Protesters out in force
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The handful of war protesters at Main Beach swelled to between 300
and 500 on Sunday, before a single rocket was fired in Iraq.
Now that the first salvo begun, the protesters face the dilemma of
protesting the war without undermining the soldiers, sailors and
marines that are fighting that war.
“I have faced that repeatedly, and my feeling has always been the
best way to support our boys and girls is to bring them home out of
harm’s way,” longtime antiwar activist Jeanie Bernstein said. “I am
an antiwar activist and a peace activist -- you can’t separate the
two.”
Bernstein is opposed to war, no exceptions.
“I was opposed to the Korean War, the Vietnam War and Desert
Storm,” she said.
But how does opposition affect the men and women who respond to
the call to fight those wars?
Laguna Beach insurance agent Patrick Freeman remembers coming home
to San Francisco after a year in the thick of battle in Vietnam. As a
soldier in daily combat from December 1966 to December 1977, Freeman
had heard little about protests against the conflict. He was
unprepared for the conflict he found at home.
“My wife picked me up, and we were driving through Haight Ashbury
when I saw people burning flags and draft cards, and I almost cried.”
Freeman said. “I felt betrayed.”
Times have changed, he said.
“I don’t think the protesters now will bother the military,”
Freeman said. “They are older, career military, not young idealistic
draftees. And the military has changed. It has to be more open with
its people than it was in Vietnam.”
War was different then.
“Wars now are over quickly,” Freeman said. “Vietnam went on too
long. In this case, we are going to get out as soon as we can.
“And the weapons used by Saddam against our military will prove
the justification for the war,” he said.
In the Vietnam era, those in military service didn’t need or get
proof, Freeman said. They believed in the country and they didn’t
question the call to duty or their obligation to follow orders.
“When you are there, you do what you gotta do,” Freeman said.
Raised and educated as a Catholic, a graduate of the Jesuit-run
University of San Francisco, Freeman believes in St. Thomas Aquinas’
10 principals of a just war.
“It’s absolutely the last thing you do,” Freeman said. “But if you
or your allies are threatened, you don’t hold anything back.
Unfortunately, some people will get killed.”
Freeman was an infantry captain in Vietnam. He saw 160 soldiers
under his command killed or maimed. They died, and he fought for the
rights that protesters are exercising when they demonstrate against
war, as unpalatable as many veterans find that.
“Protesters don’t bother me anymore, as long as they don’t
physically harm anyone else,” Freeman said. “That’s what I was
fighting for.”
Anti-war activist Bernstein expects the number of protesters
against the Iraq war to swell: that is what happened with Vietnam,
although not with Desert Storm.
“Desert Storm was over so quickly,” Bernstein said.
Some people will back off from protests, she said, because they
feel that once the military is engaged, they have to feel they are
there for a just cause.
“However, as time goes by, at least during Vietnam, oppositions
grows,” Bernstein said. “And there already was so much opposition
before this war.”
Bernstein was not among the demonstrators Sunday -- she was out of
town. But her longtime friend and antiwar cohort Eleanor Henry was
there.
“I didn’t have my clicker, but protesters were lined up 20 to 25
deep from the Ocean Avenue crossing to Broadway on Sunday,” Henry
said. “There were at least 500.”
Police estimated 300.
“I don’t expect the protests to be heard in Washington,” Henry
said. “The man [President Bush] is ‘deef.’”
Henry anticipated larger crowds of protesters since the war
started Wednesday. She planned to dress in black as a show of
solidarity with the women of Iraq and Kuwait for a gathering planned
for Thursday night.
“We had previously agreed to meet on the day after the terrible
day when the shooting started,” Jeanie Bernstein said. “Wednesday was
that terrible day.”
-- Barbara Diamond
Council puts traffic plan out to bid
Some say city officials put a whole lot of carts before the horse
Tuesday night.
The council voted 3 to 2 to award a $141,000 contract to
StudiOneEleven to refine the Village Entrance master plan; voted
unanimously to add highways to the five-hour parking limit of
commercial vehicles on city streets; and voted 3 to 2 to relocate the
corporation yard -- all projects that will affect or be affected by
traffic and parking availability.
