Latino concerns to be addressed
- Share via
Andrew Glazer
COSTA MESA -- There should be no problem addressing Latino concerns as
the city makes plans to revitalize the West Side, the project’s leader
said Tuesday.
“The satisfaction of this whole project will come from seeing the end
results,” said Elwood C. Tescher, director of urban planning and design
at EIP Associates, the consultants hired by the city. “The only way for
that to happen is to get the stakeholders involved in the process.”
Almost 45% of the neighborhood’s residents are Latino, according to a
report UC Irvine graduate students prepared for the advisory group.
A coalition of neighborhood activists, business owners and residents on
Monday presented the City Council with a report stressing the community’s
need for a grocery store, affordable housing and increased community
policing.
The group, the Latino Community Advisors, formed in September after
Latino residents living on the West Side complained that planners had
forgotten to ask for their input.
Their vision, as outlined Monday, doesn’t include anything too new or
radical, said Tescher, who was hired by the city in 1997 to find a
solution to the neighborhood’s landscaping, street layout and traffic
problems.
“Initially we heard people talking about bulldozers for the
neighborhood,” Tescher said. “But now we’re all working within the
margins of what’s already there. We’re tinkering with the basic fabric.”
But Tescher said he did find some contradictions in the group’s
recommendations.
The advisory group favors a new grocery store in the neighborhood,
Tescher noted, while it also was opposed to closing any existing
businesses or housing developments.
“There’s no sites where the grocery store would fit,” he said. “If you’re
going to have it, you have to take away something from the property.
There are inherently hard issues that have to be addressed in making this
big vision work.”
Mayor Gary Monahan said the Latino Community Advisors’ suggestions, along
with recommendations from other civic groups, will help the planning
process.
“They’re all going into the same huge melting pot, the pot that will
eventually spit out the new redevelopment plan,” Monahan said.
QUESTION
GOOD SUGGESTIONS?
What do you think of the ideas for improving communication between the
city and the West Side community? Call our Readers Hotline at (949)
642-6086 or send e-mail to [email protected]. Please spell your name
and tell us your hometown and phone number (for verification purposed
only).
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.