ACT V is fine place for...
ACT V is fine place for city yard
(Re: “Should the city corporation yard be moved to ACT V?”
Coastline Pilot, Dec. 20)
Absolutely. That was the recommendation of the 1996 report, and the site is logical for a corporation yard. As I recall, when Wayne
Peterson was on the council, he stated that he had inspected every
possible location for it and only ACT V met any sensible criteria.
Bastardizing the Village Entrance by enclosing the corporation
yard inside it is silly, a poor use of some of the most valuable land
in Laguna. Even with the corporation yard, ACT V still has room for
200 of the park-and-ride cars.
I hope the council will follow the recommendations of the 1996
task force and finally vote to demand that the city manager contract
out many services now performed at the corporation yard and move the
rest to ACT V.
TOM AHERN
Owner, Latitude 33 Bookshop
in Laguna Beach
Newport Beach resident
Previous decision was the right one
(Re: “Should the city ask for county funds for a flood control
project on Broadway?” Coastline Pilot, Dec. 20)
The Laguna Beach City Council Meeting this week (Dec. 17)
addressed the issue once again of the Broadway Flood Control Project.
Approximately six months previously, the council voted to abandon a
plan that was about 10 years in the making to replace the old flood
control channel with a new underground conduit to carry run-off and
flood waters from the surrounding hillsides and the canyon under
Broadway to the sea at Main Beach.
The county of Orange and the Army Corps of Engineers were to carry
out the lion’s share of the project. The costs were to be shared, and
Laguna would be obliged to come up with around $2 million of the $10
million cost. Construction was projected to take a full year. Much of
that time would have involved around-the-clock construction along the
major thoroughfares including most of Broadway and much of downtown
Coast Highway.
Several traffic studies were conducted anticipating alternative
flows and redirection during construction. They envisioned, among
other things, diverting traffic onto Main Beach Park over a temporary
by-pass and having traffic flow through one lane on Broadway over
steel plates used to cover a portion of the 16-foot-wide ditch into
which the new eight-foot diameter storm drain pipe would go. Needless
to point out, there would be virtually no parking available anywhere
near the construction site.
Why it was turned down before?
Several environmental concerns were put forward raising serious
objections to the project. Main Beach as the recipient or depository
of significant volumes of floodwaters through a single huge outfall
would most certainly result in extensive beach erosion and major sand
loss. Arguably more urgent is the issue of the contaminated dirt and
sand under the pavement in and around the intersection of Coast
Highway and Broadway.
Leaky gasoline storage tanks from the service stations that have
occupied that corner off and on for over 50 years have created a
critical situation, one that under California law, the city will be
liable for once the site is unearthed. This contaminated dirt is
considered hazardous material and must be carefully transported and
disposed of at significant expense. Even getting rid of the “clean
dirt” isn’t going to be a routine task.
It was suggested dumping it in the canyon, perhaps at the ACT V
site. But that might make the flooding and run off problems during
storms more acute, since creating berms and levies with this dirt
might intensify run-off problems.
Why can’t we live with manageable levels of flooding?
I have barely touched on only the most obvious possible problems
the town can expect in connection with the Broadway Flood Control
Channel. Surfrider Foundation and the Waste Water Advisory Committee
offered testimony to the City Council six months ago and the then
council was convinced the cure was worse than the disease.
After this week’s council meeting, by a 4 to 1 vote (Iseman
against), new life has been breathed into the project. In spite of
the hand wringing by the council members ... that “something must be
done,” ... I question the wisdom of a such a large-scale undertaking
to deal with the reality of periodic flooding in Downtown Laguna.
There currently exist a culvert that carries floodwaters through
town to the beach. Where it goes underground at Wild Oats’ parking
lot, it has a carrying capacity of approximately one-third of that
required to carry all the volume that comes into town via the canyon
channel. The funneling causes overflow and the volume that doesn’t
fit into the underground pipe plumes and gushes over flooding the
Downtown business district. In some sense, it may be preferable to
have this excess volume of floodwater dispersed onto the city streets
and through the network of storm drains rather than all be dumped at
a single outfall at Main Beach.
In the past 25 years, there have been some fairly serious episodes
involving property damage and loss of business attributable to
flooding. But various measures have been taken to reduce the severity
of these incidents, and they have succeeded in abating more dire
consequences. Today, virtually all the shops and businesses in the
Downtown have been outfitted with hatches blockading floodwaters from
invading their interiors. What is more, city crews are now
experienced and efficient at removing water, silt and debris from
streets and sidewalks and business closures have not exceeded two
days in recent memory.