Then, the council voted to adopt a request for proposals for the
preparation of a Downtown Specific Plan Area Traffic and Parking
Management Plan, to include a traffic study.
“None of those projects should have been approved until after the
traffic study is done,” said Carolyn Wood, former chair of the city’s
Parking, Traffic and Circulation Committee.
A proposal to establish a staging area for contractors at Big
Bend, which also would have an effect on traffic, was continued to a
future meeting. And relocating a proposed skate park to Big Bend was
referred to Caltrans for a safety appraisal.
Councilwoman Cheryl Kinsman presented the request for proposals
for the traffic management plan, which was received with kudos from
council members and interested community members.
“Now I understand why it took so long to prepare,” said Mayor Toni
Iseman, who pushed for a timeline that would allow the traffic study
to be undertaken this summer.
Kinsman said she wanted it to be right before she presented it.
She agreed that some projects should be delayed until the study is
completed. Not, however, the relocation of the corporation yard to
the ACT V lot, which she supported as member of the Village Entrance
Task Force while serving on the Planning Commission.
“That puts the cart before the horse,” said Laguna North spokesman
Don Knapp, who opposed moving the corporation yard.
“Not so long ago, I was an advocate of moving the yard,” Knapp
said. “But I saw the error of my ways last summer when peripheral
parking was proven successful.”
“We haven’t done the homework on the impact on traffic and
congestion downtown,” he said. “We need the traffic study first.”
Mayor Iseman and Councilman Wayne Baglin, who earlier in the
meeting was honored by the Laguna Canyon Foundation for his diligent
service to open space conservation, also opposed the relocation of
the corporation yard.
“We don’t have a consensus,” Baglin said. “We will spend $5
million and have an albatross in the canyon, where they are not
usually found, and asphalt all around City Hall with no money to do
anything about it.”
Councilman Steven Dicterow said the money might not be there and
might never be there.
“But at least we can get rid of the eyesore of the corporation
yard,” Dicterow said.
The council majority of Dicterow, Elizabeth Pearson and Kinsman
also are trying to get the project processed through the county. The
parcel has never been annexed by the city.
Councilman Steven Dicterow has asked staff to study the
feasibility of adding a parking structure to the project.
The only other development on that side of Laguna Canyon Road is
the Laguna School of Art and Design, which was built and landscaped
to blend into the canyon.
The cost estimate of $3.5 million to move the corporation yard may
be low, City Manager Ken Frank said. It was made several years ago.
Frank repeatedly refused to guess what the Village Entrance would
cost. Figures bandied about Tuesday ranged from $2 million to $20
million.
“We don’t have a good track record on costs,” Baglin said,
referring to Treasure Island Park, which began with an estimate of
$2.5 million and ended up costing $9 million.
No funding sources for the Village Entrance have been established.
“The way [the request for proposals] was written, it will work
concurrently with the design team of the Village Entrance,” Kinsman
said.
The notice inviting proposals will be released April 15. Proposals
will be due June 13 and a selection made by the council July 1, which
allows a high-summer traffic count, but also specifies commute and
Saturday traffic. No specific direction was given for off-season
traffic counts.
Phase One is to be completed by Nov. 15 and submitted for review.
The city has allocated $110,000 for the plan. That will pay for
only the first phase, which focuses on collecting data and on the
Village Entrance.
The completed traffic management plan might cost $400,000 to
$500,000, said Planning Commissioner Norm Grossman, who assisted
Kinsman in the preparation of the request for proposals.
Kinsman said her two-phase version is based on, but broadens, the
draft request document, approved Oct. 9 by the Planning Commission.
“Money is a very big consideration. That’s why it was split, and
also I wanted to work in the Village Entrance design,” Kinsman said.
“We have no estimate for Phase Two. It’s a huge amount and can’t be
done for the amount budgeted.”
