Inside CITY HALL
- Share via
HOME RANCH
The new Planning Commission will listen as community members get their
first chance to sound off on the revised Home Ranch draft environmental
report today.
The commission previously discussed the project in November.
Home Ranch, a 90-acre project originally scheduled for Planning
Commission review in June, has been redesigned to add housing, as well as
reduce building heights and the square-foot density of the proposed
office space.
The modified proposal for the site, a lima bean farm bordered by the
San Diego Freeway, Fairview Road, Harbor Boulevard and Sunflower Avenue,
calls for a 17-acre Ikea furniture store, 950,000 square feet of office
space and 464 homes.
Copies of the draft environmental report for Costa Mesa’s revised Home
Ranch development proposal are available at City Hall, 77 Fair Drive; the
Mesa Verde Library, 2969 Mesa Verde Drive East; and the Costa Mesa
Library, 1855 Park Ave.
WHAT TO EXPECT:
The commission will take public comment on the adequacy of the draft
environmental impact report but will make no decision about whether to
certify the document or to approve the project.
The city will continue to accept public comments on the project until
Friday.
Q-CLUB BILLIARDS & CAFE
The commission will review the Q-Club Billiards & Cafe to determine
whether it has complied with modified permits that were approved in
August.
The commission postponed a review on Dec. 14 to allow the landlord,
Mark Les, to try to resolve differences between the cafe and other
tenants, including the Dancers in Motion dance studio, which filed a
complaint against the cafe.
Complaints from neighboring tenants were that Q-Club Billiards & Cafe
patrons would smoke outside of the club and would use loud and abusive
language.
The commission postponed a review Nov. 27 because neither the property
owner nor neighbors who have filed complaints about the cafe at 1525 Mesa
Verde Drive East attended the meeting.
The business is allowed to have a small smoking area in back of the
cafe but is not allowed to serve food or alcohol there. It also must
supervise the area to keep noise down.
The owners applied for permission to create an outdoor dining patio
and sell hard liquor but withdrew that application after the commission
received several complaints in August about customers smoking and
loitering in front of the cafe.
WHAT TO EXPECT:
Since the December hearing, Q-Club Billiards & Cafe has reported that
food sales made up an average of 58% of its sales from January to October
2000.
That percentage is in keeping with the requirement that quarterly food
sales must exceed alcohol sales.
According to the staff report, the extent of the problems between the
club and other tenants has been reduced and Bob Michna, an adjacent
bookstore owner, said that loud and abusive language has diminished.
If the commission agrees that conflicts have been resolved, it is
expected to end reviews of the Q-Club but decide to resume them in the
future if the city receives new complaints.
LEARNING CENTER
The commission is scheduled to consider allowing Learning Tree
University to operate a nonprofit education and training facility in an
industrial building at 3160 and 3170 Pullman St.
The issue has been continued three times because of parking disputes
that have not yet been settled.
WHAT TO EXPECT:
The parking dispute still not been resolved. According to the staff
report, city staff recommends the council deny the center’s request
because “without clear limitations on hours of operation for each use,
there is a strong possibility that parking demands will overlap and
exceed supply, resulting in overflow of parking onto adjacent
properties.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.