Recovery program ousts tenants of affordable housing
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Lolita Harper
COSTA MESA -- A large trash bin poised outside of an Eastside
apartment complex Friday marks the beginning of a chance for a sober life
for some and the devastating end to affordable housing for others.
Morningside Recovery, a Newport Beach-based business, recently bought
an apartment complex in the 1700 block of Orange Avenue with plans to
convert the building into a sober-living home, manager Jeff Yates said.
While Yates and his colleagues gear up to open shop in the newly
purchased complex, Carrie Stevens and her neighbors are hard-pressed to
find new homes. The existing residents were informed they have 30 days to
vacate.
Stevens is a single mother who receives housing assistance from the
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.
“I struggle to support myself and my 9-year-old daughter, and it’s
nearly impossible to find HUD housing on the Eastside, especially in a
month,” Stevens said, sobbing.
Many of the renters in the complex receive some sort of financial
assistance. Many said the previous owner was amenable to accepting
housing vouchers -- a practice that is not common for many property
owners. But when the owner’s husband passed away recently, the property
became too much responsibility and the elderly woman sold it, residents
said.
Yates said he feels for the tenants, but there is nothing Morningside
Recovery can do.
“I know it’s a tough situation, but unfortunately that is the cruel
world of business,” Yates said.
Yates said the current rents were so low that it was difficult to find
a lender. To prove the property would turn some sort of profit, any
potential owner -- be it a sober-living home or not -- would have to give
the tenants notice, bring the building up to code, raise the rents and
then invite back those who could afford it.
All of this must be done in a timely fashion because, just as the old
adage says, time is money, he said.
Stevens said she’s owed more time. Yates said there is no room for
negotiation.
“There is no other alternative,” he said.
Aside from the conflict between the tenants and the new corporate
owner, group homes and sober-living homes in general have been a sore
spot for city officials in recent years.
Since the November 2000 adoption of Proposition 36, which allows
certain drug and alcohol offenders to seek rehabilitation instead of jail
time, crops of group homes have surfaced in Costa Mesa, Mayor Linda Dixon
said.
“I’m frustrated too,” Dixon said. “Local government has very little
control over those issues. Our hands are so tied, I cringe.”
State law severely limits the city’s regulation of group homes, she
said. If a group home does not offer medical assistance or any type of
therapy and has six or fewer residents, it is exempt from local control.
According to a 1999 city study, Costa Mesa had more alcohol and drug
recovery facilities than every city in the county but Santa Ana, which
only had one more home for each category. The report also found that as
many as 20 of the group homes operating in residential neighborhoods had
been violating city ordinances.
Councilman Gary Monahan said Friday that he wants to ensure
Morningside Recovery is operating above board. Many sober-living homes
provide a valuable service, Monahan said, but some try to fly under the
city’s radar. He made it clear he would not judge the facility before
researching it further.
Perry Valantine, assistant development services director for the city,
said the sober-living facilities are basically on the honor system.
“If they are truly operating within the legal limits, they can go
without asking for special permits,” Valantine said. “But if we find out
otherwise, then we deal with it.”
Yates said Morningside Recovery is in the process of applying for
state certification, which is only required of facilities that offer
counseling or medical service.
“We have no plans to do that now but are in the process just in case
we feel a need to fill that desire,” Yates said.
* Lolita Harper covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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