A year in review of Our Laguna
OUR LAGUNA
The city made some major accomplishments this year, but the
council had to rethink some of its decisions.
“One of the nice things about local government is that we can do
something, try it, make a mistake and fix it,” Councilman Steven
Dicterow said.
Accomplishments:
* Improvements to the city’s rickety sewer system, including the
cleaning of 60 miles of sewer main.
* Renovations in the city’s parks.
* Free Festival Tram experiment was a big success. Ridership
doubled and parking at ACT V was up, which kept a lot of traffic out
of Downtown.
* The city combined resources with the Laguna Beach Unified
School District to create a new, full-sized soccer field at El Morro
Elementary School, construction underway.
* Added staff to enforce codes and a water quality analyst.
* Began weekly street cleaning in some residential areas.
Second thoughts:
* Council members changed their minds in February about a
requirement that all restaurants must install grease interceptors,
although it was getting credit from environmental groups for the
requirement. The interceptors were just too expensive and difficult
to install, the council decided.
* After about 30 years of proposals, the City Council picked
StudioOneEleven as the winner in the Civic Arts Design Competition,
which originally included city-owned property on Third Street, as
well as the parcel of land next to City Hall called the Village
Entrance.
In the last meeting of the year, the council took steps to move
the corporation yard from its present site, eliminating the
foundation of the winning plan, which was the yard.
* The skateboard park, on which the YMCA had spent a goodly sum
of money to design for the ACT V parking lot and thought was a done
deal, was moved to the Bark Park, despite the outcries from pet
owners and the dismay of YMCA officials.
* City staff worked long and hard with county officials and the
Army Corps of Engineers on a Laguna Canyon flood control project, to
be funded by the county and the corps. In March, the council agreed
to delay the project for one year to accommodate realignment of
underground utility lines.
On June 18, the majority of the council voted to scuttle the
entire project as proposed. Councilwoman Cheryl Kinsman, the lone
hold-out, was distraught at the notion of turning down $10 million.
Kinsman reopened the discussion at the Dec. 17 meeting and was
appointed to a committee that would broach the possibility of getting
the county back to the table.
* The council voted in June to increase parking meter fees by 50
cents, and listed the projects that the increase would fund.
Harkening to the complaints of the business community, the council in
December reduced the fees back to $1 an hour. Now the council will
have to go back and cull the funding list for rejects, a job it
assigned to City Manager Ken Frank.
A look back, gleaned from the pages of the Coastline News and its
successor, the Laguna Coastline Pilot:
Jan. 11: Coastline staff members and friends of Elizabeth Quilter
mourned her passing on Jan. 4.
Planner Robert W. Balen told participants at a city workshop that
the California Environmental Quality Act requires an environmental
impact report on public projects before purchasing property for the
project. Property purchased for open space that will never be
developed is exempt, Balen said.
Jan. 14: SchoolPower announced that there would be no 10K run in
2002. The Laguna Beach Classic had been run, walked and trotted by
participants since 1983.
Seven teams that participated in the process to develop a
strategic plan for Laguna’s future made their final report to the
council, but learned, as Yogi Berra said, “It’s never over until it’s
over.” The Strategic Committee was told to come back with a
streamlined version before implementation could be considered.
Jan. 25: The Wastewater Advisory Committee decided it didn’t need
an outside consultant after all to assess the sewer system, the
original reason that then-Mayor Pro tem Wayne Baglin proposed the
committee in July 2001. “We have gone back to the council to say that
we don’t think this is necessarily a priority,” said Melissa O’Neal,
a committee member.
Treasure Island developer Kim Richards announced a proposal to
reduce the number of private home parcels from 17 to 14.
Feb. 15: The Council asked for legal advice to settle its dispute
with developer Athens Group about park construction costs, which
escalated from an estimated $2.5 million before construction started
to $9.8 million, $4.5 million above the costs approved by the city
manager.
Elizabeth Taylor, Michael Jackson, Merv Griffin and Penny Marshall
visited the Laguna Art Museum to help raise funds for museum projects
and for AIDS Services Foundation.
