Creek restoration plan presented
Barbara Diamond
Experts said Tuesday that time, cooperation and money -- lots of
money -- will be needed to restore Laguna Canyon Creek to anywhere
near its full potential and natural beauty.
“We estimate $1.5 million for the whole project, but it can be
done in phases,” said city consultant Michelle Mattson of Aspen
Environmental Group.
Mattson laid out the results of a creek study commissioned by the
city and made recommendations at a meeting on Tuesday night at City
Hall. About 17 residents attended.
“This is a conceptual plan,” said Craig Justice, city senior
water-quality analyst. “There are a lot of ifs. We need a more
detailed plan and to decide what makes sense from a cost-effective
standpoint.”
It’s not just a matter of grading the creek banks or planting a
few oak or sycamore trees. The creek crosses public and private land
and is under several different jurisdictions.
The study area stretches from the Aliso/Wood canyons preserve on
the corner of El Toro and Laguna Canyon roads to the Bark Park,
divided into seven “reaches” on the inland side of Laguna Canyon Road
and one “off-site” project area across the road.
Reach 1 is the Aliso/Wood canyons preserve at the intersection of
El Toro and Laguna Canyon roads. Reach 2 is the Annaliese’s School
grounds. Reach 3 is the city-owned DeWitt property. Next is Reach 4,
the Sun Valley Neighborhood.
The off-site study area, which has streams that flood the highway,
is opposite Reaches 3 and 4. A swale would reduce the flooding,
consultant Mattson said.
However, the property is an Irvine Co. easement to the county and
is believed to be specifically and only for the widening of Laguna
Canyon Road.
The Canyon Club and U-Haul properties are included in Reach 5.
Reach 6 contains the privately owned Coastal Kennel and the
city-owned properties that house the Laguna Beach Animal Shelter and
the Friends of the Sea Lions Marine Mammal Center. Reach 7 is the
Bark Park and the Verizon parking lot.
“I am a Reach 4 resident, and I want it right now,” Olivia
Batchelder said. “I am saddened to see only two others here beside
myself who are residents. Some are resistant. It is important for the
city to take this study and do something so people can see that it
will work.”
Mattson said that Reaches 1, 3, 6 and 7 have the highest potential
based on the goals of the study.
“The DeWitt property would give the most bang for the buck,”
Mattson said. “The stream is shallow. There is a floodplain. We could
remove the exotic [non-native] plants and remove fill dumped by the
church in the 1960s.”
The Bark Park, in Reach 7, would be the least costly phase and
would show the community that restoration works, Mattson said. It has
no development. It’s big and flat and conducive to a classic
restoration, using photographs as a guide.
Clean Water Now! founder Roger von Butow said flood control could
be incorporated in the project by digging up the grounds and putting
in a subterranean retention basin.
Justice said reconfiguring the dog park is a good idea; however,
flood control was not one of the original goals of the study,
although Laguna Canyon residents would certainly like to see it
included in the project.
Goals of the study included habitat restoration, aesthetics and
beautification, public education, community participation and
pollution prevention.
“The long-term goals will take time and political will,” Justice
said.
That doesn’t preclude starting small volunteer restoration
projects, he said.
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