Council will save ball fields
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A deal to save several little league fields using city money appears
set in stone. The deal will preserve open space but may damage the
relationship between the city and a local school district.
Officials from the Fountain Valley School District said they
likely won’t oppose a plan by the Huntington Beach City Council to
purchase six acres of parkland at the old Wardlow school site on
Pioneer Drive, and another two acres at Lamb School, to save portions
of each from residential development. The Wardlow school site is home
to the Huntington Valley Little League.
Relationships between the two sides, however, are at a low point,
following the collapse of a negotiated deal to save a smaller portion
of parkland at no cost to the city.
“I don’t know that there was a good feeling at any point in time,”
Assistant Supt. of Business Barry Blade said. “It doesn’t seem like
there is a good relationship there.”
The controversial debate about the site was marked by personal
insults flung at district officials by some council members, a short
school district public hearing process, and the high profile
dismissal of a city employee who had tailored a failed deal to save
the parkland.
Some Huntington Beach residents, such as Alan Gandall, a real
estate broker turned land activist, said many residents and city
officials felt dismayed during February’s Fountain Valley School
Board meeting when board members unanimously approved a plan to
declare the school sites surplus without any debate or explanation.
“It wasn’t done right,” Gandall said. “They didn’t leave any room
to discuss it. They just voted on it, and it passed, and then it was
over.”
News of the vote came as the Huntington Beach City School District
announced it was also looking at closing schools and considering
selling four sites throughout the city. After angry rhetoric back and
forth, the city and the Fountain Valley district agreed to enter into
negotiations to look at what could be done to save parts of Wardlow
and Lamb.
On the table were city concerns about open space, and district
officials wanted promises to expedite the permitting process and help
getting the maximum value for the property so it could invest the
money and collect from the interest.
In the end, the school district agreed to hand over 5.2 acres of
parkland at Wardlow in exchange for help rezoning the park. Blade
said former Huntington Beach Planning Director Howard Zelefsky was
instrumental in negotiating the deal.
“I thought we were working very pragmatically with Howard
Zelefsky. He was knowledgeable and very pragmatic,” Blade said.
But when the plan was presented to the city, Councilman Don Hansen
asked city staff to send the proposal back to the drawing board in
hopes of securing a little more land to save all the ball fields. At
that same meeting, the council voted, 6-1, to place Zelefsky on
30-day administrative leave.
With Zelefsky out of the picture, negotiations took a notable turn
for the worse.
“I don’t know if there was a misunderstanding, I just think the
school board felt it was a historic effort to try and solve something
by giving away property and perhaps misunderstood the council’s
remarks,” Councilman Dave Sullivan said.
A few days after the council meeting, an attorney hired by the
school district sent city officials and angry letter canceling
negotiations and rescinding its offer to give away part of the land.
“The school district is concerned that even the 5.2-acre ...
[offer] is perhaps too generous given the project risks,” attorney
Andreas Chialtas wrote. “The district’s comfort level at this time
with respect to the property dedication is perhaps a maximum of 4.3
acres of the Wardlow site.”
That letter prompted fiery response from City Attorney Jennifer
McGrath and a special closed session meeting of the City Council.
When the council members emerged, they announced plans to use a state
law to purchase a portion of the property at a fraction of its market
value.
Using loans and money from a park acquisition fund, the city will
purchase about 8.6 acres of parkland for between $3 million and $4
million, without any promises to help with the permitting process.
Both sides contend the purchase agreement was a better deal.
The city gets to save all the ball fields and purchase property at
a significantly lower cost, while limiting the number of homes that
can go on the site, Hansen said after the meeting.
The school district gets some limited compensation for the
parkland and no responsibilities to relocate displaced ball fields.
It also plans to drop a bid to try and rezone the property, opting to
let the future developer deal with the city.
“That group won’t have the history of the relationship that we now
have,” Blade said.
As for the possibility of returning to the negotiating table,
Blade said that opportunity is over.
“There is nothing to negotiate at this time,” he said. “They have
made their decision.”
Sullivan disagreed.
“That’s not our choice,” he said. “I think there’s always a chance
to go back to the table.”
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