Council approves the view ordinance
Mike Swanson
Tree lovers battled view preservers Oct. 21 in yet another round of a
years-old debate centered on bringing a view preservation ordinance
to the city.
The City Council unenthusiastically voted 4-1 to pass the proposed
ordinance to a second reading, saying it was a step, but still not
where any of them wanted it to be.
The ordinance intends to create a process to establish view equity
that is binding and privately enforceable while preserving and
maintaining trees to the greatest extent possible.
One difference in the ordinance from the one submitted by the
Planning Commission in 1999 is the definition of hedge, which can now
be multiple trees that form generally dense vegetation.
Resident Ganka Brown’s preferred definition of hedge defines how
the view-preserving contingent feels about dense vegetation in Laguna
Beach.
“I’d like to change the definition of hedge to ‘weapons of mass
destruction,’” Brown said.
Gary Meredith, who introduced himself as Dr. Bird, spoke from the
opposite perspective, going as far as saying that residents who trim
their trees during nesting season can be held liable. City Atty. Phil
Kohn said he’s never seen that happen.
“Just to get a better view and not care about wildlife -- I have a
big problem with that,” Meredith said. “None of us want to be run out
of our homes. What right do we have to run birds out of theirs?”
Most residents who spoke at the meeting had an opinion somewhere
in between, with balance and communication the most oft-heard terms.
“There’s not enough effort to bring a kiss method in to bring
people together,” Greg Clark said. “There’s too much division.”
Clark said he worked with a neighbor some years ago to deal with
palm trees on her property that were adversely obstructing his view.
It cost time and money, but the trees were moved and both were happy,
Clark said.
“One of the things that really freaks me out is that a landscape
architect won’t put a tree in front of their client’s house, but
won’t hesitate to put one in front of someone else’s,” Clark said.
Mayor Toni Iseman referred to Clark’s comments about his
neighbor’s palm trees during the council’s closing comments, saying
she figured it was the way he approached the situation that led to
its smooth resolution.
For some, however, the problem is far more grave than
not-so-neighborly disputes. Brown, Dave Connell and Frank Visca
consider public and private trees hazardous to the city, whether for
fires, rodents or blocking sunlight.
“Views don’t obstruct like trees,” Visca said.
Councilwoman Cheryl Kinsman said she’s been through about 100
meetings with the same people discussing the issue, and one hope in
moving the ordinance along is that there won’t be 100 more.
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