Park closures to remain in state’s hands
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Deirdre Newman
The City Council has been listening to frustrated residents of the El
Nido and Snug Harbor trailer parks complain about the closure process
for the last year.
While those complaints were enough to inspire consideration of
regulations to clarify the process, they weren’t enough to convince
the council to approve those regulations. On Monday, the council
rejected an ordinance that would have given the city more authority
over the closure and conversion of mobile home parks. The decision
means the more general state law will remain as the only requirement.
“I think [the ordinance] will create unnecessary burdens for
property owners,” Councilman Allan Mansoor said. “I’m afraid it will
make it too costly for owners to change or convert the use.”
Dick Matherly, a former El Nido resident who was one of the most
vocal critics of the relocation offer, said he was disappointed with
the decision.
“I feel they went with money, and the park owners have the money,
Matherly said.
The law would have defined terms such as “closure of a park” and
“conversion of a park” and would have required that a park owner file
a “relocation report” containing information on comparable mobile
home parks within a minimum 50-mile radius.
Some park owners argued that a local law would be too restrictive.
“For a city bent on redevelopment of the Westside, it’s adding new
layers of bureaucracy and cost to anyone who wants to redevelop their
land,” said Tom Carson, the owner of Greenleaf Park.
Council members Libby Cowan and Chris Steel supported the
ordinance.
“I don’t think it should be easy to convert or close a mobile home
park and I don’t think it should be onerous, and I don’t think this
is,” Cowan said. “But there has to be a middle ground that we as a
community take forward and say, ‘Here are the rules and
regulations.’”
State law still requires mobile home park owners to create
relocation impact reports if they’re closing or converting a park. In
March, the council approved the report for the Snug Harbor Village
and El Nido trailer parks. Owner Joe Brown offered a relocation
benefit of $3,000 for single-wide trailers and $6,300 for double-wide
mobile homes.
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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