It’s time for Rasner to resign As...
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It’s time for Rasner to resign
As six former members of the Festival of Arts Board of Directors,
we have written a letter to board President Bruce Rasner formally
requesting his immediate resignation.
We made this request because the 40-year lease Rasner negotiated
with the city of Laguna Beach does not provide sufficient funds to
maintain the Festival of Arts/Pageant of the Masters facilities
during the term of the lease and because Rasner is taking the
unprecedented step of relinquishing control over the Pageant of the
Masters by signing a licensing agreement with the ICM talent agency.
We-along with Festival of Arts/Pageant of Masters artists,
members, patrons, and volunteers with whom we are in contact-are
convinced that this festival board failed during its protracted lease
negotiations to protect the financial integrity and to ensure the
long-term viability of the Festival of Arts and Pageant of the
Masters.
We are concerned that, to make up for this failure, Rasner and
four other members of the board have secretly negotiated a sellout
that will compromise the pageant’s character and dilute its impact by
staging it in multiple locations.
We fear that Rasner’s ill-advised actions have jeopardized the
very existence of the Festival of Arts and Pageant of the Masters, to
which we, collectively, have given more than 100 years of our lives.
RICHARD BIANCHINO
SHERRI M. BUTTERFIELD
PHILIP FREEMAN
ROARK GOURLEY
ROBERT DONALD MATTHEWS
VERN SPITALERI
Laguna Beach
Bigger isn’t necessarily better
Laguna Beach is proud to be the home of the Festival of Arts and
the Pageant of the Masters. They are very much responsible for
putting Laguna Beach on the world map.
Many of us supported the recent efforts to save the Festival of
Arts, and prevent the then Festival President and Mission Viejo Mayor
Sherri Butterfield from moving our cultural resource to San Clemente.
It seems that we need to be concerned again. If I read correctly, the
new board is now exploring franchising the Pageant of the Masters.
While saying how wonderful Laguna Beach is, many people move here
and then pursue plans to make things bigger and bigger. I am sure
that they genuinely believe that bigger is always better, but it is
not.
We thank Bruce Rasner for his leadership in helping to save the
Festival of Arts. However, I am concerned when Festival of Arts
President and Laguna Niguel resident Bruce Rasner hired an
out-of-town executive director for big bucks it typically means
generating new and big ideas.
Unfortunately, many of these ideas are consistent with Laguna
values.
Franchising the Pageant of Masters and giving festival booths to
celebrity artists are big ideas that likely will make more money in
the short run.
However, I believe that artists earning booths by submitting their
works to be juried has served the Festival of Arts very well. Those
who tamper with a venerable institution may make more money, but
while significantly diminishing it.
GENE FELDER
Laguna Beach
We don’t need another power board
Do we have another power board? Do we have members who want power
and prestige at the cost of our time-honored Festival of Arts and
Pageant of the Masters? Do they understand the definition of the word
unique?
Most artists understand the word and the image of unique. For
those who don’t, it is an object, a piece of art, a person, that is
one of a kind. There are a few other definitions of this sort: an
edition of, and then the number of editions. When the editions become
many, the piece is certainly not unique any more. The pageant should
not become an edition of any number.
Our pageant is unique to Laguna Beach. If it becomes a traveling
circus (of sorts) it will no longer be unique.
This board may be unique in its own way but not the uniqueness we
want and need here.
As for Jane Seymour, it isn’t proper for us to be angry with her.
The Festival of Arts board made the arrangements to have her exhibit
on the grounds, not she. No doubt she wishes she had been elsewhere
and regrets her involvement.
Let’s get back to the basics of the Festival of Arts and the
Pageant of the Masters, while exhibiting art and having a unique show
seen nowhere else in the world
NANCY TARZIAN
Laguna Beach
Instead of endorsing the actions of Executive Director Steve
Brezzo, the Festival of Arts and Pageant of the Masters board members
should rein in proposals that have an adverse impact on these unique
Laguna Beach institutions.
The franchising plans for the pageant and the showing of nonjuried
paintings by Jane Seymour at the festival are examples of
inappropriate and inadvisable actions.
The new 40-year city / festival contract was designed to provide
funds for needed capital improvements and ensure financial success.
No additional revenue sources should be needed.
KEN ANDERSON
Laguna Beach
Help save the arts in California
The California Arts Council is the state agency that provides
support to arts and culture in California. The council is on the
brink of elimination.