More needs to be done, but at what cost in terms of inconvenience
and disruption of daily life, not to mention several cans of worms
opened in connection with a mega project of the scale being
contemplated? Clearly, the existing culvert could be remodeled. Both
its structural integrity and carrying capacity need to be enhanced.
Conservation crews could cut in catch basins, and more seeding could
be carried out to enlarge the watershed in the canyon. All of these
efforts would still leave us with some periodic flooding. Can this
town learn to live with some manageable levels of flooding? I believe
we can.
Let nature take its course
California naturalist and poet Wallace Stegner eloquently reminded
his readers on numerous occasions that the natural environment of
Southern California is a desert. We shouldn’t try to transform its
fundamental character.
Draught, brush fires, flooding and mudslides are inevitable. The
capacity of this ecosystem to absorb heavy periodic rains or El
Nino’s is grossly inadequate. Stegner argued we should not try to
constantly tame or engineer nature in a never-ending effort to make
it more conforming and hospitable to our needs and preferences.
Instead, people need to adapt to their natural environment. We should
let nature take its course to as great an extent as possible.
Sometimes nature will inconvenience us. It should. After all, we are
nature’s servant, and not the other way around.
TED CALDWELL
Member, Waste Water
Advisory Committee
Laguna Beach
Flood control project is fiscal black hole
Laguna Beach residents won’t require a trip to Mt. Palomar
Observatory for a glimpse of a black hole. Instead of gazing upward,
taxpayers’ attention can be focused down on the possible monetary
fiasco (event horizon) of the proposed Laguna Canyon Flood Control
project.
A brief history is this: With Orange County Flood and the U.S.
Corps of Engineers taking the lead, an Environmental Impact Report
necessitated by the California Environmental Quality Act was drafted.
Reading this 4-inch thick document was a task for only the
hermetically initiated -- these things are lengthy
bureaucratic/scientific equivalents of “War and Peace.”
Unfortunately, it only allowed for a pitiful (by industry standards)
10-year event flood protection, whereas categorically all others are
mandated to provide a minimum of 50-year event protection or greater.
Three items contained within this report were alarming:
(1) The extensive petroleum by-products permeating the aquifer
beneath the junction of Coast Highway and Broadway as reported in the
report. Extending up to Laguna Beach City Hall, numerous water
quality samples pointed to several possible sources. At Main Beach,
the finger (as in the middle one) was directed toward the Exxon-Mobil
station as the dominant, but not singular, contributor and culprit.
But high concentrations of benzene and company at two other sites
(Beach and Broadway plus Forest Avenue and Broadway) led to this
startling revelation: (a) Historical records indicated that the GTE
annex failed to prove remediation after removing a former
10,000-gallon diesel storage tank in their basement; and (b) Perhaps
the city yard storage tank, coupled with infiltrated residues from
the vehicular maintenance yard, had polluted upstream near city
offices.
(2) The erosive effects on the sand at Main Beach would give us
our own grand canyon during and post rainy events. Also, a hazardous
and potentially negligent condition due to: (a) the lowering of the
outfall approximate 6 to 7 feet; plus (b) increased flow volumes.
Instead of dispersing these capacities equally to several sites, all
runoff would emerge similar to a high-pressure blasting machine. The
shoreline sand replenishment, in a section already starved, might
never occur. This could wipe out the boardwalk, as well as eliminate
our “window to the sea” and its athletic facilities. Not to mention
alter the natural off-shore parallel transport of creek mouth
deposits.
(3) Noting the enormous volumes of polluted soil and water, in the
environmental impact report the San Diego Water Quality Control Board
mandated separate National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System
permits for the (a) pumping of said contaminated water to
infrastructure leading to a wastewater facility, prohibiting the
accidental (illegal) dumping into the receiving waters of the Pacific
Ocean; and (b) the temporary storage of contaminated sediment and
soil at ACT V parking lot. Also, the lot needed to be used
exclusively for staging of heavy equipment.
The roll of the dice is this: As confirmed by the Laguna Beach
city attorney during discussion of this flawed project’s
resurrection, remediation (cleanup) comes out of the pocket of the
agency who breaks ground -- us. You and me. Once started, we must
complete it. The cost cannot be determined until we finish digging.
