Village entrance still point of contention
Mike Swanson
One of the city’s most divisive issues will be in the Orange County
Board of Supervisors’ hands on Dec. 16, a date two of the five
council members believe discourages public debate.
An appeal by the Laguna Canyon Conservancy against moving the
city’s corporate yard to the ACT V parking lot will move the matter
to Santa Ana, at a site and time Mayor Toni Iseman said doesn’t suit
Lagunans’ best interests.
“It’s in the morning on a Tuesday, so if someone wants to go, and
they happen to be employed, then they’re out of luck,” Iseman said.
“This is a Laguna issue that should be heard in Laguna. It’s an
attempt to keep locals from being a part of the democratic process.”
Iseman tried at the Nov. 18 City Council meeting to have the date
of the hearing moved from Dec. 16 to one of two dates in January
offered by the board of supervisors. She said the Laguna Canyon
Conservancy preferred a January date and that more people would
likely show up after Christmas.
Iseman and Councilman Wayne Baglin voted to change the date to
January, but council members Cheryl Kinsman and Steve Dicterow said
they wanted the hearing on the earliest date possible, so the date
remained Dec. 16. Councilwoman Elizabeth Pearson, who with Kinsman
and Dicterow has supported moving the corporate yard to ACT V, was
absent.
“Dec. 16 isn’t close enough to Christmas to be that big of an
issue,” Dicterow said. “I’d like to get this done.”
Carolyn Wood, president of the Laguna Canyon Conservancy, said she
wanted to withhold the organization’s reasons for the appeal until a
6 p.m. Monday meeting at Tivoli Terrace on the Festival grounds. The
conservancy will answer questions, present facts and give attendees a
better understanding of how moving the corporate yard to ACT V
affects current and future parking and the development of the Village
Entrance project.
The matter could be handled in Laguna if the ACT V property were
annexed by the city, which Iseman said the county wants the city to
do. ACT V is owned by Laguna Beach, but it’s overseen by the county
because it’s on unincorporated property, Baglin said.
“The city has procrastinated in annexing it because they find it
easier to approve the project through the county than through the
city,” Baglin said. “We’ve had the opportunity to annex the property
several times over the past several years. It should have been done a
long time ago.”
The agenda moves faster in the county and the board is less
stringent than Laguna’s Planning Commission, Iseman said. She added
that the Planning Commission is more in tune with Laguna-specific
issues.
The board of supervisors’ meeting begins at 9:30 a.m. Dec. 16.
“We won’t know where it is on the agenda until a few days before
the meeting,” City Manager Ken Frank said.
Iseman, a teacher and counselor at Orange Coast College, said she
missed a class for the last meeting in the county and plans to change
her vacation plans to catch this one.
“I’m going to San Francisco on the 12th, and I would have liked to
stay for a while and catch up with some friends, but I’ll be back for
the hearing,” Iseman said. “This issue is extremely important to the
future of the city.”
Moving the corporate yard to ACT V would cost the city $3.5
million to $4 million. Dicterow has called the yard an eyesore to the
Downtown area at past council meetings and has said it needed to be
moved to accommodate a decorative village entrance to the city.
Iseman has repeatedly said that ACT V is not the answer.
“If we lose the critical mass of parking at ACT V, the shuttles
lose their effectiveness and congestion and parking will only get
worse Downtown,” Iseman. “Congestion and parking are two of
residents’ most common complaints. It doesn’t make sense to worsen an
existing problem, and with money the city doesn’t have.”
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