Signatures trucked into City Hall
- Share via
Lolita Harper
COSTA MESA -- Opponents of the proposed Home Ranch project turned in
boxes of signatures Wednesday that could force a citywide vote on the
controversial development.
Now, the burning question is: Did they gather enough?
At 4:08 p.m. Cindy Brenneman, Paul Flanagan and Sally Humphrey, all
members of Costa Mesa Citizens for Responsible Growth, trucked a small
dolly into the City Clerk’s office, loaded with three boxes of petitions.
It took Deputy City Clerk Ruth Delaney almost 20 minutes to officially
stamp about 125 packets of signatures. Each packet was 50 pages but
included only three pages of signatures because the city’s resolution
approving the project -- which had to be included -- was so long.
About 33 names fit on those three pages, so conservative estimates say
about 4,125 signatures were turned in.
It is not clear yet what standard the opponents must hit to qualify
the referendum for a vote. Figures range from 4,970 -- 10% of registered
Costa Mesa voters -- to 2,700 -- 10% of Costa Mesans who voted in the
last gubernatorial election.
The official figure of valid signatures will come from the Orange
County office of the registrar after the petitions are delivered. There
is no set timetable for that tally. In the meantime, the packets will
remain in a vault in the city clerk’s office.
Brenneman said about 40 people toted packets of the 50-page petitions
throughout the city in an attempt to overturn the city’s approval of the
Home Ranch project.
Brenneman estimated a total of 180 hours were spent in the process.
But she would not speculate about the number of signatures collected.”We
were not required to report how many signatures we gathered,” Brenneman
said.
Her only other comment was: “To thank all the people who spent long
hours, walking and gathering signatures.”
Two representatives from C.J. Segerstrom & Sons also showed up at City
Hall to get an initial count of the signatures. But the petitions were
not available to the public, City Clerk Mary Elliott said.
Paul Freeman, a spokesperson for the Segerstroms, said he was very
anxious to know the outcome. The fate of the third incarnation of the
Home Ranch project, which would develop the 93 acres of former Segerstrom
lima bean fields just north of the San Diego Freeway, lies in large part
on the success of the referendum campaign.
A previous project got the approval of both the Planning Commission
and City Council but ended up on a 1988 referendum in the form of two
measures on two different designs. The voters voted both down.
This Home Ranch design calls for a flagship Ikea furniture store, 192
homes and a mix of commercial and industrial land use.
Freeman said he is left with only speculation at this point.
“We know nothing and understand even less,” Freeman said.
* Lolita Harper covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.