Landslide relief is a splendid success
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It’s great that the mayor’s Adopt-a-Landslide-Family program is
bearing fruit. Four families that had not found permanent or
long-term-temporary housing since losing their homes June 1 will be
placed on donated land on Laguna Canyon Road in mobile homes that
were vacated by residents of El Morro Village at Crystal Cove.
It’s all coming together, and we should all give a big pat on the
back -- or tip of the hat -- to our mayor, Elizabeth
Pearson-Schneider, whose dogged efforts sometimes drew gasps of
opposition but in the end have panned out beautifully.
Pearson-Schneider’s original idea to have the displaced families
housed at El Morro -- which is being vacated for long-standing plans
to create a state park on the site -- was good-hearted but not in the
long-term best interest of the community.
That site has been promised to the public for decades, but the
stubborn residents are still fighting to keep their quarters on one
of the most beautiful beaches in the state.
Using the area for landslide families would have put up another
obstacle in the path of efforts to clear the site for public use.
But in a stroke of brilliance, the mayor hit on the idea of
bringing the mobile homes to the families, instead of bringing
families to the mobile-home park.
State parks officials -- no doubt delighted with the change of
direction -- readily agreed to allow the city to take some of the 20
already vacated mobile homes.
There was only one problem -- finding land available for such a
use. Enter landowner Phyllis Phillips and her architect Morris
Skendarian, who worked together to see that the property could be
used for that purpose.
It didn’t hurt that the city planning commission is chaired by
adoption committee co-chair Anne Johnson, whose panel gave the
necessary approvals this week.
This is the proverbial win-win, and we’re delighted that it looks
like these families, some of whom have children in local schools,
will be safely situated before the school year begins.
Kudos all around.
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