Residents air concerns about southeast redevelopment
Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- Residents from the city’s southeast side have a
chance to decide the future of their neighborhood.
About 200 residents turned out at the Edison Community Center last
week for the first of a trio of public meetings with city officials to
discuss the future redevelopment of more than 300 acres between Beach
Boulevard and Magnolia Street, north of Pacific Coast Highway.
“This is really the first of at least three workshops we’re planning
to get the public involved in this process,” said David Biggs, the city’s
director of economic development, during the Nov. 15 meeting. “We want to
know what we could do in the future to recycle this land, as well as what
the surrounding community would ultimately like to see there.”
AES Corp., the Ascon landfill, an oil tank farm, as well as mobile
homes and a boat business, occupy the land. A study of the area shows
more than half of the land is contaminated from industrial uses.
During the meeting, city officials reviewed a Southeast Coast
Redevelopment Plan that could set the land aside for new homes,
businesses and parkland.
Most residents who attended, some representing the homeowners
associations surrounding the property, agreed the area should be
redeveloped. Their concerns, however, varied from widening Newland Street
for smoother traffic flow to improving the landscape and aesthetics of
industrial businesses, such as the AES power plant and the preservation
of about 60 acres of undeveloped wetlands.
Armida Brashears, a 35-year resident, said she was concerned what
residential development planned for the landfill area could eventually
mean for taxpayers.
“I’m just worried about what happens when the land beneath those homes
begins to settle. . . . the damage would eventually cost the city and its
taxpayers in lawsuits,” she said, adding that extending Edison Park
across Hamilton Avenue and over the landfill could be an alternative.
Mayor Dave Garofalo assured residents their concerns and plans, not
the city’s, would be applied to the area. The next community forum is
tentatively scheduled to take place in February.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.