The proposed abolition of the California Arts Council is part of
the legislative budget proposal. The council has never been in such a
dangerous position and legislators need to hear from you that the
arts are a vital part of California’s cultural and economic
well-being.
Elimination of the council or a severe reduction in state arts
funding will affect all disciplines -- from dance to visual art,
theater, film, folk art, literature, music and arts in education,
cutting or eliminating programs and performances that impact hundreds
of thousands of school children, youth-at-risk, the elderly, and
ordinary Californians throughout the state.
More than 850,000 students and teachers in 4,920 schools will lose
arts programming if California is the first state in the nation to
eliminate public funding to the arts. The budget of the Arts Council
is less than three one hundredths of 1% of the overall state budget.
Contact your local elected representatives. You may also wish to
e-mail them and key legislative officials by accessing this Web site:
https://econstituent. votenet.com/vh1.
RICHARD STEIN
Executive Director
The Laguna Playhouse
Column missed timing on recall
Wow, I just returned from Sicily and was rather surprised that you
would have Cherril Doty write a rather long article against the
recall without a rebuttal article. Let us hope that the Los Angeles
Times-owned Coastline Pilot in Laguna Beach, will not become the
“Left” Times of Laguna Beach.
I personally have many problems with the recall, which I heard is
true of many of the President Bush people in California and the White
House but, the Doty article was way over to one side of the issue.
To start her article with, “OK. I don’t get it.” Should have put
the radar out that if the writer doesn’t get it and states the fact
in the opening sentence, it is probably best for the Coastline to ask
her to write on another topic.
“Politics isn’t my thing;” “I did not and would not vote for him
(Gov. Gray Davis)”
The art of compromise is the ability to have positive “Muse” in
your thoughts and deeds. Compromise is finding ways to get out of
this mess. However, there is a thing called being held responsible. I
would hope that in Cherril Doty there is some “Muse” that does hold
individuals, especially elected individuals, to some degree of
responsibility?
While many individuals want to see only “positive,” it was very
evident, a few years ago, that if the “muse” people had maybe been a
little bit responsible by speaking up and not saying anything, they
would have realized that the spending spree of irresponsible
legislators has now caused some of the following negative: major
increase in school tuition, cuts in school funding, a workers
compensation program that goes bankrupt in November, a loss of money
to pay single moms who need to put their children in day care so they
can work and get off welfare, continued borrowing of money which
means for five to 10 years, our state tax money will be paying for
this irresponsible spending rather than in projects that would make
our state a better, “positive” place to live. This list can go on and
on, but the reality is a very disturbing scenario for our future that
was caused by this reckless treatment of our tax dollars.
Maybe if we go back over the past few years, we can see that our
fiscal house was falling down but certain elected officials like the
governor, the leadership of the State Senate and the State Assembly
kept their fingers crossed that they could be bailed out IF the
economy turned around. Well, it hasn’t and they had no other ideas
except to raise taxes and put our children and grandchildren in a
debt situation. That means that our next generation will not enjoy
our wonderful state because the money will not be there to build the
positive. Instead, it will be paying the interest on debt this
generation is passing on to them. That is not positive. That is a
negative.
A positive attitude is accomplished when Americans use our
democracy to speak up before the negative occurs.
FRANK RICCHIAZZI
Laguna Beach
Council ignoring city codes
The City Council is encouraging anarchy -- “the absence of all
direct or coercive government as a political ideal and that proposes
the cooperative and voluntary association of individuals and groups
as the principal mode of organized society.”
Some concepts are a matter of perspective others are clearly
measurable and definitive. On June 17, four out of five City Council
members voted in direct opposition of the municipal codes when they
voted to uphold Design Review Board’s approval of the building
project at Mar Vista.
The council approved a house that contains more square footage
than City Hall, a pool larger than the Laguna Beach High School’s.
The Greenhouse? Larger than Haster Grove. The garage? Four to six
times the size on 90% of the homes in the surrounding community. This
is not just a large garage. The garage can accommodate 13
automobiles. There are two auto mechanics lifters and four auto
mechanic work areas and parking for another eight vehicles. This
makes the indoor automobile capacity larger than Franks Foreign Car
Dealership.
This is more than just neighborhood incompatibility. This is
approving an industrial site under the guise of a private residence.
