Heisler Park to get help
State grant money will enable city leaders to plan $4 million in
improvements to Heisler Park, City Manager Ken Frank said.
Erosion has begun to eat away at the bluff-top park, which was
developed in the 1930s, and the aging, narrow pathways to Picnic
Beach don’t meet modern standards of access for handicapped visitors.
On Sept. 26, the California Coastal Conservancy handed $225,000 to
the city to fund half of a design study for the work. The city will
toss in another $225,000 to complete funding for that study.
“Heisler Park is slowly slipping away from us,” Frank said. “There
is coastal erosion from the ocean and from storms.”
Storm waters crashed against the cliffs so harshly, in 1997, that
the gazebo at the park’s northern end crashed into the ocean after a
chunk of land collapsed from the bluff top.
The planning study will identify problems at the park that need to
be corrected, Frank said. One part of the study will be to generate a
geo-technical study that proposes ways to control erosion and reduce
the amount of groundwater leaching into the soil, Frank said. It will
also generate working drawings.
Along the 3,000 feet of park frontage, there are three staircases
and one ramp leading down to the beach. Those pathways don’t
adequately allow handicapped visitors to reach the beach, Frank said.
Two park restrooms, that are more than 70 years old, also need
renovating.
“They won’t smell as bad [after the work is completed],” Frank
said. “They’ve been there a long time and they are pretty
disgusting.”
The city may also redo the park’s irrigation lines and install new
curbs and gutters in the pathways to allow better drainage.
The City Council approved chipping in its $225,000 chunk in June.
The city will also look for state grant money to fund the project
itself, Frank said. City leaders hope to have the project completed
by the end of 2007.
For the grant, the coastal conservancy tapped into money from
Proposition 40, the resources bond voters passed in March.
-- Paul Clinton
Officials gear up for Fire Prevention Week
The Laguna Beach Fire Department will join the National Fire
Protection Assn. and fire departments across the nation to observe
Fire Prevention Week, Oct. 6 through 12.
“The real goal every year is to create an active awareness among
the public,” said Capt. Dan Stefano, who has been a firefighter for
seven years.
The common problems firefighters see are disabled smoke alarms,
families who don’t have escape plans or residents who don’t look out
for home fire hazards such as drapes and furniture placed too close
to heaters.
Although the highest percentage of calls in Laguna are medical
aids and rescues, Stefan said, the 10% to 15% of structure, wild land
or trash fires can have devastating effects. Those types of incidents
are all the more tragic when injury or even death could have been
prevented.
“About a year ago an elderly lady left something in the oven and
forgot about it by the time she went to bed,” Stefano said. “You see,
smoke will take you out before the fire gets to you. Even though she
was OK, it’s such an easy thing to have [smoke alarms] replaced.”
Students in Laguna schools should expect fire drills throughout
next week. Also, the four fire stations will be open for tours from
10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Oct. 12. Station One is at City Hall on Forest
Avenue; Station Two is on the corner of Agate and Glenneyre streets,
Station Three is on the corner of Alta Laguna Road and Tree Top Lane;
and Station Four is on the corner of 2nd Avenue and Virginia Way in
South Laguna.
“We’re more than happy to go out and help people when they need to
install a smoke alarm,” he said. “It’s a really inexpensive life
insurance policy.”
For more information about the tours or for additional safety
tips, please call (949) 497-0700.
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