Many cities in Orange County, including Newport Beach and Costa Mesa, have been grappling with the challenge of what to do about group homes for drug and alcohol recovery and sober-living.
In Newport Beach, the issue has become especially acute with official data showing 73 residential rehabilitation or sober-living homes on 34 parcels with the actual number probably in excess of 100. Group home clusters in some neighborhoods have been blamed for traffic, parking, noise, litter and crime.
The burden has grown great enough that more than 200 city managers and officials attended a recent "Residential Recovery Facilities Conference" led by Newport Beach Mayor Steve Rosansky. I noted that federal law, specifically the Americans with Disabilities Act and the Federal Fair Housing Act, severely limit the ability of state and local government to act in this arena. With that as a limitation, I briefed those at the conference on a plan that would have a modest impact on the supply side of the problem: Assembly Bill 716, the bipartisan drug and alcohol prison rehabilitation reform bill.