Crystal Cove evictions put on hold
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Paul Clinton
CRYSTAL COVE -- The evictions are on hold.
On Friday, the cottage dwellers at Crystal Cove State Park earned a
three-week reprieve in a tentative settlement deal with the state’s parks
department.
The residents had sued the state agency after it issued 30-day notices
Monday that required them to leave their homes by March 11. No longer.
“It’s on hold for three weeks,” said Deborah Rosenthal, the residents’
attorney. The extension will allow us “to sit down and explore the
possibility of settling the issue.”
The settlement won’t undo the evictions, only set a newtimetable for
when they would occur, said state parks spokesman Roy Stearns. The
residents now are scheduled to be evicted April 1 if no deal is reached.
“What that does is stop the clock while we seek a solution that would
be amenable to the residents,” Stearns said. “We’re talking about the
time we would give them to stay in the cottages.”
On another front Friday, Gov. Gray Davis announced a deal providing
for a state buyout of San Francisco developer Michael Freed. The deal is
the final stake in the heart of Freed’s $35-million resort project, which
was uniformly opposed by local groups.
“This truly is a triple win,” Davis said in a statement. “It is
responsive to the community, expands environmental protection and
reimburses the developer for costs incurred up to now.”
At its March 22 meeting, the seven-member California Coastal
Conservancy board is set to consider using state park bond funds to pay
Freed up to $2 million for costs incurred since he signed a 60-year
concessionaire’s contract with former Gov. Pete Wilson’s administration
in 1997.
State representatives have asked Freed for a detailed itemization of
his costs. Freed did not return several calls for comment.
As Freed’s luxury resort falls by the wayside, a coalition of
environmental groups have banned together to develop a plan for an
alternative project at the historic Crystal Cove.
Heiress Joan Irvine Smith, who brought her high-profile presence to
the issue in mid-January, said she will host a meeting Friday at her San
Juan Capistrano ranch.
“We’ll throw out some ideas on the table to try to find a common
ground on something everybody likes,” Smith said.
Smith also said she has set the wheel in motion to form the Crystal
Cove Conservancy, a nonprofit group that could direct educational efforts
at the historic district.
The 46 cottages at Crystal Cove, placed on the National Register of
Historic Places in 1979, sit on the edge of a marine ecosystem that has
been singled out by the state as an area of special biological
significance. It contains one of only two birthing grounds of the
bottlenose dolphin along the coastline.
With the evictions on hold, the state has also postponed signing
several ready-to-go contracts with engineering firms to assess the septic
tanks underneath the cottages. Parks officials have said they must
replace the tanks to comply with a cleanup order from the Santa Ana
Regional Water Quality Control Board. The tanks are suspected of leaking
into the cove.
To fund the replacement of the tanks, which the state parks department
estimates could cost up to $10 million, the agency will apply for
water-quality bond revenue from Proposition 13, which voters approved in
March.
If the state can successfully fund the Freed buyout, as well as the
septic tank work, a new plan for Crystal Cove could be developed with a
few less strings, Coastal Conservancy board member and Laguna Beach
resident Paul Morabito said.
“By doing that, you take the money issue off the table,” Morabito
said. “It becomes a pure public process.”
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