Residents plan development fight
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Residents have banded together to fight a proposed housing project
near the Wintersburg Channel that they say will bring unwanted noise
and traffic.
Shea Homes has proposed a 171-home development on a vacant parcel
of land located on the west side of Graham Street south of Warner
Avenue near the Wintersburg Channel.
“We think that this piece of land could be put to much better
use,” said Mark Bixby, one of the residents leading the charge to
restore of the Wintersburg Wetlands. “We would like to see the land
purchased from Shea and be turned into a working wetlands.”
Along with traffic congestion, Bixby and members of the Neighbors
for Wintersburg Wetlands Restoration have other safety concerns as
well. The housing tract will only have one entrance and emergency
vehicles would need to have a key or know the combination to enter
the gated community, he said.
The project’s environmental report has undergone several revisions
since it started to take shape in 1997.
“[The environmental report] has never been discussed in public,”
Bixby said.
While the project has been in development for several years, it is
only now going before the Planning Commission, Bixby added.
Planning Commissioners are reviewing the project and responding to
comments from community members now, said Scott Heff, planning
manager for the city.
“We’re anticipating going to public hearing in September,” said
Mary Beth Broeren, principal planner for the City.
After it goes to the Planning Commission, the project will then go
before the City Council.
The project will also require certain approvals from the
California Coastal Commission.
Representatives at Shea Home’s office in Brea could not be reached
for comment.
-- Jose Paul Corona
Residents vow to fight planes towing banners
Irate residents have implored the City Council to bar
banner-towing planes from making summertime sweeps over the city.
In response to several resident’s complaints that the planes are
noisy and disruptive, Councilwoman Connie Boardman submitted a draft
of a proposed ordinance that would prohibit the planes from flying
over the city to her colleagues Monday night. The council gave its
initial approval to the plan with a 6-1 vote. Councilman Ralph Bauer
cast the sole dissenting vote.
“This is just not a burning issue in Huntington Beach,” Bauer
contended.
Fellow council members vehemently disagreed. Councilwoman Pam
Julien Houchen was particularly disgusted by an ad she saw flying
over Pier Plaza while Downtown with her triplets. The ad depicted an
aborted fetus, she said.
“I think they went one step to far,” she said. “We need to clean
up our air space.”
Until recently there was not a lot city leaders could do to
control aircraft flying over the city. But in January, Judge Helen
Gillmor of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco
upheld a Honolulu ordinance that gave cities the right to regulate
aerial advertising. Boardman cited this ruling at Monday’s meeting
and suggested Huntington Beach rid the city’s skyline of these ads.
The ordinance Boardman proposed was based on the one drawn up in
Honolulu.
Bauer’s main concern was the use of police department resources.
Rather the patrolling the city, the police helicopter would have
to follow banner towing planes to the airport to write citations when
they landed, he said. The city would then need two police helicopters
in the air instead of one.
“Following planes is not as important as catching bad guys,”
Bauer declared.
A police helicopter would not be required to fly to an airport to
meet the banner towing plane as it landed, said Police Chief Ron
Lowenberg, but an officer would have to give the pilot a citation in
person, so a police cruiser would be sent to the airport.
Long Beach and Chino airports are where most of the banner-towing
planes fly out of, he said.
The draft ordinance will be submitted to the city attorney for
review and brought back before the council at the end of the month.
-- Jose Paul Corona
Lennar offers helping hand with housing
The people who will live in the new homes at Mystic and Nautical
Pointe in Huntington Beach know how fortunate they are. After all,
not everyone can afford to buy a home in one of the two new housing
tracts.
While affordable housing and helping the homeless may not have
been a top priority when deciding to buy their homes, the new
homeowners have already lent a helping hand.
For each home purchased in the two neighborhoods, developer Lennar
Homes has agreed to give 1/20 of 1% of the sale price to Habitat for
Humanity Orange County and HomeAid Orange County.
Both charities help people in need of housing. Habitat for
Humanity is a nonprofit organization that builds homes for those in
need and HomeAid Orange County provides temporary shelter for those
who find themselves without a home due to unforeseen circumstances
such as a job loss or devastating family illness.
The Lennar Charitable Housing Foundation was established by Lennar
Homes with the specific purpose of helping those who don’t have homes
of their own.
“It’s great to be able to do the right thing for all the right
reasons,” said Jon Jaffe, vice president of the Lennar Corp.
-- Jose Paul Corona
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