COMMENTS & CURIOSITIES
Peter Buffa
By now, you’ve heard it all. Over and over, I might add. About 2,307
people have asked me what I think about it. I try not to get involved.
Fourteen years was more than enough, thank you. That’s almost a third of
my life, for heaven’s sake.
Everyone has tossed their two cents about Home Ranch in the pot except
me. Wait, that’s not true. There’s a 16-year-old kid on the drive-through
window at In-and-Out and an 87-year-old woman in Bethel Towers who
haven’t been heard from yet.
That’s it, Jimmy, Gwendolyn and me. Jimmy wouldn’t know the difference
between Home Ranch and Home Depot, and Gwendolyn doesn’t have a phone,
which leaves just me. So let’s begin, shall we?
I’ll dispense with the suspense and tell you where I stand right up
front. Contrary to a lot of what you have heard, Home Ranch is not a good
project. Home Ranch is a great project.
That’s it, in a nutshell. A proposal like Home Ranch comes along once
every 10 years, maybe. Smart cities don’t pass up opportunities like
this, and Costa Mesa is a smart city.
By the way, anything I tell you is strictly between us. Please don’t
mention any of this to the City Council. When you’re on the dais, there’s
nothing more annoying than having to listen to some has-been mayor.
Eeesh.
What don’t you know about Home Ranch? At this point, not much. In
fact, if you scanned the pages of this fine publication just this Friday,
you saw a very thorough analysis of Home Ranch from every angle, pro and
con, with site plans and pictures and cool graphics.
So, what’s all the rumpus? You’ve already heard more than you ever
wanted to know, but remember, never confuse politics with reality. Crafty
old council members who are all bent over and have gray hair have to read
between the lines. And what’s between the lines is this: there is very
little opposition to Home Ranch.
“Wait,” you say. “All those stories and quotes and Citizens for This
and Citizens for That. How can that be?” Stay calm. You have to ask
yourself two key questions: Who is the opposition? And what are they
saying?
Over the last year, there have been more community meetings on Home
Ranch than you can count. Go ahead, try it. Count as high as you can.
I’ll wait. No rush. Done? Good. Whatever number you came up with, there
were six more meetings on Home Ranch than that.
More importantly, there were very few people at those meetings, as in,
very few. But most importantly, you heard from the same six or eight
people, meeting after meeting. Be that as it may, what were the opponents
saying?
Talk about deja vu all over again. The environmental impact report is
desperately flawed. The traffic is going to bring this city to its knees.
There will be gridlock and smog at levels foretold only in the Book of
Revelation, which could trigger a post-nuclear winter in Mesa Verde.
Plant life will disappear first, then all traces of animal life.
Oh, and the bridge on Gisler. Never forget the bridge on Gisler. Any
action taken for any reason by anyone, anywhere in this city at any time,
will result in the Gisler Street bridge.
Sound scary? It should. It’s meant to. Sound familiar? See if this
helps. Choose one of the items in parentheses to complete this sentence:
“The environmental impact report for (MetroPointe, the Auto Club
expansion, Harbor Center) is desperately flawed.”
Why don’t the predictions of impending doom come true? A number of
reasons:
1) Developers who build businesses that are a pain in the patoot to
get in and out of are called “former developers.”
2) City planners and traffic engineers are very good at what they do.
They know how to move people and cars in and out of a project and how to
relieve developers of large amounts of dollars to make sure it happens --
in the case of Home Ranch, $12 million of them.
Which brings me to the wonderfully offensive issue of the $2 million
“bribe” to Newport-Mesa schools. It is quite interesting, is it not, that
when a city or a school district or neighbors are working a developer
over like a speed bag for tot lots and parks and double-paned windows and
who knows what all, that’s not “extortion.” But when a developer offers
$2 million to a school district as part of its proposal -- that’s a
“bribe.”
It is particularly offensive to anyone who knows that the Segerstrom
company and family have a record of giving in this community that is
beyond generous.
Every youngster in every Newport-Mesa school during the past 30 years
has worn a uniform or used a computer or a stage or a laboratory or a
playing field that wouldn’t have been there without the Segerstroms’
generosity. But now, stepping up with $2 million for the same schools is
a “bribe.” Ah, politics. No wonder people love it so.
When you’re on the dais, some decisions are easy and some decisions
are hard. With apologies, this one is a no-brainer. This thing is a
home-run for everyone involved and the bases are loaded. Let’s get on
with it. I gotta go.
* PETER BUFFA is a former Costa Mesa mayor. His column runs Sundays.
He may be reached via e-mail at PtrB4@aol.com.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.