Council denies Subway
Barbara Diamond
A bid to put a Subway sandwich shop on Broadway was toast Tuesday
after council members could not justify the lack of on-site parking.
The Planning Commission had voted 4 to 0 in November to deny the
proposed shop at 219 Broadway, based on the shop owner’s inability to
comply with the city’s parking regulations. Councilwoman Elizabeth
Pearson appealed the decision.
“Our ordinance doesn’t allow off-site parking, but I remember
situations from my Planning Commission days where it was allowed,”
said Pearson, who earlier in the evening had voted to oppose off-site
parking at Montage Resort and Spa.
Pearson, who chaired the Subway hearing in the absence of Mayor
Cheryl Kinsman, rescinded her appeal after the three other council
members opposed it, and she voted with them to uphold the
commission’s denial.
The shop needed 17 parking spaces to meet city requirements. Three
spaces were grandfathered because a retail shop had been on the site
before city ordinance took effect. The shop was credited with another
three spaces for providing outside food service. None of the six
actually existed.
However, a representative of the property owner said 11 spaces in
an adjacent parking lot would be reserved for the shop.
Unfortunately for applicant Greg Ficke, the city code says the
spaces must be on the same site as the business. It would require a
variance for which legal findings must be made.
“I just can’t make the findings,” Councilman Steve Dicterow said.
Pearson said that the policy should be revisited and that she
would put it on an agenda, and she told Ficke to consider
resubmitting his application.
Besides insufficient parking, the Planning Commission also cited
the shop as a fast food restaurant, which is contrary to the Downtown
specific plan.
“There is a difference between fast food and quick food,”
applicant Greg Ficke said. “McDonald’s, Jack in the Box are fast
food. It is pre-prepared and fried. Subway makes food to order, and
it doesn’t fry anything.”
In her appeal, Pearson said she believed the project was in accord
with the specific plan.
Bette Anderson, speaking on behalf of Village Laguna, said the
project was not unique and did not add to the diversity of Downtown.
She said one Subway in town is enough.
“In all my years living in Laguna, I have been asked many things,
but not once have I been asked if there was a Subway in town,”
resident Curt Mahoney said. “There are those who want to make Laguna
into Corona del Mar, Beverly Hills or Mission Viejo. Thank God for
those who don’t.”
Councilman Wayne Baglin took exception to slights cast on other
communities. People who live in Mission Viejo like Mission Viejo, he
said.
Probably most of the people in the audience were not aware that
the applicant is a member of the Aliso Viejo City Council.
His wife, Julie, disagreed with Village Laguna comments. She said
the proposed shop would add to the Downtown.
“It will not look like the everyday chain restaurant,” she said.
“It will be unique.”
Applicant Ficke said he planned to make the shop Laguna-specific
by deviating from the usual Subway signage colors he described as
gaudy and decorating the interior with artwork by local painters and
old Laguna Playhouse playbills.
He also said he would add to the products sold in other Subways.
“I got approval to toast,” he said.
However, he declined Pearson’s request to name the shop something
other than Subway -- just as the Ace Hardware Store in Laguna is
called Coast Hardware.
“If I were writing a book, the title of this chapter would be
‘Permission to Toast,’” Councilwoman Toni Iseman said. “That is the
essence of the issue. To have to get permission to toast is the
antithesis of what Laguna is.”
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