Home Ranch opponents to begin vote drive
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Lolita Harper
COSTA MESA -- The opposition to the Home Ranch project will hit the
streets today in hopes of gathering enough signatures to put the
development’s future on the ballot.
Members of Costa Mesa Citizens for Responsible Growth, a community
group vocally opposed to the Home Ranch development, will start their
referendum campaign by gathering signatures from registered voters.
Cindy Brenneman, an active member of the community group, will lead
the signature-gathering campaign. Members of her team, as well as any
other volunteers, plan to meet at Totally Coffee at the corner of Mesa
Verde East and Harbor Boulevard and then split up to cover more ground.
Opponents have 30 days to file enough qualifying signatures to mandate
a referendum.
“We are under a time crunch, but hopefully there will be enough
interest in doing the right thing for the city,” Brenneman said.
The Home Ranch project -- which calls for a flagship Ikea furniture
store, 192 homes and a mix of commercial and industrial land use -- was
approved by the City Council on Nov. 19. Planning Commissioners endorsed
the project in September.
While organizing a referendum campaign is certainly within the
people’s rights, Mayor Libby Cowan said opponents don’t fully understand
the widespread support for the development. She said she is afraid scare
tactics will be used to get signatures.
“I would just ask anyone who is asked to sign to fully read the
resolution and understand what it is they are being asked to do. Because
[the project] doesn’t put a bridge at Gisler Street and the project is
designed to mitigate the traffic to no worse than current levels,” Cowan
said.
But traffic congestion and the Gisler bridge will be selling points
for signature gatherers, former mayor and vocal opponent Sandra Genis
said.
Certain concerns are more prevalent in certain areas of the city,
Genis said.
Her strategy: If someone lives near where the Gisler bridge is
penciled to be built, tell them the increased traffic could require the
bridge. If they live near the building site -- bordered by the San Diego
Freeway, Fairview Drive, Harbor Boulevard and Sunflower Avenue -- point
out that traffic at surrounding intersections will undoubtedly get worse.
They are not scare tactics, they are facts that were not included in
the traffic analysis done by the city, Genis argues. Regardless of where
a resident might live, the most important thing is they collect
signatures from registered voters in the city of Costa Mesa, Genis said.
Opponents need to get about 3,000 valid signatures to get the Home
Ranch project put to a vote. But they won’t stop when they think they
have enough, Brenneman said.
Genis echoed her sentiment, saying there are bound to be invalidated
signatures once the petition is turned in to the city. Referendum
petitions are usually given from city officials to the county registrar
for a final count. Signatures are cross-referenced with voter
registration files to determine their validity.
If opponents don’t gather enough signatures this weekend, they will be
out again in a week.
“We’ll be out there as long as it takes. As long as people are willing
to walk, we’ll be out there,” Brenneman said.
-- Lolita Harper covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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