SOUNDING BOARD -- Paul Freeman
- Share via
Among the many mandated and public benefit requirements in the Home
Ranch development agreement recommended by Costa Mesa city staff is a
$2-million education endowment -- a required public benefit for Costa
Mesa’s high schools. A further obligation is a multimillion-dollar sales
tax guarantee. In addition, there are commitments of millions of dollars
worth of value in historic preservation, public safety improvements and
traffic improvements that more than offset the effects of the proposed
project.
Joseph Bell in his most recent column (The Bell Curve, “Take the
school money out of Home Ranch vote,” Thursday) did a disservice to your
readers by mischaracterizing the nature of the public process and
discounting the scope and scale of the required public benefits.
C.J. Segerstrom & Sons does agree, however, with his suggestion that
approval of proposed new land uses should stand on their own merits.
State law ensures as much. The council, when acting on Home Ranch, will
take independent votes on three separate issues: whether the
Environmental Impact Report is adequate to certify, whether the proposed
new land uses merit approval, whether the draft development agreement is
in the public interest.
Bell urges that Costa Mesa forgo its opportunity to require defined
and communitywide benefits from major projects such as Home Ranch. That
is for the council to decide.
The nature of a development agreement is that both the city and
developer get something otherwise not attainable: for the city, more
benefits than otherwise can be required under state law; for the
developer, a guarantee that the building parameters approved today will
not be changed except by mutual consent, in this case for 20 years. That
the political leadership of Costa Mesa would want to require financial
support for the schools reflects, in my view, their vision and
recognition of what our meetings with residential homeowner associations
and the community were all about.
The Home Ranch proposal is being examined based upon exhaustive
traffic and other environmental analyses prepared by city consultants.
The City Council in its deliberations will have the benefit not only of
these technical studies, but also of what has been remarkable public
scrutiny and input.
Should the council ultimately vote for the new Home Ranch general plan
amendment, it will do so because its members believe it will result in
better land use as compared with nearly 1 million square feet of
industrial and warehouse uses presently allowed under the city’s general
plan for Home Ranch. Should the council ultimately vote for a Home Ranch
development agreement, it will do so because it has concluded it is worth
guaranteeing specific building rights in exchange for extraordinary
public benefits.
* PAUL FREEMAN is the director of community and government relations
for C.J. Segerstrom & Sons.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.