A closer look -- Living within limits
- Share via
Jennifer Kho
COSTA MESA -- As code enforcement officer Mitt Sealy pulled over
during a recent patrol to examine a broken table leaning against a garage
in a Westside alley, the owner of the garage and adjoining home
approached.
“What is it now?” said Les Launder, shaking his head. “This is not my
. . . fault. [The table] is not mine. People drop things here, couches
sometimes and all kinds of other things. Get out of here. It’s not my
fault.”
Sealy left quickly, saying he decided to monitor the alley that day
after receiving a neighbor’s complaint about junk storage on Beach
Boulevard.
A few minutes later, he heard over his radio that Launder had called
911 immediately after the encounter and reported that Sealy was harassing
him.
RESPONDING TO COMPLAINTS
The not-so-warm welcome Sealy received is an extreme example of the
response to a number of new city property maintenance regulations -- and
the accompanying code enforcement.
Supporters and opponents of the code revisions have spoken strongly at
public meetings since September, when the city released a brochure
identifying changes to property maintenance regulations.
In August, the new rules went into effect. The city’s Code Enforcement
Department -- strengthened by three additional officers in July -- has
been working vigorously to bring homeowners into compliance.
After hundreds of residents at a Westside community meeting in the
spring requested stricter regulations, the city updated the property
codes, said Don Lamm, Costa Mesa’s deputy city manager and development
services director.
The residents’ main complaint was that absentee landlords --
particularly apartment owners -- were not maintaining their properties,
forcing lower-income residents to live in substandard conditions and
lowering property values for other homeowners, Lamm said.
The new property codes prohibit peeling paint, dry rot, broken
windows, torn screens or deteriorating walls. They also state that
sidewalks or parkways must be free of deteriorating fences or signs, dead
or dying landscaping and litter or weeds. In addition, residents cannot
live in a recreational vehicle or garage.
MORE CODE REVISIONS AHEAD
Property maintenance codes were not the only ones targeted for
revisions this year.
To combat overflowing trash bins, the City Council in early November
passed new waste-hauling service codes, regulating the size of trash bins
and the frequency of trash pickup that must be provided to tenants by
owners of multifamily apartments and homes.
Now the city is working on comprehensive zoning code revisions. The
latest revisions, if approved, will change the property development
standards and add a new design review process.
The Planning Commission is expected to review the proposed zoning
codes Dec. 11, then pass on a recommendation to the City Council.
The main effect of all the revisions has been to give the Code
Enforcement Department “teeth,” Lamm said.
“It used to be the city could only require a building to be repaired
if it didn’t comply with building codes or if the [disrepair] was
life-threatening, like if the hand rail on the second floor was
physically rotting and falling off,” he said.
“These regulations mean we can now force them to paint the hand rail
to keep it from rotting. These codes all address safety issues. We don’t
really care how high people mow their lawns -- that’s not a priority. But
safety is a big issue.”
Eleanor Egan, chairwoman of the Westside Improvement Assn., is an
adamant supporter of the new codes.
She said the code changes are a step in the right direction but that
many of the violations still have not been fixed.
Sealy agreed that the Code Enforcement Department has a lot of work
ahead but that at some sites, including homes on Ralcom Place, Hamilton
Street and Beach Boulevard, conditions have already taken a turn for the
better.
DECODING MIXED MESSAGES
Others don’t think as much of the tighter city laws.
Marie Kolasinski, a member of the Piecemakers -- a Costa Mesa
religious sect that often tangles with city and county government over
health, fire and building codes -- said she thinks the new codes are far
too strict.
“If our city government is going to tell us when and how to paint our
houses, we are rapidly becoming a dictatorial police state,” she said.
“I’m hoping things will start to turn around so people can start
thinking for themselves. I am really disappointed with our city. We will
never have a community feeling if the government keeps telling us what to
do this way.”
Despite some obvious resentment, Sealy said most of the people he
talks to want their neighborhoods to look better.
Toward the end of his route, a woman at a Victoria Street apartment
gave evidence to support Sealy’s view.
“The door to the laundry room doesn’t work sometimes,” said Maria
Franco, adding that her deteriorating apartment is owned by an absentee
landlord.
“We tried to put plants in near the sidewalk once and the owner said
we couldn’t. I think these [codes] are good because the property will be
brought up.
“Things will look nicer with new paint and the neighborhood will feel
better about itself. They [codes] will make the owner clean up, not us,
and that will also be good.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.