DeVore’s lost cause founders
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Assemblyman Chuck DeVore has decided to take a “strategic retreat”
from his two ill-conceived bills to permit 30 more years of private
use at Crystal Cove State Park in return for some dough for the
cash-strapped state.
Apparently realizing that he had no support for the legislation --
which has been lambasted by parks supporters and others -- DeVore
announced this week that he will drop the bills instead of taking
them to a committee where they would have undoubtedly foundered.
As DeVore told a Coastline Pilot reporter, he didn’t want the
failure of this piece of legislation to doom his plans for El Morro
and Crystal Cove.
Still, DeVore has more to worry about than some bills that failed
to get traction in Sacramento.
The fallout of this special-interest legislation -- proposed some
two decades after the tenants had promised to leave the land and turn
it over to the public -- isn’t pretty.
It’s hard to understand why the assemblyman is still championing
the cause of the beleaguered trailer-park tenants and their
representatives, who, as we learned after the bills surfaced, include
the assemblyman’s former campaign finance manager. El Morro trailer
dwellers were significant contributors to DeVore’s 2004 campaign.
DeVore is still working overtime to try to quash state parks plans
for this prime spot. He now plans to try to convince the governor to
step in and halt evictions for nearly 300 mobile-home tenants who
still haven’t left.
We doubt that Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger -- even back in his
golden days after the recall -- could sell the idea of reneging on
this special parkland and allowing it to remain unavailable to yet
another generation of the public that paid for it.
DeVore evidently knows when he’s beaten, but he doesn’t know when
to quit.
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