Public land cannot be in private hands
- Share via
Land is at a premium in Newport-Mesa. Just ask those homeowners who
have seen their equity skyrocket in recent years.
And public land is even more treasured, as it allows all residents
to have the benefit of walking along the water’s edge at sunset or
take a morning jog through a nature preserve.
Those who clandestinely convert public land into their own private
property, by fencing off portions of city parks and adding them to
their own backyards, are wrong. And no amount of excuse-making or
money can change that.
Yes, the situation on Malamar Drive is a complex one, in which
city leaders had already denied the public access to a portion of
Irvine Terrace Park by building a fence about 30 feet short of the
property line to protect homeowners from transients who were known to
camp there.
Although it was technically still public property, the woody,
sloping area seemed inviting to two homeowners on Malamar Drive, who
landscaped it, fenced it in and adopted it. Similar measures were
taken by Mesa Verde homeowners in Costa Mesa, whose homes back up to
Fairview Park.
Homeowners defend their actions by saying the land was not used
anyway or that they found it that way. They have offered to make it
up by buying it from the respective cities.
City leaders have not made any formal decision about what to do
with the land but in both cases, leaders are shying away from selling
the land and rightfully so. Negotiations concerning public property
for private use should always raise red flags, whether it be the
Balboa Bay Club or a patch of grassland on some hill.
Those who chose to flout property lines and feel entitled to take
the people’s land as their own should not be accommodated with the
easiest solution possible. And if the land is truly dangerous or not
attractive to the public, city leaders should clean it up so that
people can enjoy it.
Obviously, the land is not so bad that it can’t be landscaped into
a nice sitting area for a backyard get together.
The owners of the land in question, whether in Irvine Terrace or
Fairview parks, are members of the public. And it is they who should
be considered as the top priority in sorting out these property
disputes.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.