Furthermore, planned during several off-seasons (meaning rain is
possible), it could result in many more watery incursions during
construction. As fast as we pump and carry off soil, Mother Nature
and El Nino could provide a free refill and redistribution. Removal
and relocation of hazardous material is problematic, not to mention
expensive. ACT V, already being coveted for other uses, might be tied
up indefinitely. Fines (assessed civil liabilities) by the
Environmental Protection Agency for breaches of the permits are
another consideration.
Councilwoman Cheryl Kinsman, a self-described bean counter
(accountant), has wrapped herself in the flag of “financial realism”
since running for office. What kind of Twilight Zone thinking results
in this inevitable black hole of fiscal Russian roulette? If the
eventual cost for this city, now at $2 million, swells out of our
control who will bail us out? Already over-burdened taxpayers are
wading into precarious waters, when only the subterranean section
from Beach Street to the boardwalk needs attenuation. Enhance this
culvert, yes, but without polluted aquifer intrusion. Let the city of
Laguna Beach be the lead agency, tailoring the project to our
monetary ability and actual needs. Taking the county’s and the corps
of engineer’s money upfront is like accepting a nickel for something
which might eventually cost us a dollar. This is irresponsible
gambling with city funds. Now that’s realism.
ROGER VON BUTOW
Founder and chairman Clean
Water Now! Coalition;
Founder and board member
of South Orange County
Watershed Conservancy
Laguna Beach
Baglin’s actions were not conflict of interest
In regard to the matter of Wayne Baglin: Is every individual who
gains office expected to give up their livelihood? Wayne was only
conducting his normal business.
He didn’t vote on the issue when it came to the city, nor did he
participate in council discussions of the matter. He did not seek out
the Hatfields as an agent -- they sought him.
I therefore see no conflict of interest in the councilman
conducting his normal business.
ALAN R. FITZSIMONS
Laguna Beach
Not guilty plea is insult to community
Anyone unwise enough to act as obviously inappropriately as
Councilman Wayne Baglin did in taking a $30,000 commission on a sale
to the city while being a councilman certainly would compound the
offense by pleading “not guilty” and also insults the intelligence of
the community.
Admitting his mistake might go a lot further with the court and
also save him some legal fees, which I certainly hope are not being
picked up by the city.
ANDY WING
Laguna Beach
The low down on Hospitality Night
* In the Dec. 13 issue of the Coastline Pilot, the community was
asked if anyone knew the origin of Hospitality Night. Barbara
Diamond’s column suggested Harry Lawrence might know the answer. The
following is his welcome response:
From my Chamber of Commerce files on the subject, the date could
be December 1952. I headed the Christmas Spirit Committee Seven
Points program, dedicated to the children of Laguna and the true
spirit of Christmas for all in Laguna Beach.
The most important event about 3 p.m. began with the children in
holiday costume led by Santa Claus and the elves up Forest Avenue
past City Hall with its holiday-lit Pepper Tree and the large
religious Cresh set below. Then down to Ocean Avenue to the South
Coast Theater, which was donated to us for the afternoon by owner
Goldberg. Entrance for parents and children was with food cans or
toys for the poor. Inside was entertainment with Santa Claus as host
and finally those costumed children crossed the stage to be judged
and awarded prizes.
After Thanksgiving, homes and businesses were encouraged to string
Christmas colored lights and decorative creations that represent the
theme. The homes on the hillside actually became a blaze of color.
Judged evaluated homes and businesses in keeping with the spirit of
Christmas, and winners were given certificates.
Downtown, with the help of merchant funding and the city hung
tinsel and colored lighting across city streets.
Merchants’ windows Downtown and up and down Coast Highway were
judged as to the theme, and winners were given certificates.
All service clubs were encouraged to bring food or toys to a
central building and give gift baskets. Rotary Club alone delivered
24 large baskets to needy homes on Christmas Eve.
So the Coast Highway was not neglected, the idea of the Christmas
theme was painted on large artist pallets of wood to be hung on lamp
posts, which was the work of sign painter Earl Secor and his wife and
underwritten by the Pottery Shack and Warren Imports. It was to be
expanded each year until pallets reached the Art Center in the south
and Boat Canyon in the north.
At that time, Laguna Beach was a member of the Coastal City Assn.,
San Clemente to Seal Beach, and for three years in a row, Laguna
Beach won the top award for the best Christmas presentations.
HARRY J. LAWRENCE
Laguna Beach
* Editor’s note: Thank you Harry!
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