An increasingly more organized opposition
Lolita Harper
COSTA MESA -- They started by nodding to each other and exchanging
friendly hellos at City Council meetings in the 1980s.
Nearly 20 years later, residents opposed to the Home Ranch project
have transformed themselves from a group of disenfranchised stragglers to
an organized association -- Costa Mesa Citizens for Responsible Growth --
with enough clout to be awarded a three-hour special presentation against
the development.
What kept the group together over the years?
A common disdain for projects that repeatedly called for changes to
the Segerstroms’ former lima bean fields into what the critics claim to
be traffic and pollution-creating monsters.
From the early battles surrounding Home Ranch, two council members
were born. And Karen Robinson, who is serving her first term, was also
largely elected by the same people.
Former mayor Sandy Genis has been involved since the beginning, she
said.
Genis credits Mesa Action -- a now obsolete community group -- with
sparking the anti-Home Ranch movement. Mesa Action formed to oppose the
building of the amphitheater on the fairgrounds and what was formerly
known as Crystal Court. Genis said the group, although made up of
different members, got people thinking about growth in general.
“If Mesa Action hadn’t raised consciousness, we wouldn’t have all
gotten together to talk about things,” Genis said.
When the first Home Ranch proposal hit the agenda, people such as
Genis started talking about its problems during meeting breaks. Those
conversations grew to outside meetings, and the residents formed a
network so strong they were able to block two previous Home Ranch
proposals.
Even when the group filed a lawsuit against the city for approving the
second Home Ranch proposal, it had not officially formed.
“We were still trying to figure out what name to use on the filing
papers,” Genis said.
The group was not officially named Costa Mesa Citizens for Responsible
Growth until this summer. Old members came together once again, saying
“it’s back,” Genis said. At the same time, new activists became involved
because they were concerned about the most recent plans, especially the
proposed Ikea store.
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