LETTER TO THE EDITOR -- Forrest Werner
Costa Mesa Councilman Gary Monahan got it right when he said, “It
won’t be a bean field forever.†Anyone who thinks otherwise isn’t being
very realistic (“Residents wonder if Ikea offer is priceless,†Sept. 3).
Current zoning calls for the property to be used primarily for
warehouses. If you think warehouses are attractive, drive east on Dyer
Road, east of Main Street, and you’ll see warehouses. Long two- and
three-story drab buildings with loading docks for trucks line the north
side of the street. Not only are these buildings unattractive, but they
are open 24 hours a day, seven days a week for the handling of freight.
We’re talking 18-wheelers here, not pickups. Let’s also look at the jobs
created by this type of operation. Not exactly high-skill, high-tech
employment.
The mix of office, business complex, retail, light industrial and
residential development by C.J. Segerstrom & Sons has a lot more appeal
and benefit to the community than the current general plan offers.
Aesthetics alone with the included landscaping make the project
attractive. Factor in multiple numbers and kinds of employment
opportunities available and the comparison becomes a no-brainer.
Let’s move on to the school foundation proposal. The Segerstrom
developers understand that to attract quality business tenants, there
needs to be a quality, educated work force available. By offering to set
up two foundations to support Costa Mesa and Estancia high schools and
TeWinkle Middle School, they display a willingness to help improve the
educational opportunities for our children, as well as provide quality
employees for their tenants close to home.
I think the contributions to establish the foundations are just the
tip of the iceberg for financial support. After all, the traffic
improvements alone will cost $10 million to $12 million up front, and not
a stone or shovel has been turned to start the development itself.
As a comparison to developer interest in the educational system in a
community, the Irvine Co. gave Newport-Mesa Unified School District a
$5-million endowment, $3.5 million to turn the closed Lincoln
Intermediate School into a state-of-the-art K-6 school and donated 11
acres of land (at about $1 million an acre) for the newly opened Newport
Coast Elementary School. That’s why I say the foundation is only the
beginning. Look at these problems as “opportunities.†If not a bean
field, what?
EDITOR’S NOTE: FORREST WERNER is a Costa Mesa resident and former
Newport-Mesa school board trustee and is president of the Newport-Mesa
Schools Foundation.
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