COSTA MESA CITY COUNCIL WRAP-UP
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Here are a few items the council considered Tuesday:
HOME REMODELING
The city stands to lose an estimated $58,000 in fees but could
gain millions in real estate values under a proposed incentive
program to encourage homeowners to remodel or add on. The council
agreed to pursue the pilot program, suggested by Councilman Eric
Bever.
The council will vote later on creating a remodeling incentive
program that would run from September through December. The program
would waive construction permit fees and speed up approval of
remodeling plans for homeowners.
WHAT IT MEANS
Homeowners could save money on city fees by starting remodeling
projects this fall. If the trial program works, the council might
consider a longer construction fee waiver program in the future.
SKATE PARK CHANGES
The city’s neskateboard park will get improvements for safety and
convenience of skaters and spectators, the council decided. Instead
of building a shade shelter as planned, the council will spend
$150,000 on other additions, including bleachers outside the skating
area for safe viewing, a place for skaters to keep their backpacks
and gear, and screens to keep skaters’ limbs from tangling with fence
posts.
Because the skate park has been so well received, council members
also said they’d like to start looking for another skate park site,
possibly at Lions Park.
WHAT IT MEANS
Improvements at the skate park could be finished later this summer
or early in 2006.
MEDICAL MARIJUANA
The council chose, in a split vote (Dixon and Foley dissenting) to
ban dispensaries that offer marijuana for medical use, an issue many
cities have been wrestling with because of a conflict between state
and federal laws. State law permits medical use of marijuana, but
federal drug law still makes any marijuana use a crime.
The city’s Planning Commission had recommended a moratorium on
marijuana dispensaries while officials worked out how they should be
regulated, but the council in June voted, 3-2, to ban the facilities
outright. But a second reading of the ban July 5 received a tie vote
-- Councilman Gary Monahan was absent -- and had to be revisited
Tuesday.
WHAT IT MEANS
No medical marijuana dispensaries will be opened in Costa Mesa.
-- Compiled by Alicia Robinson
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