Feb. 22: The Community Art Project grossed about $19,000 at the
second annual fund-raiser, held Feb. 15 at Wells Fargo Bank. Proceeds
were to be used to fund installations of public art on private
property.
March 1: The council approved free tram rides during the Festival
season. The goal was to increase tram use, thereby reducing Downtown
congestion, a boon to residents.
March 8: Artist Ron Rodecker, creator of the Dragon Tales TV
characters, was the grand marshal.
Neighbors of the proposed Driftwood development announced
formation of an association. “The goal of the Aliso-Hobo Canyons
Neighborhood Association is to prevent or to seriously modify the
development,” Jeanie Bernstein said.
March 15: The Art Institute of Southern California -- this was
before the name changed to the Laguna College of Art and Design --
held its 28th annual Color It Orange, one of the county’s largest
exhibits of art by children.
Five sea lions, restored to health at the Friends of the Sea Lions
Marine Mammal Center on Laguna Canyon Road, were released at Crescent
Bay Beach.
March 22: Bouquets were piled along the Laguna Canyon Road culvert
where Ryan Patrick McDonough, 29, a Laguna Beach High School
graduate, died March 15 in a car accident.
March 29: Laguna opponents to an airport at El Toro chalked up a
lopsided W in the March election. Almost 90% of Laguna’s voters
supported Measure W, which prohibited an airport on the former U.S.
Marine Corps Air Base
April 5: Vanessa Ettinger, known to many as the Spider Woman,
died. Ettinger was the poster child of Friendship Shelter, which took
great pride in her well-being after she was referred for treatment of
schizophrenia.
April 12: The bottom line topped the City Council agenda on April
10 as Councilman Freeman took exception to calling the difference
between what the city has to spend and what it wants to spend a
shortfall.
“It’s a case of too many good causes chasing too few dollars,”
Freeman said.
After 3 1/2 hours of debate, the council agreed to set spending
priorities.
April 26: North Laguna residents appealed to the city for relief
from noise they said ricochets off the Festival of Arts grounds and
echoes in the surrounding hillside neighborhoods. The festival board
scheduled a meeting to discuss the concerns.
A warrant was issued for Three Arch Bay resident Jon E. Jennet,
50. Jenett was charged with forging documents submitted to the court
during a trial for embezzlement.
May 3: The city began a monthlong celebration of its history with
a reception at Madison Square and Garden Cafe. Other events were:
guided tours of historic downtown, natural history hikes through
Laurel Canyon to Bommer Ridge, a backstage tour of the Pageant of the
Masters and a presentation by William Taylor on adventurer William
Halliburton sponsored by the Laguna Beach Historical Society.
Plans to expand St. Catherine of Sienna Church tore up the
neighborhood even before construction started. Neighbors opposed
expansion, which would have blocked their views and the pathway that
they previously used as a shortcut down the hill. It also did nothing
to relieve the parking congestion.
Razor blades were found buried in the sand Feb. 28 at Main Beach.
Police were advised of the blades by an anonymous telephone call.
May 10: The City Council cut a deal to cap the escalating costs of
the park at Treasure Island. $7.7 or $7.8 million (depending on
interest rates), a tad higher than the $175,000 cap City Manager
Frank had recommended in early negotiations. In return, the developer
was allowed to pull building permits for the condominiums on the
property. Then-Mayor Baglin called the deal “smoke and mirrors.”
May 17: The county approved a $667,001 loan to Related Companies
of California for the construction of affordable housing units at 450
Glenneyre St.
Laguna Beach County Water District took down the safety/security
fence that barred the public from the Richard Jahraus Reservoir at
Top of the World, the highest point in Laguna.
May 24: Then-Mayor Baglin and City Councilwoman Kinsman criticized
the $31-million draft budget proposed by City Manager Frank for
including quality of life projects at the expense of vital services
or projects. “Budgets are a matter of choices,” Councilman Dicterow
said. “We have focused on basics in the past. But great cities
enhance the quality of life and feed the soul.”
May 31: Laguna Beach veterans saluted their fallen comrades in
Memorial Day ceremonies held at Monument Point in Heisler Park. The
ceremonies were preceded by the traditional Exchange Club’s pancake
breakfast.
