Council votes to relocate yard to ACT V
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Barbara Diamond
Laguna Beach will move forward on the relocation of the corporation
yard to the ACT V parking lot without waiting for the parcel to be
annexed into the city.
“I do not see why we are not annexing the property to do a city
project on city land,” Laguna Greenbelt Inc. President Elisabeth
Brown said. “It says to the community at large that the project would
not meet city standards. I am not a fan of this project, but even if
I was, doing it this way smells.”
The council voted 3 to 2 to approve a resolution requested by the
Local Agency Formation Commission affirming the city’s intention to
annex the parcel with the understanding that annexation would not be
required as a condition of occupancy for the new facility.
“We can move ahead on this project, but have an agenda item to
stipulate that the project is subject to city rules,” Councilman
Steve Dicterow said.
ACT V was purchased by the city in 1996. The next year, the
council voted to move the corporation yard to the parcel.
That project was dumped, but has been revived even though a design
competition had been held for the Village Entrance, which specified
the inclusion of the corporation yard.
Dicterow, Elizabeth Pearson and Cheryl Kinsman, who also
resurrected the relocation, voted to proceed with the relocation
project under the county, seen by the three as faster and cheaper.
Further discussion, Dicterow opined, would not be productive.
Mayor Toni Iseman and Councilman Wayne Baglin opposed the
resolution.
“Have we ever had the county do planning on another city project?”
Iseman said. “Why are we doing that?”
City Manager Ken Frank said he couldn’t remember county planners
working on any city projects, but the goal of a council majority is
to construct the corporation yard at ACT V in a reasonable time
frame.
Moving forward with the project under county jurisdiction would be
the most expedient course of action, Frank said.
Annexation could set the project back anywhere from nine to 18
months, he said. Under the county, the project could be put out to
bid in the spring.
“It certainly appears that annexation hasn’t been started because
it would be a more arduous process,” Top of the World resident
Johanna Felder said.
In addition to procedural concerns, opponents also brought up the
loss of summer parking at ACT V.
The California Coastal Commission will require parking spaces lost
at ACT V because of the construction to be replaced elsewhere.
“The question is how many spaces will we have to replace,” Franks
said. “Historically, we parked 190 cars in the gravel. After we
re-graded, we parked double that.”
Iseman said the elimination of parking at ACT V would sabotage the
highly successful free tram service that lured a record number of
drivers to park last summer on the city’s outskirts. The council has
approved free trams again for this coming Festival season.
Reading from a presentation by Laguna Canyon Conservancy President
Carolyn Wood, Jeane Bernstein said the corporation yard has been
identified as a part of the Village Entrance project, and removing it
should trigger a separate California Environmental Quality Act study.
“The council would have to make the findings that relocation is
the best alternative,” Wood said. “I don’t think that finding can be
made.”
Baglin, who said he has fought a losing battle against moving the
corporation yard to ACT V, said the council’s decision could have
dire consequences.
“We may all end up losing on this,” Baglin said. “There is an
opportunity for litigation in this. It is seen as a linchpin. It is
an opportunity for a citizen’s initiative and that could cost
considerable time, aggravation and money.”
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