Costa Mesa gives final OK to tear down Motor Inn and build luxury apartments
The Costa Mesa City Council gave its second and final approval Tuesday on a plan to demolish the Costa Mesa Motor Inn and replace it with hundreds of high-end apartments.
The 4-1 vote, with Councilwoman Sandy Genis dissenting, paves the way for the motelâs owner, Los Angeles-based Miracle Mile Properties, to turn its 4.15-acre property at 2277 Harbor Blvd. into a 224-unit apartment complex.
Mayor Steve Mensinger said Costa Mesa resident Larry Haynes, executive director of Mercy House, a Santa Ana-based nonprofit that provides homeless services, volunteered to help the motelâs long-term tenants with relocation assistance.
Haynesâ assistance would be in addition to the relocation packages, worth up to $5,500, offered by Miracle Mile and another $200,000 the company is giving directly to the city toward that effort.
Though the two ended up voting on the same side, Mayor Pro Tem Jim Righeimer and Councilwoman Katrina Foley butted heads.
Righeimer, who helped facilitate the project for more than two years, said the city will benefit because the blighted motel is a source of criminal activity and prostitution.
Righeimer said while affordable housing is not in the works for this project â much to the dismay of some local activists who staged rallies against the plans â he would support other affordable-housing projects if they came to the dais.
Addressing Foley and Genis, âI will do whatever I can to help you bring the next deal in the city ... but Iâd like to see you two actually do something and bring something.â
Foley interjected, calling Righeimerâs statement âextremely rude.â
âThe point is,â Righeimer continued, âyou bring something forward, you get something we can vote on, you bring 20% affordable [housing], and Iâm all for it.â
He added that previous councils stopped projects when facing opposition.
âWe literally, on this council, had motels get voted to become affordable housing,â Righeimer said, âwhen no child should be dumped with that. Those properties should have been torn down ... but Iâm here to clean up the community, get rid of the drugs, get rid of all the issues over there that have been pushed aside for 20-some years, 25 years in the city, and to get it done.â
Foley countered that Righeimer âacts like heâs the only one thatâs ever done anything good in the city as a City Council member. Itâs just ridiculous.â
Foley said she spoke with a developer whoâs willing build affordable housing north of the 405 Freeway, but that Righeimer told that developer he wouldnât support it.
âSo donât say youâre âgoing to be supportive of affordable housing. Bring me a deal.â That is just grandstanding and you know it,â Foley said.
Foley blamed the Motor Innâs issues on Miracle Mile for allowing criminal behavior to occur there and that the council is now rewarding the company housing density bonuses worth âmillions and millionsâ of dollars.
She said she did not think the âbehind-the-scenes dealsâ by Righeimer, a former Mercy House board member, and Mensinger were in the âbest interest of our community.â
Mensinger accused Foley of impugning Haynes and Mercy House, which Foley denied, saying he was âa good community guyâ but that she didnât trust the councilmenâs âmachinationsâ for the project.
âIâm kinda dumbfounded,â Councilman Gary Monahan said of Foleyâs remarks. He pointed out that Haynes has long worked alongside city staff on homeless issues and commended him for approaching Mensinger to help Motor Inn residents.
âLarry Haynes and Mercy House offered to help at no cost ... why wouldnât we accept it?â Monahan said to Foley. âWhy is there something dirty behind it?â
âI donât know. I donât have anything in front of me,â Foley said, adding that she didnât like how it came up during the meeting without her prior knowledge. âI just am concerned about the process in how [suddenly] weâre deciding that itâs this individual.â
Monahan replied, âNo, weâre not deciding anything, because the moneyâs not going to him. Heâs offered to help us for free.â