Council denies Home Ranch rehearing
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Lolita Harper
COSTA MESA -- Expecting the City Council to deny a request to reopen
the Home Ranch hearing, local labor union officials did not send their
attorney to Monday’s meeting to argue for a rehearing.
And as guessed, council members voted 4 to 1 to deny the request, with
Councilwoman Karen Robinson dissenting.
“I hear no new evidence. I don’t believe there is any need to reopen
the hearing,” Mayor Libby Cowan said.
Michael E. Wall, an environmental attorney based in San Francisco,
represents the Service Employees International Union but was not present
at the meeting.
Anastasia Christman, a research analyst for the labor union, was in
the audience but did not speak up during the meeting.
“We felt like the filing spoke for itself. It wasn’t a huge surprise
that the rehearing was denied,” Christman said.
Last week, Wall formally requested that Home Ranch discussions be
reopened to further investigate the lack of affordable housing. The
development in question -- on 93 acres of former lima bean farm just
north of the San Diego Freeway -- call for a flagship Ikea store, 192
homes and a mix of commercial and industrial land use.
Labor union officials representing janitorial employees claim the Home
Ranch project will bring hundreds of low-paying jobs while providing no
affordable homes to house the workers. The homes on the site will be
owner-occupied and start in the mid-$200,000 range.
City Attorney Jerry Scheer said the original rehearing submission to
the city was a self-contained document and that labor union lawyers were
not required to be there in person to have a formal action taken.
Although a personal appearance was not required, CouncilmanGary
Monahan said the failure to show up was unprofessional.
“It just goes to show that they are not really serious about the
issues surrounding Home Ranch,” Monahan said.
Such a rehearing is often considered the final step before a lawsuit,
but union officials would not confirm any plans to sue the city.
Christman said they are following the referendum campaign, led by Costa
Mesa Citizens for Responsible Growth, and getting some of the union
members involved.
“We have members who are residents of the city, so they are eligible
to be part of that process. But we also have members in other [cities]
that we have to decide how to best represent also,” Christman said.
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