Burnham to help rebuild
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Alicia Robinson
Bob Burnham will lead efforts to rebuild a Laguna Beach community
destroyed Wednesday by a landslide that displaced nearly two dozen
families, Laguna city officials announced Monday.
Burnham, who has lived in Laguna Beach for 25 years, retired
nearly a year ago after serving as Newport Beach’s city attorney for
more than two decades.
The city of Laguna Beach hired him to oversee all aspects of
landslide recovery efforts, including acting as a liaison for
displaced residents, working with government agencies to get relief
funds, and managing construction projects to buttress the wrecked
hillside and repair infrastructure, Mayor Elizabeth Pearson-Schneider
said.
“He’s a Laguna resident, which I think is very important, because
he understands the community and will be particularly sensitive to
the way Laguna typically approaches problem solving,” she said. “I
think he’s worked on problem resolution before, [and] worked as a
community liaison before, so I think he’s very sensitive and that’s,
I think, critical in this situation.”
Late Monday, Burnham said he was still sorting out what all his
duties will be. He’ll be paid $50 an hour, and he expects a big
portion of his work will be working with the Federal Emergency
Management Agency and other organizations that are providing
assistance.
He praised the work of city police, firefighters and building
officials, as well as other cities that have offered help to
residents whose homes are uninhabitable.
“They took very good care of the victims,” Burnham said. “They
have just done an incredible job.”
Meanwhile, state Assemblyman Chuck DeVore is seeking state
permission for now homeless residents to stay in vacant homes at the
El Morro Village mobile home park.
The 22 families whose homes were deemed unsafe to inhabit have
been staying wherever they can -- in some cases other residents have
taken them in -- but they need somewhere to live for up to the next
three years, Pearson-Schneider said.
“People are saying these are millionaires. Well, they’re not
millionaires anymore because most of their assets were in their homes
and they don’t have a home anymore, and some of them don’t even have
the land that the home was on,” she said.
She pitched the idea of putting residents in homes at El Morro,
where about 26 trailers are vacant after some residents agreed to
stop fighting eviction by the state and leave. The state owns the El
Morro property and plans to turn it into public parkland but is still
battling in court to get residents out.
“You’ve got about two dozen people with a desperate need and two
dozen homes that have already been evacuated,” DeVore said. “It just
seems like a natural fit.”
DeVore was waiting to hear from California Resources Agency
Secretary Mike Chrisman about whether Laguna residents can settle in
at El Morro. The Assemblyman became popular with El Morro residents
in February when he introduced two bills to extend their leases, but
he pulled the plug on the bills in April, saying he couldn’t get
enough votes to pass them.
Residents at El Morro would welcome the landslide victims because
they also have suffered from natural disasters, El Morro Community
Assn. President Jeanette Miller said.
“We’re familiar with acts of nature because about 40 of our
residents were burned out in a valley fire 10 years ago. Plus, on the
beach side, people who have been there a long time have been washed
out twice,” Miller said.
About eight El Morro residents who have other homes have offered
to put up Laguna residents in need of housing for anywhere from a
week to a month, Miller said.
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