This project isn’t compatible with any structure in this city,
commercial or residential. It is a dirty industrial site in an
environmentally sensitive area. Ten years ago, mitigation for this
site approved one dwelling. Not an automotive center, sports center
or agricultural center. Only the residential dwelling is exempt from
California Environmental Quality Act guidelines. The rest of the
project falls under the act, which has not been applied. The city is
going to make the residents of the community pay for the lack of
mitigation that would never be acceptable given today’s guidelines
and the knowledge we’ve gained in the course of the last decade.
Sometimes these laws are in place because they have purpose. The
residents expect their elected officials to uphold the laws and
maintain the foundation and integrity of this community. The property
owner expected the city to apply their knowledge and approve a course
that places them in the best position for which they can achieve the
best possible outcome from their project. The council let both
parties down.
We don’t have a bunch of miscellaneous habitats we can waste on
the City Council’s arbitrary inability to perform its elected job
duties. This project has major problems as is. If the council cannot
effectively work through these from within the framework it has been
given and accepted the responsibility for, it should move on down the
road and let someone else who is capable take the reins.
SHARON PAGET
Laguna Beach
Mar Vista appeal was as on time as possible
I am sadly disappointed in the decision, on June 17, by our City
Council to deny my appeal of the Design Review Boards approval of the
plans for the 18,000-plus square foot project in South Laguna. This
decision has done nothing to build my confidence in our City Council.
All council members considered this a “significant” development
that will have a major impact on the surrounding neighborhood. I’d
say so, considering that close to 14,600 cubic feet of earth will be
removed and over 1,000 trucks will have to cruise through our
neighborhood just to get it off site. For months our neighborhood
will be negatively impacted by construction alone. Not to forget --
compatibility, size and visual impacts.
All Design Review Board members had concerns as well but approved
the project despite them.
Councilmen Wayne Baglin and Steve Dicterow repeatedly vocalized
how problematic this project will be, but are willing to use it as an
experiment in handling the new National Pollutant Discharge
Elimination System Water Ordinances. Baglin does not want to feel he
has reneged on a deal made more than 10 years ago (with a prior
owner) dedicating open space. However, such a deal is actually an
open space required dedication, not a gift from property owner to
city. The area in question is zoned open space / conservation (the
most restrictive of the city’s open space zones), and is not
developable in any case. So the open space dedication that seemed to
have been Baglin’s reason for voting against my appeal is a
non-issue.
I was unfairly chastised for “appealing at the 11th hour” and for
not having voiced my concern at prior Design Review Board
proceedings. The travesty of the council’s decision sets a very
harmful precedent for preserving what’s left of the hillsides we
cherish in all of Laguna.
I think all of the council members, with the exception of Mayor
Toni Iseman, were asleep or could care less when neighbors and myself
expressed our numerous concerns.
I thank the mayor for showing us the respect for all of our
efforts and being the only one to truly show concern for our
community. She had the conscience to vote no on the castle
overlooking our fiefdom below.
ELIZABETH PHILLIPS
Laguna Beach
City Manager has got to go
A funny thing happened as I was picking up the local papers at the
post office. I met a man and we were in an instant agreement. City
Manager Ken Frank has got to go!
From reading the July 11 story in the Los Angeles Times, it would
seem that Councilman Wayne Baglin was duped by our city manager City
Atty. Phillip Kohn into thinking that he would have no conflict of
interest problems taking a commission representing his client in the
sale of the Third Street property because, he was assured, that he
would be protected when the city used the eminent domain procedure.
Guess what? They didn’t use eminent domain, and Baglin was left
holding an arrest warrant which must have been traumatic and became
expensive. I know the feeling, but that’s another story.
Baglin should know by now, after all these years, just who Ken
Frank is, and if he doesn’t and is that much of an innocent, what’s
he doing on council? I went on record years ago saying that Ken Frank
should move on. Frankly, I don’t want this Machiavellian character
running my town. It was nice to be affirmed that I was not alone. As
for Kohn? That’s another question?
If anything good could come out of this whole affair it would be
Frank’s retirement after 30-plus years. It’s time.
ANDY WING
Laguna Beach
The Coastline Pilot is eager to run your letters. If your letter
does not appear, it may be because of space restrictions, and the
letter will likely appear next week. If you would like to submit a
letter, write to us at P.O. Box 248, Laguna Beach, CA 92652; fax us
at 494-8979; or send e-mail to [email protected]. Please
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