Problems at the poles
- Share via
Mathis Winkler
ONE FORD ROAD -- Don’t get Cordell Fisher wrong. He can’t think of a
place he’d rather live than his home in Newport Beach’s One Ford Road
development.
The 63-year-old retired consultant for an insurance company proudly
shows off perks such as a meditation garden and a state-of-the-art gym
that come with living in the exclusive gated neighborhood.
“You couldn’t get a nicer community to live in,” said Fisher, who
bought his home about two years ago. “This is paradise.”
Even when he first noticed the little brown spots on the wooden safety
rail around his porch, Fisher had nothing to complain about. Customer
service officials for Pacific Bay Properties, the company in charge of
developing One Ford Road, took care of problems right away.
“They would come out and fix anything I wanted,” he said Wednesday.
“The service was excellent.”
But when a limited warranty on his house expired in May 2000, things
began to change, Fisher said. Company officials refused to deal with
decay on the rails, saying that this was now Fisher’s responsibility as
the homeowner.
Besides, the city’s building code allowed the use of poplar wood to
build the rails, and Fisher’s problems were the result of a lack of
maintenance.
Armed with more than 100 signatures from Newport Beach residents,
Fisher took his case to City Council members Tuesday. He asked city
leaders to revisit the building code and take poplar wood off the list of
materials acceptable for such rails to ensure no one gets injured as a
result of decay.
But the issue is not of runaway decay, Chris Yelich, a vice president
for Pacific Bay, countered in his own remarks to the council.
Fisher, Yelich said, just didn’t follow proper procedures.
“If maintenance isn’t kept up, there will be decay,” Yelich said,
adding that One Ford Road’s proximity to the ocean made it even more
important to stay vigilant. “We take offense to the fact that what we’ve
done out there is dangerous to the health and safety” of residents.
Yelich could not be reached for comment Wednesday.
Jay Elbettar, the city’s building director who has met with Fisher
several times to discuss the matter, said he would check into the matter.
But the outlawing of poplar wood won’t happen quickly.
“There is a due process,” Elbettar said, adding that the California
building code allows the use of poplar wood as well. “We have to go
through public hearings, we have to make findings that in fact this
material is not performing.”
While Fisher claims similar decay of safety rails can be found at
other homes in the neighborhood, Elbettar said city officials have not
been able to find other cases.
Sitting on the porch of his house, Fisher said building department
officials were due any time to red tag the rail for code violations: The
distance between some of the beams in the rail exceed 4 inches and the
poles have been directly set in the porch’s concrete.
While Fisher said he’s not planning to sue the developer, he’s
thinking about reporting his rail problems to the California contractors
state license board.
Elbettar said a building inspector should have caught the
irregularities during construction of the house but added that Fisher
himself asked for the code violation citation.
“He wanted it done very quickly,” Elbettar said, adding that while
Fisher will have to pay for a building permit to fix the problem, he
won’t be fined. “He’s the person who is pushing for this.”
And in a letter Monday, Pacific Bay lawyer Julia L. Bergstrom told
Fisher that the developer would fix the problems if city officials decide
code violations occurred.
But other than that, “Pacific Bay will not agree to perform any
additional maintenance or repair to your wood porch and balcony
railings,” Bergstrom wrote, adding that company officials won’t directly
deal with Fisher from now on and all correspondence must go to the law
firm.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.