Los Angeles Times

Sober-living homes to close in Costa Mesa

Operator will also end legal fight to overturn city ordinance aimed at curbing the spread of such facilities.

- By Luke Money luke.money@latimes.com Money writes for Times Community News.

Solid Landings Behavioral Health, one of the biggest operators of sober-living homes in Costa Mesa, has agreed to close all of its live-in facilities in the city and end its legal fight to overturn an ordinance aimed at curbing the proliferat­ion of such homes, officials said.

The company will immediatel­y close 15 sober-living homes under what city officials called a “landmark” settlement announced during Tuesday’s City Council meeting. Eighteen other homes that Solid Landings operates will be closed over the next two to three years.

The company has also agreed to drop its lawsuits against Costa Mesa. One filed last year in Orange County Superior Court challenged the city’s denial for Solid Landings to host group counseling sessions in an office building. The second, filed in federal court, alleged that a city ordinance approved in 2014 was discrimina­tory to recovering addicts. The ordinance attempted to curb the proliferat­ion of sober-living homes in neighborho­ods of single-family residences, among other regulation­s.

The closures will put a dent in the number of group and sober-living homes, as well as related treatment facilities, in Costa Mesa. As of January, city officials have estimated there are about 300 citywide.

“This is a major victory both for the residents of Costa Mesa and city officials who worked diligently on this issue for several years,” Mayor Steve Mensinger said in a statement. “We have invested considerab­le resources in legal, law enforcemen­t and code enforcemen­t efforts to ensure a balance between our residents who deserve neighborho­od peace and tranquilli­ty and those who seek facilities to battle their addiction problems.”

Solid Landings will continue to operate two counseling facilities in Costa Mesa, but they will be relocated to commercial and industrial areas, said city spokesman Tony Dodero.

Costa Mesa officials and residents have raised concerns about the growing number of sober-living homes. Many have argued that the facilities, which house recovering alcoholics and drug addicts, have disrupted their neighborho­ods, bringing in noise, parking problems and secondhand cigarette smoke, among other things.

Reached for comment before Tuesday’s council meeting, Solid Landings spokeswoma­n Jemellee Ambrose confirmed in an email that the company was “in active discussion­s with the city” but said that she could not comment on specifics.

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