Expansion proposal for home appealed
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Lolita Harper
Adding square footage to a Mesa North home simply gives Greta
Anderson-Davis more room to love, the mother of 10 argued in her application to add a second story to her home.
The Planning Commission will consider her request Monday evening
and review the plans to create an eight-bedroom home for the large
family, which consists mainly of adopted children who have
developmental disabilities.
“We have nine already and are always open to any child who needs a
home,” Anderson-Davis said. “We just need more room.”
Neighbors said they don’t doubt that Anderson-Davis is helping
children who need loving homes, they just think the home is on a
scale much larger than the neighborhood permits.
“We have nothing against her or her family. We are just concerned
about our privacy, our ability to get sunshine in our backyard,”
neighbor Christian Christiansen said.
Plans for the home in the 3000 block of Madison Avenue call for
the addition of a 950-square-foot second story that would include a
master bedroom suite and a bonus room. Anderson-Davis is also asking
to lengthen the existing garage. The total proposed square footage
for the home is 3,982.
City Zoning Administrator Perry Valantine initially approved the
proposed second-story, saying it “would be substantially compatible
and harmonious with the neighborhood, since many other properties
contain two-story houses, and the scale and massing of the proposed
construction would not be obtrusive from the street.”
Neighbor Stan Brown disagreed and appealed Valantine’s approval.
Brown is backed by five other neighbors who sent letters to the city
to oppose the construction.
In a letter to the city, Brown wrote that the neighbors want to
prevent another monstrosity, such as the contentious and costly
three-story Samoa House -- a battle still being fought in court.
Brown is also concerned about the business license that
Anderson-Davis holds for the home and said an addition to the house
means more children, and more children means more staff to take care
of them.
Anderson-Davis confirmed her “small family home” license but
argues it is different from a group home because her home provides
24-hour care to fewer than six children. Seven of her children are
legally adopted and therefore officially part of her family. Two
others are in the process of being adopted, but because of their
disabilities the state requires long-term trial periods, she said.
She said her neighbors are misinformed and acting out of
ignorance. They just don’t understand what she and her husband are
doing to help children who have been deemed “unadoptable,”
Anderson-Davis said.
“They are unsympathetic and simply don’t want this is their
backyards,” she said.”
The mother also confirmed that she hires staff to assist with the
many needs that her challenged children have.
Anderson-Davis said she bought the house because of the
possibility of building on to accommodate her growing family and is
merely trying to provide a larger loving atmosphere.
“Why can’t they just let us live our lives and give our children
the type of childhood that they gave their children,” Anderson-Davis
said of her neighbors. “They say they’re protecting their nice
neighborhood. It still is a nice neighborhood, and that’s why I want
to raise my kids here.”
* LOLITA HARPER covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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