Delino described the document as the most important item on the
council’s agenda Tuesday.
“Cheryl did a bang up job, and it has Freddy Talarico’s
fingerprints all over it,” Delino said.
He recommended adding to the document that the goals are to
promote residents’ access to and through Downtown and to promote the
economic sustainability of the Downtown businesses and the art
festivals.
The request for proposals was approved with the change suggested
by Delino and with the addition of the word “accidents” in the
direction for assessment of the pedestrian and vehicular Downtown
traffic.
Legion Street was correctly substituted for Park Avenue as the
southern boundary of the Downtown Specific Plan area.
-- Barbara Diamond
Council backs bid to protect shores
The combination of trampling hikers, animal-collecting high school
students and declining water quality is reportedly ruining the marine
habitat at Treasure Island.
To save the area, Coastal Resources Management Senior Marine
Biologist Rick Ware filed an application in November to the
California Coastal Commission nominating the Treasure Island
shoreline, including offshore waters, as a state marine park.
The City Council voted Tuesday to back Ware’s cause and take more
steps to proactively preserve the area.
“The council’s objective is protection and restoration of the
Treasure Island marine habitat,” Councilman Wayne Baglin said, “not a
record of its death.”
Ware is in his second year of a five-year, $500,000 city contract
to conduct an intensive study of Treasure Island’s environmental
progress, especially since the addition of the Montage Resort.
After a presentation by Ware detailing the diminishing growth of
marine life in the area, Baglin said he wasn’t happy.
“What I kept hearing here was that we’re going to have a five-year
study of ‘death of a reef,’” he said. “I see, after five years, we’re
going to be trying to restore it.”
In Baglin’s five-pronged motion concerning the council’s action,
he suggested the council first write a letter to Mary Nichols,
California secretary of state resources, explaining the problem and
asking how to protect a marine environment “on the verge of being
lost.”
He also said Montage Resort management must propose a public
education program and recommendations for enforcement against those
damaging the area to the council by May 30 for an implementation
program this summer.
The education program would be in collaboration with Ocean
Laguna’s TideWater Docent program.
Ware’s study hasn’t included monitoring the water quality in the
area, which Baglin said has to change in his motion, approved by
every member but Cheryl Kinsman.
“We’re paying him $500,000,” she said. “We can’t just spend all
our money on one little cove. What about the rest of Laguna Beach?”
The boundaries of the proposed marine park extend about 1,200 to
1,800 feet offshore and about 2,400 feet long, at a depth of 40 to 60
feet. Sandy beaches, intertidal zones and shallow reefs would be
protected.
Ware said most visitors to Treasure Island go straight to the
intertidal area and “trample right over animals and plants,” singling
out students on field trips as common culprits.
“After telling students for three or four days that they can’t
come down here,” Ware said, “they still come down. And their teachers
are still sending them down to collect animals off your reef here at
Treasure Island.”
He’s also seen sport-fishing from the reef and sport-fishing boats
come in from Dana Point.
Enforcing laws against such activity is currently in Marine
Safety’s hands.
“As far as citations go, the lifeguards do not have the
resources,” Chief of Marine Safety Mark Klosterman said. “We’ve
requested in the past, through the budget process, a more dedicated
marine officer. That’s just not a viable option, and therefore we’re
pursuing this docent program.”
The TideWater Docent program intends to have trained volunteers in
Laguna’s coves in time for the influx of spring field trips by
surrounding communities.
“The problem is not just Treasure Island,” Director of TideWater
Docents Fred Sattler said. “It’s all of our coves.”
Program members hope that by teaching children and adults about
what they’re destroying, they’ll think twice before they trample.
-- Mike Swanson
Councilman Baglin pleads not guilty
Councilman Wayne Baglin pleaded not guilty on March 14 to six
counts of felony conflict of interest.
A pre-trial was set for April 4, with a jury trial to begin May
19.
The Orange County district attorney filed the charges after the
Orange County Grand Jury voted to indict Baglin.
Baglin’s attorney said at the time that the case against Baglin
was politically motivated, but did not identify a particular person
or group.
