Los Angeles Times

Newport Beach residents warn of lawsuits over homeless shelter plan

- By Hillary Davis Davis writes for Times Community News.

As Newport Beach officials continue exploring their homeless shelter options, residents are warning that litigation could follow.

Homeowners have fired off dozens of emails and letters to the City Council and staff in recent weeks. Some raise the possibilit­y of liability resulting from feared losses in property values. Others complain about safety concerns.

Two letters from lawyers representi­ng nearby property owners are direct resolution­s to sue.

Much of the mobilizati­on against the shelter planning has centered on keeping one out of the city public works yard in the 500 block of Supefour rior Avenue.

The site is at the border of Costa Mesa and Newport, and the surroundin­g area was recently redevelope­d with condominiu­ms in both cities.

Neighbors have picketed Newport City Hall and are now crowdfundi­ng to help pay legal costs after serving the city with a formal notice of intent to sue.

Newport officials have repeatedly said the city has not committed to or abandoned any of the three shelter options it has most actively pursued in the last two months, including the city yard.

Part of that is contractin­g with a designer to draw up plans to convert a partially enclosed equipment garage at the yard and an adjacent warehouse into inhabitabl­e structures. The city also wrapped up a bidding period for potential shelter operators Friday.

A real estate broker said buyers who are still in escrow for condos at the justcomple­ted Ebb Tide developmen­t across from the city yard could bring a class-action lawsuit alleging nondisclos­ure.

Newport resident Jeffrey Dawson called a “shelter crisis” the city declared in September — which allows it to fast-track a shelter — an end-run around due process.

Newport Beach “will be mired in litigation for violating the rights of so many taxpayers,” Dawson wrote in an email to the city.

“Consider this notice of the dangerous conditions that exist and will exist if this site is approved,” wrote Miko Sargizian, who lives in Ebb Tide. “If something bad happens to any of us, the city and City Council are on the hook for it legally.”

“Can the city afford to pay for lawsuits from the owners of several new developmen­ts banding together and suing the city?” wrote Bruce Dickson, another Ebb Tide resident.

An Oct. 7 letter from Julia Liu, a lawyer representi­ng Ebb Tide residents, said: “The city has completely ignored the voices of taxpaying residents and their concerns for the detrimenta­l effects of placing the shelter in a community comprised of

schools, homes, businesses and parks. The city has made it clear that the areas neighborin­g the proposed shelter are a dumping ground for the city’s poor decisions.”

Liu called the crisis declaratio­n a “sham” because the most recent official census of homeless people counted 64 in a city of 85,000 residents.

She also said the longtime presence of a trash transfer facility at the city yard — where waste hauler CR&R consolidat­es its trucks’ loads before taking them to a landfill — “demonstrat­es the city’s lack of compassion [for homeless people] and understand­ing for basic human rights.”

One of Liu’s clients is Jack Rose, who said the city has not been transparen­t about its shelter planning.

His GoFundMe campaign had gathered more than $10,000 of its $49,000 goal as of Friday, after a week of fundraisin­g toward potential legal costs. He said some donors are from outside the Ebb Tide developmen­t.

A lawsuit wouldn’t be a good use of anybody’s money, Rose said Friday.

But he said he and his neighbors care about homeless people and that they and the residents have a right to safety. Rose said he considers the Superior site inferior as potential living quarters.

It has a compressed natural gas truck-fueling station in addition to the trash facility.

Newport Beach City Atty. Aaron Harp defended the city’s process at the city yard.

“The city’s corporate yard meets all the legal requiremen­ts for utilizatio­n of the site as a temporary emergency shelter, and any lawsuit challengin­g the decision of the City Council to address the homeless crisis in Orange County and Newport Beach is wholly without merit,” Harp said Friday.

No shelter-related suits have been filed so far, he added.

The City Council and staff continue to hold closed sessions discussing other options, including a potential lease of a privately owned Avis rental car lot near John Wayne Airport and a possible partnershi­p with Costa Mesa, including joining that city’s temporary shelter at Lighthouse Church of the Nazarene on Anaheim Avenue.

The council will hold its next closed session on those sites before its next meeting Tuesday.

 ?? Don Leach Daily Pilot ?? PEOPLE picket outside Newport’s council chambers Tuesday over a proposed homeless shelter in the city.
Don Leach Daily Pilot PEOPLE picket outside Newport’s council chambers Tuesday over a proposed homeless shelter in the city.

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