Home Ranch rehearing requested
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Lolita Harper
COSTA MESA -- As opposition to the approval of the Home Ranch project
mounts, a labor union lawyer has requested a rehearing of the project,
saying the city did not address concerns between the jobs and housing
imbalance.
Michael Wall, an environmental attorney hired by the Service Employees
International Union, plans to address the council tonight to ask that the
Home Ranch discussions be reopened to further investigate the lack of
affordable housing, union officials said.
Such a rehearing is often considered the first step before a lawsuit,
but union officials would not confirm any plans to sue the city.
Anastasia Christman, a research analyst for the labor union, said a
lawsuit is a possibility but only the rehearing is being pursued right
now.
“We still think the actions and comments of the City Council did not
address critical problems with the project. This is a formal request to
reopen and rehear the discussion,” Christman said.
The Home Ranch project -- on 93 acres of former lima bean farm just
north of the San Diego Freeway -- calls for a flagship Ikea store, 192
homes and a mix of commercial and industrial land use.
Labor union officials representing janitorial employees claim the
development will bring hundreds of low-paying jobs while providing no
affordable homes to house the workers. The homes on the Home Ranch site
will be owner-occupied and start in the mid-$200,000 range.
City Manager Allan Roeder said housing concerns were addressed during
the public hearings, but labor union officials simply didn’t like what
they heard. The council is in a tough position, Roeder said, because
resident outcry has called for only owner-occupied housing on the site,
which reduces the density of the homes on the project.
“Whichever way one might turn on this, someone is going to be
dissatisfied,” Roeder said.
Lacking more affordable homes in the project, Christman said the city
should require developer C.J. Segerstrom & Sons to contribute to
organizations that promote affordable housing on a regional scale.
“If they can’t build more houses on Home Ranch site, it doesn’t mean
they can’t offset the imbalance in other ways,” Christman said.
Paul Freeman, spokesman for C.J. Segerstrom & Sons, has consistently
defended the developer. He has noted that the original plan for the site,
which proposed 366 homes, met with considerable opposition and that, in
response, the Segerstroms changed the project to include only
owner-occupied housing.
“Groups like Habitat for Humanity and other groups that work to
provide affordable housing are very important and our company supports
them in various efforts,” Freeman said.
But it is not the responsibility of the developer on this project, he
added.
The development agreement provides substantial community benefits as
it stands, he said.
City attorneys were unavailable for comment on the issue.
Council members will decide tonight whether to grant a rehearing. If
it is granted, it will be scheduled for a future meeting.
If the request is denied, Christman said the union would watch the
developments closely and then decide what course of action to take.
* Lolita Harper covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
FYI
What: City Council meeting
When: 6:30 p.m., today
Where: City Hall, 77 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa
Information: (714) 754-5221
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