Huscroft House still short on restoration funding
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Lolita Harper
COSTA MESA -- Debates surrounding the historic Huscroft House have
often been heated, but the fact that the Craftsman-style house landed in
the Home Ranch development agreement lighted a flame under Councilwoman
Linda Dixon.
Dixon said she was shocked the building was included in the Home Ranch
agreement and said she learned of it while looking through her packet.
She has received increased criticism about endorsement of the project and
resents any implication that the $200,000 from the Segerstroms --
earmarked for the house’s restoration -- influenced her vote.
“My decision was not based on any aspect of the development
agreement,” Dixon said. “My decision was based solely on what I thought
was the best use for the land.”
The City Council approved final plans for the Home Ranch project --
which includes a 308,000-square-foot Ikea furniture store, a corporate
headquarters for Emulex, nearly 800,000 square feet of office space and
192 homes -- by a 4-1 vote Monday.
Because Dixon was vocal about saving the Huscroft House in council
meetings in the spring, she knew assumptions could be made about how the
item got included in the development agreement. She expressed her concern
from the dais at Monday’s meeting.
Dixon was angry that a 20-year development agreement was back on the
table when she thought developer C.J. Segerstrom & Sons agreed to reduce
it to 15. She implied the developers may have been trying to appease her
by contributing toward the house.
“You know I was very much in favor of saving the Huscroft House, and
now it’s in the development agreement,” she said to Paul Freeman, a
spokesman for C.J. Segerstrom & Sons. “I don’t know how that came about,
but the house is not nearly as important to me as a 15-year development
agreement.”
Her comment was met with applause from the audience.
Councilman Chris Steel jumped in to defend Freeman, saying the money
for the house was his suggestion.
“I brought up the house. I thought if the Segerstroms would pay for
it, we wouldn’t have to use taxpayer money,” Steel said.
Regardless of whose idea it was, $200,000 does little to solve the
city’s Huscroft House dilemma, said Donna Theriault, a management analyst
with the city.
The money would only cover costs to move the house -- last estimated
at $175,000 -- but would not cover any restoration or maintenance
expenses, Theriault said.
“It just gives the City Council one more thing to consider, but it’s
not enough to help much of anything,” she said.
The Huscroft House was on the agenda Monday night, but council members
continued the item to include an analysis of the $200,000. The money does
not require the city to relocate the house; it only gives them another
option.
“There are no strings attached,” Theriault said.
The city only has one formal proposal from a Newport Beach woman who
wants to move the house to Fairview Park and operate a private museum and
reception hall. Earlier staff reports called the proposal problematic
because it does not fit into the park’s master plan.
Theriault said the council could decide to reopen the bidding and
offer to move the home with the Segerstrom money. But that could border
on using public funds as an incentive, she said.
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