Los Angeles Times

Fairground­s could be used for O.C. shelter

Under Newsom order, such state-owned sites will be considered for emergency facilities.

- By Faith E. Pinho Pinho writes for Times Community News.

The OC Fair & Event Center is preparing for the possibilit­y that the Costa Mesa fairground­s could become the site of an emergency homeless shelter.

In an executive order addressing homelessne­ss, Gov. Gavin Newsom last week ordered the California Department of Food and Agricultur­e to assess “fairground­s in or near jurisdicti­ons where a shelter crisis is currently in effect” to determine whether the state-owned properties could be viable venues for short-term shelters for people experienci­ng homelessne­ss.

State agencies have until Jan. 31 to conduct an initial shelter assessment of fairground­s, vacant hospitals and other state-owned properties. A year ago, Newsom issued an executive order to create an inventory of such state properties.

“At this point, we have no idea what the criteria is for the assessment; we’re just waiting to hear,” fairground­s Chief Executive Michele Richards said. “But obviously, we’re prepared to respond if we’re called into action to participat­e in the assessment.”

The fairground­s are already designated as an emergency shelter for large animals in case of an evacuation, such as during the 2017 Anaheim Hills fire.

Whether the fairground­s qualify as a location “where a shelter crisis is currently in effect” is unclear. Steve Lyle, director of public affairs for the Department of Food and Agricultur­e, said the agency is still evaluating whether the OC Fair & Event Center would be assessed.

Fairground­s board Chairwoman Sandra Cervantes did not comment Tuesday.

Costa Mesa Mayor Katrina Foley was skeptical that Orange County would qualify when compared with fairground­s in other counties racked by homelessne­ss. The OC Fair & Event Center is a couple of miles from Lighthouse Church of the Nazarene, where Costa Mesa opened a temporary shelter in April. The city is not experienci­ng a crisis, Foley said, citing 42 people placed in permanent housing to date.

“It seems like there’s probably other locations where there’s more of a desperatio­n to try to get people out of being encamped,” Foley said. “Cooperativ­ely with [other] cities over the last two years, we’ve really worked to resolve those issues here in Orange County.”

Given that the OC Fair & Event Center also is a year-round venue for events such as gun shows, Touch-a-Truck and the Orange County Market Place swap meet, “the fairground­s is not an appropriat­e place for housing,” Foley said.

Foley was part of a lawsuit filed in 2010 aimed at blocking the sale of the fairground­s to a private investment group.

Repurposin­g stateowned property in Costa Mesa for homeless services isn’t a new idea. The state has suggested using Fairview Developmen­tal Center, a sprawling campus housing adults with intellectu­al and developmen­tal disabiliti­es, as a potential location for services. The center is slated to close this year.

In September, the Costa Mesa City Council authorized a special committee to be a liaison with state officials about the potential future of the Fairview campus.

About 300 people attended a public meeting in 2018 about the possibilit­y of using Fairview, which at its peak in 1967 housed 2,700 people, as an emergency shelter for the homeless. Most in attendance opposed the idea, prompting the council to pass a formal resolution disapprovi­ng of it.

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