Home Ranch report earns planners’ OK
- Share via
COSTA MESA -- The Planning Commission took a first step toward making
the Home Ranch project a reality when it unanimously agreed Monday to
recommend that the City Council approve the environmental report for the
development.
However the recommendation of the report to the council does not mean
the project is approved yet, Planning Commission Chairwoman Katrina Foley
said. It does mean the commission deems the report sufficient for the
project, she said. The City Council will make the final decision.
“I’d be watching Sports Center if I had my choice, but I spent hours
upon hours reviewing the documents and I feel that our noise consultants
have done their job and done their job well,” Commissioner Bill Perkins
said.
The environmental report was the first of a series of approvals C.J.
Segerstrom & Sons was requesting at Monday night’s meeting in the
company’s attempt to develop the former lima bean farm off the San Diego
Freeway.
Unlike the last meeting, public comment was not limited. During the
Sept. 10 meeting, commissioners enforced a rule that only individuals who
had new information or had not yet spoken would be allowed to comment on
the project. Although the official public comment period on the report
was closed at the last meeting, state law mandates that public comment be
heard before any action is taken by a governing body, Assistant City
Atty. Tom Wood said.
Foley reminded the audience numerous times that discussion must be
relevant to the environmental report only, and not to the project as a
whole. Yet even those who strayed from the specific topic were allowed to
continue speaking.
Costa Mesa Citizens for Responsible Growth are arguably the most vocal
group opposing the project. Members contend that a 308,000-square-foot
Ikea furniture store, the most controversial part, among other industrial
buildings and housing, would hurt the city by increasing pollution and
traffic and decreasing the overall quality of life.
In addition to the environmental report, C.J. Segerstrom & Sons has
applied for two general plan amendments, a rezone petition, a
conditional-use permit and a development agreement. Each remaining issue
was discussed at the meeting but no action was taken by press time.
Paul Freeman, a spokesman for Segerstrom & Sons, had hoped a decision
would be made on at least the environmental report for the project. The
report was the least political item, he said, and supported by facts that
can be easily discussed.
The Segerstrom firm has been trying to develop the land -- bordered by
the San Diego Freeway, Fairview Road, Harbor Boulevard and Sunflower
Avenue -- for 20 years. The project has changed greatly over the past
decades, varying from twin tower high rises to its current design, which
incorporates single-family residential homes.
The most recent plan calls for a 17-acre Ikea furniture store, 791,050
square feet of office space, 252,648 square feet of industrial use and
192 homes.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.