Costa Mesa staff pushes Home Ranch adoption
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James Meier
COSTA MESA -- What was the talk of the town before the Sept. 11
terrorist attacks may clear its first hurdle -- the Planning Commission
-- tonight.
The Home Ranch project would convert about 93 acres of the Segerstrom
family’s lima bean field off the San Diego Freeway into a mix of
single-family homes, office and industrial space and an Ikea furniture
store.
The city’s staff has recommended the commission approve the project
tonight and forward it to the City Council, but no matter the vote’s
outcome, the issue, and its offshoots, will be touchy.
At the commission’s last meeting, held Sept. 10, Chair Katrina Foley
limited the public comment to those who had yet to speak on the issue.
Presented over the last 20 years in many incarnations, the Home Ranch
project has long been a subject of debate. The commission has hosted
four public meetings regarding the latest project since August. At a
study session Sept. 4, Costa Mesa Citizens for Responsible Growth, an
opposition group, provided a counter presentation to that given by the
plan’s developer, C.J. Segerstrom & Sons. The group said the project will
hurt the city by increasing traffic and pollution and reducing the
overall quality of life.
The plan changed significantly in June when Segerstrom & Sons
representatives replaced the apartments proposed for the site with
single-family homes and townhomes.
If the council approves it, the project -- bordered by the San Diego
Freeway, Fairview Road, Harbor Boulevard and Sunflower Avenue -- would
host a 17-acre Ikea, 791,050 square feet of office space, 252,648 square
feet of industrial use and 192 homes.
A development deal negotiated with Segerstrom & Sons for the project
includes traffic mitigation projects, a sales tax revenue guarantee, an
educational fund, preservation of 1.5 acres to maintain the Segerstrom
family home and barn and possible funding for a new fire station.
One term of the development agreement calls for a $5 million sales tax
guarantee over five years. The city will have a specific yearly amount of
sales and use tax guaranteed, and if the retailer -- most likely Ikea --
does not hit that mark C.J. Segerstrom will cut a check for the rest.
The Segerstrom family announced Aug. 22 it will donate $2 million to
Costa Mesa high schools and middle schools if the city approves its
development deal for Home Ranch.
FYI
* WHAT: Costa Mesa Planning Commission meeting
* WHEN: 6:30 p.m. today
* WHERE: City Hall, 77 Fair Drive
* INFORMATION: (714) 754-5245
* JAMES MEIER is the assistant city editor and editorial page editor.
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