The councilman is accused of violating state law 1090, which
prohibits an elected official or members of his family from
financially benefiting from a contract with the agency the official
represents.
Baglin, a real estate broker, accepted a $36,000 commission from
the sale to the city of two lots on Third Street he brokered for
clients while sitting on the council. The clients paid the
commission.
Baglin did not vote on the sale, which would have been a violation
of the state’s political reform act and a separate violation.
-- Barbara Diamond
Council closer to sewer reconstruction
The City Council adopted a resolution approving the reconstruction
of seven miles of sewer pipes and 250 manholes at its Tuesday
meeting.
In addition to a $630,000 federal grant for sewer system
improvements, the staff is seeking a state grant and a low-interest
state loan for more improvements.
With help from the federal grant and the sewer fund, the city is
lining nearly nine miles of deteriorated pipes this fiscal year. The
remaining seven miles, plus the 250 manholes, are expected to be
rehabilitated over the next two or three years.
The state informed Laguna Beach that it would not enter into a
contract regarding low-interest funds, which would be necessary to
complete the improvements in two or three years, until it obtains
environmental approval.
-- Mike Swanson
Ebell Club to hold rummage sale
The Ebell Club of Laguna Beach will hold its annual rummage sale
from 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. on Saturday at the Boys and Girls Club of
Laguna Beach, 1085 Laguna Canyon Road.
All proceeds from the sale are donated to fund local philanthropic
organizations.
Donations were made last year to the Boys and Girls Club, TLC,
Brandy’s Friends, the Laguna Chamber Music Society, the Thruston
Graduation Scholarship Fund, La Playa, the Skipper Carillo
Scholarship and the Laguna Beach High School scholarships.
-- Barbara Diamond
‘Only in Laguna’ ready to role
The fourth annual “Only in Laguna” fashion show is set for
Thursday at Tivoli Too.
The show will feature Laguna’s political and civic leaders
modeling fashion wear from local clothing boutiques. The proceeds
will benefit the Laguna Beach Community Clinic and the not-for-profit
No Square Theatre.
This year’s theme is “The Wonderful World of Real Estate.” The
event will take place from noon to 2 p.m. at Tivoli Too, 777 Laguna
Canyon Road. Tickets are $32, which includes lunch. Advance tickets
may be purchased at the Laguna Board of Realtors office, 939
Glenneyre St., or limited tickets may be purchased at the door. For
information, call 497-2474.
Village Laguna to host spring Potluck
Village Laguna will host a Spring Equinox Potluck Party to
celebrate of the arrival of spring. The event will feature fine wine
and delectable fare.
The public is invited to the party which will begin at 4 p.m.
Sunday at the home of Mary and Herb Rabe, 489 Pearl St., Laguna
Beach. Admission is $25 per person and can be paid at the door. For
reservations, call 494-4137 or send a check to Village Laguna, P.O.
Box 1309, Laguna Beach 92652.
Village Laguna is a nonprofit organization dedicated to preserving
and enhancing the unique village character of Laguna Beach. The group
has been actively involved in civic activities supporting numerous
causes.
Harpsichordist Eric Kinsley to perform
Laguna Beach Live! will present harpsichordist Eric Kinsley in a
free chamber music concert at the Laguna College of Art and Design.
Eric holds a doctorate of music from the Manhattan School of Music
and teaches at Southwestern Academy and California Lutheran
University. He has premiered works in Rome, New York and Los Angeles
and has received grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and
the New York Harpsichord Society. Works by Bach, Haydn, Scarlatti,
Aguila and Schrader will be presented, and Kinsley will give an
informative talk .
First Sundays is a free community program of art exhibits and
classical music concerts funded by the lodging establishments of
Laguna Beach, the Laguna College of Art and Design and contributions
from the audience. This concert is co-sponsored by the American Assn.
of University Women, Laguna Beach Branch.
The concert will be from 3 to 4:30 p.m. April 6. The College Art
Gallery opens at 2 p.m.
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