State can raise stakes on land transfer
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Alicia Robinson
Newport Beach city officials have been dreaming for more than three
years of creating Sunset Ridge Park at Coast Highway and Superior
Avenue. On Monday, the cost of that dream got a lot more expensive.
The city wants to build the park on about 18 acres of land now
owned by Caltrans, but getting it done has been a legislative
labyrinth.
In 2001 state legislators agreed on a bill to transfer the
property to the state parks department. Newport Beach would have paid
the state $1.35 million for the property -- the price the state
originally paid for it -- and would have leased it as park land for a
nominal fee.
But on Monday the assembly passed a new bill that says the state
can charge fair market value for the Caltrans parcel as well as a
number of other state-owned pieces of surplus land.
A spokesman for the state Department of General Services, which is
handling surplus property sales, wouldn’t disclose a new price for
the Caltrans land, but Newport Beach assistant city manager Dave Kiff
said he was told it could go to $18 million.
City officials want the state to honor the lower price. It wasn’t
a sweetheart deal, Kiff said -- the state constitution allows coastal
lands to be sold at their original purchase price if they’ll be
turned into public parks.
But the state has been looking to bring in some money through
selling off its surplus properties, and $1.35 million is small
potatoes for land on the coast in Newport Beach.
“Part of the purpose in seeking fair market value for all our
properties is to ensure that the taxpayers of California get a good
return on their investment,” said Matt Bender, a spokesman for the
Department of General Services.
The state is in discussions with Newport Beach about what the
property is really worth. If the land doesn’t become a park, existing
zoning allows development of as many as 135 units of single-family
attached housing, Kiff said.
The City Council tonight will consider a lease for the park
property, and building the park facilities should cost between $5
million and $6 million. But Newport Beach officials are still waiting
to hear the state’s price tag for the land.
“The only thing I can think of is that they’re going to propose
that we pay more money,” Kiff said. “Paying more money is not a win.”
The bill that requires fair market value for the property will go
to the Senate next, and the city is enlisting Sen. John Campbell’s
help to make changes there.
“What we’re talking about now is that they would pay more for the
property but they would own it,” Campbell said. “That’s one of the
things we’re trying to make happen here.”
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers government and politics. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4626 or by e-mail at alicia.robinson
@latimes.com.
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