Diamond Street parking woes continue
Residents in the 200 block of Diamond Street asked the City Council
on Tuesday to do something about the construction crews that have
been congregating outside their homes before 7 a.m. for the last 10
months.
Construction crews aren’t allowed to begin working before 7 a.m.
in Laguna Beach, and the 300 block of Diamond Street has a variance
that doesn’t allow the trucks to park there before work can begin.
Residents in the 200 block said the workers have simply moved down
the street to do their waiting, being noisy and disrupting the area
as early as 5:30 a.m.
“In the last 10 months, we’ve had the peace and tranquillity in
our neighborhood taken away from us,” Ron Gill said. “They use foul
language, they leave their 10-wheel trucks running, polluting our
neighborhood and blocking our driveways.”
Gill presented the council with a petition signed by his neighbors
asking that their block be added to the plan that doesn’t allow
trucks to park in front of their homes in the morning.
Traffic Sgt. Jason Kravetz said he wouldn’t have a problem adding
the 200 block to the Diamond/Crestview restricted parking plan, but
suspected the workers would just find another street.
“The concern is that this problem will be displaced somewhere
else,” Kravetz said. “Signage would also have to be added on Diamond,
and they aren’t the most attractive signs, and enforcement’s
difficult because different people are working down there every day.”
City Manager Ken Frank said he and city staff would look at the
neighbors’ petition, listen to their concerns and report some options
back to the council.
“We’re merely asking that someone offer another alternative to
these trucks parking in front of our homes,” Gill said.
-- Mike Swanson
Playhouse gets new lease on theater life
The City Council unanimously approved a 40-year extension of the
Laguna Playhouse’s lease of the Moulton Theatre at its Tuesday
meeting.
The lease expired June 30, 2000, but at the request of the
council, the Playhouse delayed negotiations until summer 2003. The
Moulton Theatre, which opened in 1969, was built with private funds
raised by the Laguna Playhouse on land obtained by the city from the
Irvine Co.
Under the terms of its lease, the Laguna Playhouse pays the city
$8,500 per year, adjusted annually for inflation. The Playhouse bears
all costs of operating and maintaining the facility, which is
comprised of two parcels -- the theater and the parking lot.
According to the terms of the lease, use of the parking lot is
ceded to the Festival of Arts during the summer for cast members of
the Pageant of the Masters. The new lease will expire June 30, 2043.
The Moulton Theatre is at 606 Laguna Canyon Road.
Analyst to discuss the ongoing conflict in Iraq
The Laguna Beach Peace Vigil will sponsor a discussion led by an
independent Iraqi analyst at 7 p.m. Wednesday at the Neighborhood
Congregational Church.
The discussion will focus on the history of the United States’
conflict with Iraq. Mark Gery, a member of the Education for Peace in
Iraq Center in Washington, D.C., will facilitate discussion.
Gery is writing a book called “Desert Nightmare: America’s
Historic Conflict with Saddam Hussein’s Iraq.”
The Neighborhood Congregational Church is at 340 St. Ann’s Drive.
For more information, call (949) 499-3190.
Change battery along with clocks
Don’t forget to change your clocks, and the Fire Department
suggests that while you’re at it change the battery in your smoke
alarm.
The early notification of the sounding alarm gives you the time to
escape, since smoke alarms can cut your risk of dying in a home fire
nearly in half. A typical living-room fire can threaten the entire
house in just a few minutes, producing life-threatening conditions
throughout the house in less than two minutes after the alarm sounds.
Smoke alarms should be cleaned at least once a year, tested
monthly and batteries should never be “borrowed” to use someplace
else.
The Fire Department suggests that you change your battery twice a
year. A great time to change your battery is when you set your clock
back in the fall and again when you set it forward in the spring.
This year, daylight-savings time ends on Sunday, and clocks will
be set back on that day at 2 a.m.
For more information on Fire Safety or Emergency Preparedness,
contact (949) 497-0700.
Calvary Church hosting festival on Halloween
Calvary Evangelical Free Church will host a Halloween “Ball” at
Fellowship Hall.
There will be a Harvest Festival with refreshments, a square dance
exhibition and dancing.
The event for all ages will begin at 5 p.m. Oct. 31. The
exhibition will begin at 6 p.m. Fellowship Hall is at 486 Legion St.
For more information, call (949) 494-6191.
Festival of Arts board candidates to speak
Village Laguna will host an event for candidates of the Festival
of Arts Board of Directors to speak.
The membership meeting will be at 7 p.m. Monday in the Wells Fargo
Community Room, 260 Ocean Ave.
The seven candidates vying for three open seats are Paul Goldie,
Richard Hawthorne, Anita Mangels, John Hoover, Bruce Rasner, Carolyn
Reynolds and David Young. They will be asked to share their
philosophies and visions for the future of the festival.
The public is invited, and refreshments will be served. For more
information, call (949) 499-4809.
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