Document 22 of 26.
Copyright 1990 The Times Mirror Company
Los Angeles Times
September 20, 1990, Thursday, Home Edition
SECTION: Long Beach; Part J; Page 7; Column 1
LENGTH: 1225 words
HEADLINE: LA HABRA HEIGHTS SHUTS THE GATES;
PRIVACY: COUNCIL MAJORITY CALLS ACTION TO BAR
GATED COMMUNITIES A STAND AGAINST ELITISM. REAL ESTATE INDUSTRY LEADERS EXPRESS DISMAY.
BYLINE: By HOWARD BLUME, TIMES STAFF WRITER
DATELINE: LA HABRA HEIGHTS
BODY:
The City Council of this small, hillside community has voted to forbid
neighborhoods from closing themselves off with gates.
The council majority, saying it was taking a stand against elitism, approved an
ordinance that makes it illegal to install a security gate across a private or
public
road.
Mayor John Wible, the only council member who voted against the
ban last week, said the ordinance invades property rights, which include the
option to gate a private road.
Officials of nearby cities could think of no other city that has enacted such a
ban. Real
estate industry leaders expressed surprise and dismay at the city's move, which
they consider government intrusion.
Councilman M. Jay Collins, a 15-year resident of the town of 5,300, led the
council supporters of the
ban.
"There's an elitist attitude that occurs behind a gated community," he said in an interview after the meeting.
"It breaks up a community and divides the community. You
end up with, 'My area is better than your area.'
"
Collins first raised the issue before the council last December, after
developers brought plans before the city to gate private streets for security
reasons.
Collins wanted to keep gates off both new developments and the
city's numerous private roads. These roads, which serve as shared driveways,
are maintained by the families that live alongside them. The new ordinance will
permit only those street barriers already in place, such as the one at the
entrance to Flowerfield Lane, a tract of 20 homes in the southern part of the
city.
The ordinance became necessary to prevent neighborhoods from walling off large
sections of the city from most residents, Collins said. Whenever the community
allows development, it is already surrendering
"the natural lay of the land," he said, and if residents are then locked out, they
"have given something up and got nothing in
return."
At stake, said Collins and other council members, is more than just an
electronic security barrier, but the rural, independent, neighborly ambience
that attracted residents to settle here in an era when the pervasive avocado
ranches of the heights seemed a getaway from Los Angeles.
Residents have
fought to maintain this lifestyle before, successfully beating back efforts to
build a freeway through the city. Most households still have septic tanks
rather than city sewer lines. And the narrow, twisting city streets lack curbs
and gutters to create a rural feeling.
"The community is essentially
a former avocado grove whose roads were designed for transporting farm produce
back to the city," Collins said.
The City Council also forbids street lights. Said council member Diane Kane:
"We want to be able to see the stars in the sky."
The encroaching Los Angeles metropolis, however, has practically
blotted out the constellations with its light pollution, and brought about
other changes as well, including the push for gated neighborhoods. Throughout
the city, homes start at $400,000 and move rapidly upward. These days,
well-heeled professionals and business people join the community to build
multimillion-dollar
dream homes on the hilltops. Many newcomers lack the rural orientation of
longtime residents, who often raise horses, chickens and other livestock.
Of recent arrivals, Kane said,
"They're putting up lighting all over the place. I think they're terrified of
being in the
dark.
"Almost uniformly, people building new homes want perimeter fencing and security
gates," she added.
"I don't see it. Our crime rate is extremely low and our (law-enforcement)
response rate is excellent." Compared to greater Los Angeles,
"we are a very safe area," she said.
At the
council meeting, Collins reported that there were only 12 residential
burglaries in the first six months of 1990, down from last year.
Crime statistics show that residents of nearby Whittier are twice as likely to
experience residential burglaries, even though Whittier is not regarded as a
high-crime
area.
The Sheriff's Department has no record of a murder in La Habra Heights for
1988, 1989 or 1990.
As for gated communities, the Sheriff's Department has no policy on them. In a
letter to the city, Sheriff Sherman Block wrote that a gated community can
improve security, but potentially slows down response to calls when officers
have to negotiate gates.
Crime wave or no, Mayor Wible, the lone no vote on the
ban, said homes worth millions of dollars could legitimately inspire security
worries in their owners, and the city should not diminish their
property rights.
"I'm going to tell you what kind of security you're going to have?" he asked other council members rhetorically.
"I don't think so.
"I do live on a private road, but I don't have a gate," Wible said later.
"I'm not much of
a gate guy, hideaway person. I just figure privacy is something I really think
people should be able to choose. The basic issue is being able to choose what
kind of security you want for your family."
The presence of gates would not make residents any more active in or
detached from the community than they would be otherwise, Wible said.
He added that the council's vote
"has to do with Powder Canyon. They don't want that to be a gated community."
The proposed Powder Canyon development would include 136 exclusive homes built
around a private golf course in the city's undeveloped northeast corner.
"It's
a huge parcel," council member Kane said. He estimated that gating the Powder Canyon area
would close off
"one-third of the land mass of the city."
Sequoia Real Estate in Torrance plans to develop the canyon. The developer will
not contest the issue of having gates, said media
representative Marlin Weiss.
At least one potential challenge has already arrived, however. Attorney Raymond
Tabar of Thomson
& Nelson, a Whittier law firm, faxed the city notice that certain unnamed city
residents considered the gate
ban an infringement of their rights. There may be a court
challenge, the letter implied. When contacted, Tabar said he could not disclose
his clients' identity.
A legal battle, even if unsuccessful, could prove costly to the city, which
operates with a part-time staff. The city's annual budget of $2.4 million is
less than some residents will spend to purchase homes here.
Although other municipalities discourage gated communities, the city staff
could find no other city that had expressly banned them.
In Orange County, one-third of 140 new developments under construction two
years ago had security gates, according to Residential Trends, a Costa Mesa
industry publication.
In Los Angeles County, gated districts go back at least 50 years, said Ellen
Poll, the president-elect of the Los Angeles Board of Realtors. While security
remains a primary motivation, enhancing property values and creating snob
appeal are also
involved.
"There is definitely an aspect of prestige. Developers gate a community when
they want to create an upper class," Poll said.
"A gate purely for its own sake connotes 'estate.' It's a vestigial remains from
the day when grand houses were at the end of long beautiful
drives which were entered from a gate," she said.
Poll added that living behind a gate does not necessarily isolate people from
the concerns and problems outside.
"They have to come outside of the gate once in a while," she said.
GRAPHIC: Photo, (SOUTHEAST) BAR NONE: La Habra Heights is safe enough without security
gates blocking neighborhood roads, said City Council members. A new ordinance
makes it illegal to install such gates. ; Map, GATED COMMUNITIES IN LA HABRA
HEIGHTS, Los
Angeles Times
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH
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