Laguna and Festival sign lease
Barbara Diamond
After six sometimes contentious and sometimes downright nasty
years of negotiating, the city and the Festival of Arts signed a
lease Tuesday night.
“We took the time to make sure that all ambiguity is gone,” Wayne
Baglin said.
The council approved the lease 4-0. It was signed at the podium by
members of the Festival board and on the dais by the four council
members present. Steven Dicterow was absent.
“I feel wonderful about being here tonight,” Festival board
President Bruce Rasner said. “The measure of a contract is that it
benefits both sides. We all wanted the same thing and I think we got
it.”
The signing was taken out of the order it appeared on the agenda
so that retiring council member Paul Freeman could participate.
Freeman, Dicterow, Baglin and Councilwoman Cheryl Kinsman all
negotiated at different times on behalf of the city. Negotiations
were begun six years ago at the suggestion of then-Mayor Wayne
Peterson, hoping they would be concluded before the old lease
expired.
Rasner and Bob Dietrich negotiated for the Festival after a
previous board was recalled while trying to move the festival to San
Clemente.
“For two years, I have been sitting in a little room with one
other council member, usually either Paul or Wayne, and Bruce and
Bob,” Kinsman said. “Mostly we met over there because they have food
and our city manager is known to be parsimonious, so we don’t have
food.
“I love you all,” he said. “You are the reason the Festival is
still here.”
Outgoing Festival board President Scott Moore said he signed the
lease on behalf of all the artists who rallied to save the Festival
for Laguna.
“I attended the San Clemente City Council meeting the night
[ousted board President] Sherri Butterfield signed the letter of
intent to move,” board member John Campbell said. “I stood up and
said, ‘Ladies and gentlemen don’t pop your champagne corks too
soon.’”
Kathleen Blackburn, who served the city as mayor during a
particular trying time with the Festival now sits on the Festival
board.
“I am thrilled this is finalized,” Blackburn said.
However, a couple of glitches have cropped up, said by both sides
to be easy to resolve.
The current legal description of the property the Festival
occupies at 650 Laguna Canyon Road doesn’t allow even the present
buildings to exist on the site, according to Rasner, let alone allow
the expansion plans.
City officials said it would be rectified.
The Festival board also requested a letter from the city verifying
that the council agreed with the interpretation of some language in
the contract as understood by the board.
Primary terms of the contract:
1. The lease term is 40 years, retroactive to Oct. 1, 2001, to
apply to the current festival season.
2. Payment to the city will be 3.5% of revenues from Pageant of
the Masters tickets, grounds admissions and rents paid to the
Festival by food and beverage vendors.
3. The Festival will pay 6% of those same revenues into a Festival
Improvement Fund. The fund will be used only for improvements to the
Festival grounds, agreed upon by the council and the Festival board.
4. Performances of the Pageant and the Festival are required to be
held on the festival grounds in Laguna Beach.
5. The city of Laguna Beach must be the primary location for the
Pageant.
6. Any assignment of the lease is subject to city approval.
7. The city has final authority on subleases, if there is
disagreement among the four members of the Irvine Bowl Policy
Committee, comprised of two council members and two Festival board
members. Two members of the City Council will be appointed at the
Dec. 17 meeting to serve on the committee. The committee will be
charged with ensuring that the bowl facilities are used in accord
with the terms of the lease.
8. A study already underway on the feasibility of building a
300-space parking structure behind the Laguna Playhouse will proceed.
The Festival will continue to have the use of the parking behind
the Playhouse, the city park nursery on Olive Street, and the city
will continue to sell the Festival parking spaces in the city
employee lot, number and cost to be determined.
Capital improvements began this year in anticipation of the lease.
Replacement of an inadequate storm drain was started in September
when the festival season ended.
Construction of shops for carpentry, sculpture and painting is
next on the agenda.
Plans for renovations also include a new facade, improvements to
the bowl, conversion of the Festival Forum Theatre into a museum to
house the Festival’s art collection and a construction of a new
theater.
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