Southeast coastal redevelopment plans move forward
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Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- City officials and residents have revisited plans
to spruce up a 266-acre parcel between Beach Boulevard and Magnolia
Street just east of Pacific Coast Highway in hopes of clarifying steps
required to redevelop the area.
“We’re at the very initial phase of redevelopment, which can be
stopped at any time,” said Carol Runzel, an assistant project manager
with the city’s Economic Development Department. “Our goal was to meet
with residents discuss the process with which a redevelopment plan will
follow and hear their concerns.”
City officials have drawn up a preliminary plan for redeveloping the
parcel, dubbed the Southeast Coastal Redevelopment Project. It outlines
the long-term planning goals and policies to clean up the area, as well
as incorporating community comment on the matter.
John Scott, president of the Southeast Huntington Beach Neighborhood
Assn. and one of about 150 people who attended a Jan. 18 meeting at
Edison High School, said much of the concern over the redevelopment plan
revolves around corporate welfare, the project’s estimated timeline and
industrial zoning.
The southeast coastal area includes the AES Corp. power plant, Ascon
landfill, an oil tank farm, mobile home park and undeveloped wetlands. A
study of the area by city consultants found that more than half of the
land is contaminated from industrial uses.
If the city’s Redevelopment Agency ultimately approves a redevelopment
project for the area, it will be eligible for a larger slice of the
property taxes garnered by the land to use for residential development,
environmental cleanup or beautification efforts.
“I think that residents here feel like we suffer the consequences of
living near a lot of industrial uses of the area and we want the
redevelopment money to stay in the area instead of funding improvements
somewhere else, like the [Huntington Center],” Scott said, adding that
the plan stretches over three decades and many residents would like to
see it finished sooner. “But we need to clean up that area, and if this
is the only vehicle to do it, we need to pursue it.”
Gus Duran, the city’s housing and redevelopment manager, said the
preliminary plan serves as a charter for the Redevelopment Agency
governing its responsibilities over the project area.
He said it doesn’t include potential land uses, such as specific
residential or industrial projects, which fall under the jurisdiction of
the city’s general plan.
The Planning Commission reviewed the redevelopment plan Tuesday and is
slated to vote on it next month, when it then moves to the Redevelopment
Agency.
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