Beach plans awaiting final OK
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June Casagrande
Two new restroom buildings, a multipurpose building housing a
concession stand, some new landscaping and a slightly larger parking
lot are the main points of a plan to improve Corona del Mar State
Beach.
The City Council on Tuesday approved the concept for the
improvements, but the project still has a number of hurdles to clear
before it becomes definite. The Coastal Commission and several other
administrative bodies must approve the plans before the city will
start accepting bids on the project. Once they’ve picked a bidder,
the matter will return to the council one more time to approve the
contract that will finally make the first part of the project a done
deal.
“We’re not approving the project tonight. This is just to go
forward with the conceptual design,” Mayor Steve Bromberg told
audience members at Tuesday’s council meeting before the council cast
the 6-0 vote. Councilman Dick Nichols abstained because his home is
close to the project area.
Only about $2 million of the cost of the $2.5-million project is
in place. The plans approved Tuesday include suggestions to seek
further funding and ways to scale back the last phase of the project
in case that funding isn’t found. The project won’t use any general
fund money. The $2 million in place comes from the American Trader
Oil Spill Settlement Agreement funds and some state money. Additional
funding could come from state sources.
The plans have drawn opposition from some residents and from
Nichols. Some worry that a lifeguard structure on top of the
concession building would spoil the view. Some oppose the project
because it would reduce the amount of sand area by about 8,800 square
feet.
Fire Chief Tim Riley, whose department oversees lifeguards, said
that the lifeguard station would improve safety at the beach and that
it was designed to preserve views.
City staff say that the loss of sand area includes areas along the
parking lot where a wavy grass pattern will surround the lot under
the new plan.
“We were really responsive, I hope, to concerns about the views,”
Assistant City Manager Dave Kiff said.
Nichols and others have worried that the public has not been
brought into the process as well as they should have been. Though
supporters of the plan point out that there have been about 13 public
meetings on the matter, Nichols said that notification for at least
one community meeting was inadequate because only about 300 neighbors
of the project received mailers that the meeting would be held.
Staff members say that the city’s goal is to begin work by
September 2004 and to finish by March 2005.
The multipurpose building would house food concessions, a marine
life education center and an area where lifeguards could apply first
aid. The plans also call for removal of a blue storage facility now
on the site.
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
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