June 7: Planning Commissioners reviewed the proposed city projects
on Third Street and concluded they did not jibe with the city’s
general plan. The City Council has yet to consider the issue.
June 14: The Lifeguard Tower at Main Beach, a Laguna Beach icon,
was set to be rededicated in conjunction with the city’s 75th
anniversary, June 29.
City officials asked the public to help meet the new, much
stricter standards of National Discharge Elimination System Permit
regulations, designed to keep pollution out of the storm drains and
off the beaches. Sweep, don’t hose was the advice.
June 21: The City Council said thanks, but no thanks to $10
million of federal and county money to construct the flood control
channel project on Broadway. It was the second time the city had
pulled back from the brink of a project to control storm waters that
back up at Broadway and Beach Street, flooding the Downtown during
heavy rains.
June 28: A fire in Laguna Canyon alarmed the residents. The fire
began in almost the same spot as the 1993 fire storm that devastated
the town. Lessons learned then paid off. No homes lost this time.
Deputy City Manager Ken McLeod assumed the duties of fire chief
the next day. Before joining the City Hall staff, McLeod had held
high management positions with the Orange County Fire Authority.
Treasure Island got its third name change and fourth owner since
development as a resort was first proposed. A partnership of Montage
Hotels and Resorts, Athens Group and unnamed investors purchased the
30-acre oceanfront site for a reported $30 million and renamed it
Montage.
The City Council approved the 2002-03 budget, blending spending
proposals by Councilwoman Kinsman and Councilman Freeman, predicated
on increases in the parking meter fees to $1.50 per hour.
July 5: A newly installed stoplight at Beach Street and Broadway
signaled gridlock. It was out of sync with nearby lights and allowed
only a couple of vehicles through on each cycle. “I couldn’t believe
it added half an hour to my drive from the Sawdust to Downtown,” said
Lynne Powell, Sawdust event coordinator. Those probably were the most
polite words anyone uttered about the signal. The city worked with
Caltrans to fix the timing problem.
July 12: Paper towels were blamed for two sewage spills. About 100
gallons of sewage made it to the sand on July 6 at Picnic Beach, but
not much got to the surf. A second spill was reported from the same
line two days later. Workers filled a five-gallon bucket with paper
towels. It was the first beach closure in Laguna since Dec. 17, 2001.
Different Drummer bookstore closed its doors after 15 years.
Aug. 2: Laguna Beach businessman Sadiq Tawfiq helped revive
Crossroads, a nonprofit group which plans to bolster the art and
culture of Afghanistan, Tawfiq’s native country.
Aug. 9: The Laguna Board of Realtors presented checks to Laguna
Shanti, First Thursday Art Walk, Laguna Beach High School Scholarship
Foundation and a Youth Shelter program, proceeds from A Taste of
Charity, one of the board’s annual fund-raisers.
Aug. 16: South Coast Medical Center’s emergency department was
recognized as No. 1 in patient satisfaction by the California
Emergency Physician’s Medical Group.
Red Flag picked up another 25 recruits ready to help make Laguna
Beach more fire resistant. Trained Red Flag volunteers patrol
whenever the fire department declares conditions are ripe for fires.
The Planning Commission gave unanimous support to rules designed
to protect neighborhood character and reduce the effect of
“mansionization,” a catch-all phrase for structures that stick out
like a sore thumb. The commission recommendations were to be
forwarded to the council for approval.
Aug. 23: Residents learned that Mc Calla’s Pharmacy and
Generations on Forest Avenue probably would have to move to make way
for proposed expansion of Hobie’s. McCalla’s had operated at the same
location for almost 45 years.
Aug. 30: An Environmental Impact Report supported conversion of
the El Morro Village mobile home park to public camping grounds and
park. The state has owned the land since 1979. Sept. 6: Laguna Beach
High School students voted to change the school mascot from Artists
to Breakers. Some alumni called the decision wimpy and an ill-advised
break with tradition. The school’s first teams had been the Breakers.
A second vote confirmed the change. A compromise was eventually
reached to use the Breakers for athletic teams and leave the Artists
name for other functions.
