County approves ACT V development
Barbara Diamond
The county Planning Commission voted 4 to 1 Wednesday to approve a
coastal development permit for the relocation of the city corporation
yard to the Laguna Canyon parcel known as ACT V.
Testimony at the hearing about the Coastal Commission’s stand on
the permit process, recently made public, deepened the rift on the
council to a chasm.
A letter from the California Coastal Commission dated April 21
notified the county that the staff regards the permit as appealable
to the commission. A similar letter was sent to the city’s Community
Development Department. County, and city officials dispute that.
“We got the letter Wednesday morning,” City Manager Ken Frank
said, “but I had received a fax Tuesday afternoon that the letter was
coming.”
Based on the fax, the City Council on Tuesday voted 3 to 2 to hire
specialized legal council to look into issues raised by the coastal
commission.
Councilman Wayne Baglin and Mayor Toni Iseman, a longtime opponent
of the relocation to ACT V, opposed hiring an attorney.
Frank said he gave copies of the letter to Iseman, Baglin and
Councilwomen Elizabeth Pearson and Cheryl Kinsman at the county
Planning Commission meeting on Wednesday, which all four attended.
“No one on the council had seen this letter from the Coastal
Commission when they voted to hire an attorney to oppose commission
review of the project,” Iseman said after the meeting.
She had testified to that, identifying herself as a member of the
commission.
“I was the next speaker,” Kinsman said Thursday. “I said, to my
best recollection, that I wasn’t going to say anything, but since she
mentioned she was on the coastal commission and had received that
letter only this morning that I would leave it up to the county
commissioners to draw their own conclusions.”
Observers at the hearing interpreted Kinsman’s statement as an
implication that Iseman had prior knowledge of the coastal
commission’s action and possibly influenced it.
“The commission did not take this action at my request or on my
behest,” Iseman said. “They don’t take orders from me.”
Iseman wants an apology from Kinsman.
The Coastal commission staff advised the county and the city that
any development of the site that had taken place without provable
notification to the commission was done without a valid permit,
because the commission had no record of being notified when the
original permit was approved by the county several years ago. Grading
and alterations to a blue stream line were done before the City
Council decided not to move the corporation yard to ACT -- a decision
now reversed.
“We had the approval of the county, state Fish and Game, the Army
Corps of Engineers and the Regional Water Quality Board,” Frank said.
The letter also contended that any reduction in parking at ACT V
requires an amendment to the city’s local coastal plan.
“I’ve been saying that for 10 years,” said Laguna Canyon
Conservancy President Carolyn Wood, a member of the city’s Parking,
Traffic and Circulation Committee.
Frank expects the county approval on Wednesday to stand. The
permit is for four years.
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