Readers Respond -- How should city deal with affordable housing?
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In regards to “Cut back affordable housing, Steel says” (March 23), I
am very concerned about how often “our property values” were mentioned as
opposed to how rarely human value was spoken of. Steel said that
nonprofit organizations have “a negative impact and have hurt our overall
quality of life.”
I think that Adrian would disagree. Adrian is an eighth-grader who
studies after school at the Shalimar Teen Center, a THINK Together
Learning Center and local nonprofit organization. He is bright, outgoing
and does well in school. Recently, he told me with pride in his voice,
that he would be the first person in his family to graduate from the
eighth grade. I think that his involvement with the teen center and his
work with volunteer tutors has had a positive impact in his life.
The two teens from the Shalimar Teen Center that were recently
accepted to Sage Hill High School have also benefited from the
opportunities found here at the teen center. People do not come to Costa
Mesa because charities are here. The charities came because the need was
here. Organizations like the Shalimar Learning Center are not negatively
impacting our communities. They are raising educated young people with
the skills to contribute to our community.
Just who is “our?” Our property values and our quality of life.
Shouldn’t that include all of the residents of Costa Mesa and not just
the ones who have money?
Steel said, “We’ve got to get serious about the people we’re letting
live here.”
Well, who let Steel live here? Maybe he’s right. Maybe “we” shouldn’t
let people like Steel live here.
People are free to live where they want. I was raised in Costa Mesa. I
went to college, got my degree, got some overseas experience and now have
a job that I love and work hard at. But I can’t afford to live here. Does
that mean I don’t have the right to affordable housing?
I think it’s important to live and work and worship and play in the
same community. I’m living with my parents and saving so I can have the
privilege of living in the community I love. I know people who want to
live in Costa Mesa because it’s got “flavor” -- mercados, arts, colleges,
Spanish, English, experiences from around the world to be shared with one
another, courage, persistence and hard work. We have much more to offer
the city than our property values.
CRISSY BROOKS
Costa Mesa
Editor’s Note: Crissy Brooks is the director of the Shalimar Learning
Center.
In terms of affordable housing, in the first place, it should be using
market standards.
Whatever the market will bear should determine the price of housing.
It shouldn’t have an artificial cap on it as Mayor Libby Cowan is trying
to do.
Now, at the March 16 City Council meeting, Cowan actually hinted to a
developer, who is trying to develop some homes on the El Camino Shopping
Center site, that he should make his homes priced for the “work force.”
That sounds suspiciously like telling the guy that he’s got to keep
his prices way down, not go to market prices on this thing. That’s really
not what we need in Costa Mesa. We need to let the free market reign on
this thing. Property has certain value and it’s what a willing buyer and
a willing seller are willing to agree to. That’s what should dictate the
prices in the city, not an artificial cap.
MARTIN MILLARD
Costa Mesa
If only I’d been told.
I am a white male, mid-30s, and I’m a registered Republican in the
state of California, although I tend to vote my conscience and not my
party. I’m a computer professional who lives in Costa Mesa, was recently
laid off from a dot-com bust at my company, and with a coming recession,
well, of course budgeting is on my mind and that of my wife’s.
Still, I am an honest man, not a criminal or layabout. I am a
responsible citizen and I enjoy living in this community. None of this
matters now, I guess. Since my wife and I enjoy “affordable” housing, at
least one councilman thinks we don’t belong here.
Steel says more expensive housing would improve the city by bringing
richer people into its borders, and in doing so, he insulted a large,
vaguely defined group of people known as -- what’s the word? -- oh yes,
his employers.
If Steel truly believes that wealthy people are a better class, and
people like me are “undesirable” because we need to be able to afford
housing, then he has every right to that belief, no matter how abhorrent
and self-serving it might seem to be. So let’s assume for the moment that
the councilman’s statements were merely aimed at trying to bulk up the
city’s financial stature.
Of course, but then he makes things worse.
“I’m not in favor of subsidized housing or affordable housing. We’ve
got to get serious about the people we’re letting live here.”
Would someone please remind the councilman that he lives and works for
a public government. The very attitude that allows a statement such as
“the people we’re letting live here” is so offensive and elitist that it
makes me question why he doesn’t move further south in the county where
people who think like Steel are smart enough to keep “the help” at bay by
doing away with that most horrible of curses: affordable housing.
Cheers to Mayor Libby Cowan for her intelligent rebuttal, by the way,
and her defense of city charities, as well.
