bills because it’s fiscally
irresponsible for the state to embark on the $13-million project to
redevelop El Morro while the state budget is bleeding red ink.
Opponents of the bills believe the land should be open to the
public. In their eyes, El Morro residents have gotten a sweet deal
for the last 25 years, paying below-market rents to live on valuable
coastal property that was purchased with taxpayers’ money. Some
criticize DeVore for accepting campaign contributions from the
residents and loans from the family of Roberto Brutocao, a board
member of the mobile home park’s management company and DeVore’s
campaign finance manager.
DeVore withdrew the bills Thursday because he could not get a
majority of the committee to vote for them, he said Monday.
“Losing a committee vote is something that I can’t afford right
now, because it makes a policy pronouncement on my idea and says it’s
dead,” he said.
The bills wouldn’t affect the state’s ongoing court proceedings to
evict residents. A handful of the park’s nearly 300 tenants agreed to
leave by April 1, but most are fighting in court to stay.
The assemblyman said he sees other options to keep El Morro open
and bring in more money for the state -- an order from Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger could do it, or a provision could be added to the
budget bill to continue collecting rents from residents.
“I’ve already talked to several [El Morro residents], and they
understand the tactical necessity of losing” this particular battle,
DeVore said.
El Morro Community Assn. President Jeanette Miller could not be
reached for comment Monday.
Others are likely to cheer DeVore’s withdrawal of the bills,
including former Assemblyman Gil Ferguson, who sent a letter last
week urging Water, Parks and Wildlife Committee members to vote
against the bills.
“My opposition to these people plundering public property goes
back several decades and is well-documented,” Ferguson wrote in a
statement sent to the Daily Pilot with the letter.
The Orange County Taxpayers Assn. also opposed the bills and said
the land should be opened to the public. DeVore’s goal of saving the
state money is “noble but misguided,” association President Reed
Royalty said when reached by phone Monday.
The state Parks and Recreation Department didn’t take a position
on the bills but planned all along to proceed with developing the
park, parks department spokesman Roy Stearns said.
“Now we can continue with our project,” he said. “Maybe that
removes a cloud to allow us to continue without further delays.”
Had either of the bills passed, Royalty thinks they might have
been an albatross around DeVore’s neck, because “he’d be known as the
guy that kept the public from using the taxpayers’ land.”
DeVore doesn’t see backing off on the bills as a total loss. If
the court starts evicting residents, he could bring an urgency bill
forward, he said.
Such a bill would probably look more like one state Sen. John
Campbell proposed but later withdrew when he was in the assembly.
That bill would have extended mobile home park residents’ leases
and devoted the money to renovations that are now underway on
cottages at Crystal Cove State Park. The project to refurbish 22
historic cottages there is over budget, but Stearns said he’s not
sure by how much. DeVore has pointed to the Crystal Cove cost
overruns as evidence of why it’s a bad idea to begin the new El Morro
project.
The $13-million for the El Morro project comes from a
voter-approved parks bond issue and has already been set aside in
state budget.
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers government and politics. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4626 or by e-mail at alicia.robinson
@latimes.com.
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