Council OKs RV parking restrictions
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Lolita Harper
COSTA MESA -- The cheers, boos and hisses of previous meetings
regarding recreational vehicles were absent Monday as a highly organized
group of motor home owners formally supported additional parking
restrictions.
The group, known officially as the Costa Mesa RV Owners Assn., gave a
tandem presentation delivered by six consecutive speakers that expressed
their approval of an ordinance similar to that of Newport Beach. It also
impressed council members.
“I thought you guys did an excellent job,” Councilwoman Karen Robinson
said to the group. “I applaud your organization and the manner in which
you presented the information.”
City Council members easily agreed and unanimously directed staff to
draft an ordinance that would prohibit RVs from parking on any city
street, with a 24-hour exception for loading and unloading purposes. The
law has a loophole that offers a 72-hour exception to anyone who asks for
it, but police officials warned it is not as “user friendly” as it may
seem.
The council gave tentative approval to a similar ordinance in December
that restricted the parking of RVs on residential streets with a 24-hour
exception for loading and unloading.
The council’s decision to embrace that idea prompted RV owners to
flood City Hall when the law was up for formal approval. More than 40
owners claimed they were being punished for the abuses of a few
irresponsible people who store their vehicles on public streets.
The same folks crowded council chambers Monday to voice their approval
of the Newport Beach-like ordinance. The difference, they said, was the
special provision for an additional 72 hours that can be given by the
Police Department.
“We feel the Newport Beach ordinance is working very well and it
offers satisfactory flexibility to RV owners,” said Frank Leingang, a
member of the RV owners group.
Costa Mesa Police Lt. Karl Schuler -- in his sixth presentation to the
council in five months -- outlined a laundry list of options before the
council, including a simple ban, a placard system and tougher rules for
the existing 72-hour law. He recommended the city follow Newport Beach’s
lead but warned that a 72-hour exception would be difficult to attain.
The loophole is to allow for mechanical problems and other emergencies
and would not be available to anyone who simply asked for 72 hours, he
said.
Mayor Linda Dixon said she wanted to ensure the 72-hour exception was
granted for hardships only.
While most of the 15 or so speakers favored the suggested ordinance,
RV owner Bernard Ungrodd questioned the motivation for any new
restrictions, citing a lack of evidence or other information that motor
homes constituted a safety hazard.
“I would like to see some numbers that even demonstrate a problem,” he
said.
Council members have said they initiated tougher parking restrictions
for motor homes after hearing from numerous residents that the large
vehicles are unsightly and dangerous and that some owners use the public
streets to store their vehicles.
City staff members will present the proposed ordinance to the City
Council for preliminary approval after a town meeting on the subject that
has yet to be scheduled.
* 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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