El Morro plan only muddies the water
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Last week, a group called the El Morro Village Community Assn.
pitched a plan that would in essence give a reprieve to some 200
mobile home owners who live on state beach park lands along the
Newport Beach and Laguna Beach borders.
The plan, which counters those of state parks officials, would
call for an increase in mobile home rents, and some of that money,
some $10 million backers say, would go toward refurbishing the
historic cottages at Crystal Cove.
There were other finer points to the plan.
Money gleaned from rents would be earmarked for affordable housing
for Laguna Beach fire and emergency personnel and an RV camp next to
El Morro Elementary School would be replaced in lieu of building a
vacation hostel. The plan, like the state’s, does call for the
elimination of the beachside mobile homes and also earmarks $1
million a year for two groups with a vested interest in open space --
the California State Parks Foundation and Laguna Greenbelt, an
environmental group that has long fought for protection of Laguna
Canyon.
As first blush, this quid pro quo plan sounds nice and offers up
money to all the right factions.
But it’s hard not to see this for what it really is -- a veiled
effort by the El Morro mobile homeowners to hold on to their little
slice of paradise at any cost.
Some background here might help.
The land at El Morro was part of a larger sale. The state
purchased a large chunk of coastal bluff tops, beaches and canyons
from the Irvine Co. several decades ago.
Along with that sale came El Morro Beach and Canyon, Crystal Cove
State Park and Beach and the historic cottages that sit on that
beach.
Those cottages too were inhabited by tenants who paid little rent
and fought for decades to avoid state eviction. But that battle
finally ended in the summer of 2001, and now the land is rightfully
in the hands of the state and available for enjoyment by all state
taxpayers.
That is exactly what should happen at El Morro.
Contrary to the claims by those at El Morro, the state does have a
plan for the restoration of the 46 Crystal Cove cottages. That
$12-million restoration, announced last October, called for rental of
the cottages to the public at $100 a night.
The state also has a plan for El Morro and has issued a
modification to its plans that is largely based on public comments
and suggestions. Instead of acknowledging the state’s efforts, the El
Morro mobile home owners fight the state at every turn and make
allegations that simply don’t wash.
With all due respect to those residents at El Morro, it’s time to
realize that the day is fast arriving to vacate the premises, hand
the land over to its rightful owners -- the state taxpayers -- and
end these last-ditch efforts that only muddy the process.
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