Sept. 13: Sept. 20: Wildlife advocate Jane Goodall made a visit to Laguna
Beach to help raise funds for the Cougar Fund and the Jane Goodall
Institute. “I think it went really well,” Goodall told Coastline
Pilot reporter Suzie Harrison. “It was a wonderful atmosphere, and
people clearly enjoyed themselves. They stayed for hours.” Local
writer and filmmaker Cara Shea Blessley started the Cougar Fund.
Sept. 27: The City Council hammered “mansionization,” endorsing
Planning Commission recommendations to protect the integrity of
neighborhood character with architectural designs that fit, both in
size and appearance.
Oct. 4: Laguna Beach was off to the races. Bicycle racing fans
loved the first Laguna Beach Rotary Grand Prix, pronounced grahn pree
by racing aficionados, but the Downtown business people hated it.
Streets were closed most of the day and customers were almost
nonexistent.
The Council trimmed the Planning Commission recommendations to
forgo a hedge ordinance, voting 4-0 to put limits on the heights.
Local election campaign contribution limits were rescinded after
the Lincoln Club successfully challenged a similar law in another
Orange County community.
Oct. 11: A second federal grant to repair the city’s sewers was
awarded to Laguna Beach, again assisted by Congressman Cox. The
Environmental Protection Agency grant put another $700,000 in the
city coffers, followed by an EPA order to the city to create a
strategic plan to end spills and implement the grease control
ordinance.
Oct. 25: A lone burglar shot and wounded a store clerk and a
police officer Oct. 23 on South Coast Highway before he was killed by
a barrage of police gun fire.
The 10th annual “Lagunatics” tickled the audience and actors it
lampooned, proving again that Laguna folks take their causes
seriously, but not themselves. Bree Burgess Rosen founded
“Lagunatics” and its offshoot, No Square Theatre.
Nov. 1: Members of the City Council and staff were subpoenaed to
testify before the Orange County Grand Jury, presumably about
then-Mayor Baglin’s acceptance of a commission n the sale of property
to the city, although the subpoenas did not so state.
Nov. 8: Less than 400 votes separated top vote-getter Iseman in
the City Council race from the fourth-place finisher, O’Neal.
Incumbent Dicterow and community activist Pearson also got the nod.
Betsy Jenkins was the only newcomer elected to the school board.
She came in third behind incumbents Robert Whalen and K Turner. Susan
Mas retired from the board after 15 years.
The Orange County Grand Jury voted to indict then-Mayor Baglin on
charges of violating state code 1090, which prohibits elected
officials from profiting by doing business with the government they
represent.
Nov. 15: The Laguna Beach Club for Kids -- more often called TLC
-- celebrated its 30 anniversary. It began as the Girls Club when
there were separate clubs in town for boys and girls.
A spill closed a portion of Victoria Beach on Nov. 11. An
estimated 20-to-50 gallons of sewage hit the surf line, due to a
blocked lateral from a private residence. South Coast Water District
services the area.
Nov. 29: Business owners successfully protested permit fees for
signs that already were in place and in compliance with the recently
revised ordinance.
“Norwalk virus” hit 93 Thurston Middle School students on a field
trip to Catalina. The county Health Care Agency investigated.
Dec. 6: Santa Claus came to town for Hospitality Night, riding in
the city’s venerable Seagraves fire engine, driven by retiring Capt.
Eugene D’Isabella. Hospitality Night is sponsored by the city and the
Chamber of Commerce. It is the biggest, and many say, the best party
of the year.
In one of his final acts as mayor, Baglin signed the lease
agreement with the Festival of Arts on Dec. 3 before handing the
mayor’s gavel to Iseman. The lease was signed by all of the festival
board of directors and council members, including Councilman Freeman,
before he officially retired, to be replaced by Elizabeth Pearson.
Dec. 13: Councilman Baglin was arraigned on six counts of felony
conflict of interest. Deputy District Atty. Jeff Winter said Baglin
was warned not to the take the commission on the sale he brokered of
two pieces of property to the city. Baglin pleaded innocent.
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