Steel, please learn from history. Strength lies not only in fiscal
responsibility but in diversity, compassion and yes, common sense, not in
exclusionary and dictatorial attitudes. I can only hope you someday know
what it feels like to be told you’re not wanted, say, when you’re up for
reelection.
MICHAEL CARNEY
Costa Mesa
The Pilot recently ran an editorial suggesting that Newport Beach
needs to provide low-cost housing for senior citizens.
Given the fact that Bethel Towers (our senior housing) in Costa Mesa
has a waiting list of 700 elderly people who need low-cost housing, Costa
Mesa should probably look into more senior housing as well. Addressing
the needs of our seniors would certainly meet any state or
federally-mandated low cost housing requirements.
Mayor Libby Cowan suggests there is a need for pride of ownership
housing in the $250,000 range. The Westside Improvement Assn. agrees and
has suggested raising the slum areas of town and building condominiums
and single-family homes in place of the obsolete apartments currently
found there. Condos on the Westside currently sell between $175,000 and
more than $300,000, and building more will fill the affordable housing
need Cowan speaks of.
We also need to build more “move up” single family homes to give
current condo owners a place to move in Costa Mesa while freeing up their
condos for entry-level buyers. While it would be nice to start out in a
single family home, Costa Mesa’s proximity to the ocean drives the real
estate market and eliminates the possibility of building $250,000 single
family homes. To do so on our valuable property would be foolish. We need
to apply the principle of “Highest And Best Use” in every project to
ensure that we do not sell ourselves short. Building a new and wonderful
city depends on it.
ERIC BEVER
Costa Mesa
Our President says: Leave the arsenic in the water, cut more roads in
the national forests for logging, leave the American Bar Association’s
opinions out of the appointment process for judges, build oil wells in
the most pristine parts of Alaska, to heck with repetitive workplace
injuries, let the corporate agriculture conglomerates pour their
pesticides by the ton and don’t hold power companies responsible for the
ozone depletion or their part in global warming.
Who is this man working for? Only the very rich, certainly not the
struggling, working people and their children.
Now our own Councilman Chris Steel says Costa Mesa has too many
nonprofits and helps too many people and we shouldn’t subsidize the poor
or build affordable housing because it lowers the property values.
Property values over human values? Well go ahead and lower my property
value. I’m not selling so it doesn’t bother me. Bush and Steel will be
gone and those of us who are staying for the long haul will be left to
clean up their mess, again. They should both be ashamed, very ashamed.
There was a farmer who consistently won the best-in-show for his prize
corn and he always shared his best seed with his neighbors. When asked
why, he said, “It’s in my own best interest. The wind picks up the pollen
and carries it from field to field. So if my neighbors grow inferior
corn, the cross-pollination brings down the quality of my own corn. That
is why I am concerned that they plant only the best.”
Uplifting each other, healing the separation in our community,
listening, mediating disputes, exercising compassion and understanding
for those who temporarily have less and directing government toward
creating a more enlightened society is the job of both Steel and Bush.
Get with the program or sell now while your property still has any value,
because your ways of thinking will definitely sell all of us down the
drain.
DAN MILLSTEIN
Costa Mesa
If “affordable housing” is referring to multifamily units, such as
apartment buildings, nothing will help unless some criteria is sent on
occupancy. There are a lot of affordable housing apartments in the city,
however the property owners don’t do a very good job in screening
tenants. There are a lot of property owners that don’t even know the
number of people living in their apartments. It sometimes takes three or
four families living in one apartment to be able to come up with the rent
in even the affordable housing units. As long as the property owners get
their rent, they don’t care how many people it takes living in the unit
to accomplish that end.
Unfortunately, most of the affordable housing owner-occupied homes
that are available in Costa Mesa are in neighborhoods where teachers and
nurses etc., choose not to live because of the crime rate and the
problems those neighborhoods have. For the amount of money they would
have to pay for a home in a less than desirable neighborhood in Costa
Mesa, they can buy a home in Huntington Beach or Fountain Valley in a far
more desirable neighborhood. That is what I found when I was looking for
a house.
I think that Mayor Libby Cowan and Councilwoman Linda Dixon need to
spend more time on the Westside, especially after dark, to see what is
really happening in Costa Mesa. Then they would get the feel of what the
neighborhoods there are really like. Then they need to ask themselves if
they would want to live in those neighborhoods.
SUSAN SPIEGELMAN
Fountain Valley
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