The Mercury News

After 20 years in planning, project set to make big waves

Ground is broken for housing units for adults with disabiliti­es

- Sy oiona Kelliher f kelliher@bayareanew­sgroup.com

All of the families faced the same dilemma.

It was 1999 in Half Moon Bay, and the topic often came up among parents while sitting in the bleachers, watching their kids’ Special Olympics basketball games.

Within a few years, many kids on the team would grow up to be adults with intellectu­al or developmen­tal disabiliti­es — but with few options in the Bay Area to live and work outside their parents’ homes.

“That is really the worst thing that claws at a parent’s mind,” recalled Jeff Peck, whose daughter was 11 at the time. “What is my child going to do after I die?”

More than 20 years later, those conversati­ons have come to fruition — almost. As the temperatur­es rose Saturday morning, many of the same parents, kids and officials gathered on a parcel of land near the Half Moon Bay airport to celebrate the groundbrea­king of a first-ofits-kind affordable housing community for people with disabiliti­es in San Mateo County.

The finished project — built under Peck’s nonprofit, Big Wave — will house 33 adults with disabiliti­es, with the potential to expand. Commercial businesses, along with service provider One Step Beyond, will be built alongside the residentia­l community to both subsidize the cost of the units and provide employment opportunit­ies for residents.

Twenty-three of the spots are accounted for, mostly to Half Moon Bay families who were part of the original discussion­s. All units are uniquely affordable — about $60,000 per unit compared to about $300,000 at many similar residentia­l living facilities.

“We’ve never wanted this to be a community for rich families,” said Kim Gainza, an executive board member of Big Wave whose daughter will be a future resident. “This was the goal all along.”

The need for supportive housing for people with disabiliti­es is acute in San Mateo County and more broadly, families say. According to the county Department of Housing, waiting lists for adults with disabiliti­es in San Mateo run between one and five years long, with need far outstrippi­ng supply.

The Gainza family searched for options for years to no avail. Emmy Gainza, 29, has Williams syndrome, a genetic disorder that causes developmen­tal delays.

She had been living in her own condo with a roommate for two years but recently moved

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back home because of the pandemic.

By moving into the Big Wave project, Gainza will be able to get back some muchneeded independen­ce, she

said — while surrounded by friends from the Special Olympics community.

“It’s been 20 years that we’ve been fighting this whole thing, and I want the fighting to stop,” she said. When she thinks about her life at Big Wave, she imagines “seeing my friends, being with them every day, doing

new activities.”

Getting to this point didn’t come easy. Big Wave went through more than 30 public hearings and multiple environmen­tal reviews before officials signed off, Peck said, and it faced some opposition from a “small but vocal” group of residents who opposed the project.

Funding the $23 million project also proved complex. Peck and a business partner bought and donated the parcel of land for the project but otherwise relied on funding from the original group of families, plus grants and donations from philanthro­pists around the Bay Area.

“It’s a remarkable accomplish­ment,” said Supervisor Dave Pine. “The journey they had was so hard — I wish it had been easier.”

Once the project is completed — ideally about 18 months from now, Peck said — he’d like to see it become a model for other supportive housing communitie­s around California and the nation. But first he’d like to take a breather.

“I’m looking forward to getting out of that warrior mode and creating something that will last the rest of my daughter’s life,” Peck said.

 ?? PHOTOS BY ANDA CHU — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Big Wave Community Cooperativ­e Board President Terry Mckinney, left, and Big Wave Group Chairman Stephen St. Marie lead a cheer during a groundbrea­king ceremony for a new housing community in Half Moon Bay on Saturday.
PHOTOS BY ANDA CHU — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Big Wave Community Cooperativ­e Board President Terry Mckinney, left, and Big Wave Group Chairman Stephen St. Marie lead a cheer during a groundbrea­king ceremony for a new housing community in Half Moon Bay on Saturday.
 ??  ?? Big Wave CEO and founder Jeff Peck speaks during the groundbrea­king ceremony. The nonprofit Big Wave is building a $23 million affordable housing project for adults with developmen­tal disabiliti­es.
Big Wave CEO and founder Jeff Peck speaks during the groundbrea­king ceremony. The nonprofit Big Wave is building a $23 million affordable housing project for adults with developmen­tal disabiliti­es.

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