Montage has 60 days to fix parking
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Barbara Diamond
Montage Resort management has 60 days to resolve its overflow-parking
problem, preferably in its own backyard.
The City Council voted unanimously on Tuesday to accept the
decisions and recommendations, with one major exception, made by the
Planning Commission on Nov. 12 after reviewing the second of two
traffic and parking studies. A third parking study, requested by the
commission, is scheduled for February.
Councilman Wayne Baglin, who appealed the commission’s
determinations, withdrew his appeal and voted with the rest of the
council, but admonished resort operators that off-site parking is not
acceptable.
“I’m not saying we are encouraging you to get everything on site,”
Baglin said. “I am saying we are requiring you to get everything on
site.”
Hotel operators had temporarily leased two parcels across the
street from the resort and 25 underground spaces at Albertsons market
last year in response to concerns about parking voiced last year by
the council, neighboring residents and Aliso Creek Shopping Center
businesses.
However, on Tuesday, neighbors and council members said the
above-ground parking on the leased lots is ugly and should not be
pursued.
“You should be a world-class resort without a wart,” Baglin said.
The lease on one of the parcels, formerly occupied by a Unocal
service station, expires in the beginning of March. The lease on the
striped strip below Laguna Terrace expires in May.
An urgency ordinance approved by the council last year that
prohibits all development on the privately owned parcels except hotel
parking expires March 4. A proposed development for the Unocal site
that was halted by the ordinance would resume processing when the
resort’s temporary-use permit expires, unless the permit is renewed.
A provision of the coastal development permit requires the resort
to own the ground, not just lease it, for any permanent off-site
parking.
A resort spokesman said Tuesday that negotiations were underway to
purchase the striped strip.
“Don’t,” Councilwoman Toni Iseman said.
Resort operator maintain that they have met the parking
requirements in the coastal development permit: 409 spaces in the
garage under the hotel and an additional 150 for overflow in peak
times when valet-parked. The city disputed the resort’s calculations,
claiming some of the designated overflow spaces are being used for
storage.
“The staff felt the hotel had 125 [overflow] spaces,” City Manager
Ken Frank said. “The council adopted our recommendation for an
additional 25 spaces. The hotel is using the 25 spaces under
Albertson’s to meet that.”
Subsequently, the hotel management implemented Planning Commission
recommendations from the first report, reviewed Sept. 18, and a new
system of employee parking. The new system, which uses employee
parking stickers and reassignment of employee parking in the
underground garage, had been in effect for a few weeks when LSA
Associates Inc. conducted the second study.
According to the second report, the resort’s on-site parking
accommodated guest and visitor parking in the October peak, a period
when parking demand is about 60% of the maximum demand in the summer.
The report concluded that employees were still not using to the
fullest extent the 127 spaces allocated for them on-site, but with
more time and improved management, the demand for off-site parking
would be reduced.
“What I am concerned about is that it is not just Montage employee
parking,” Driftwood neighbor Penny Elia said. “The report doesn’t
show parking in the neighborhood. What will we do about a parking
study for the entire area?”
Based on an independent car count, employee parking in residential
neighborhoods has been completely eliminated, LSA representative Tony
Petros said.
“On Wesley, the parking is by visitors to the park and the beach
and church-goers, not resort employees” Petros said. “As you go up to
Marilyn, Ocean Vista and Driftwood, there is no parking other than
residents.”
Petros said the striped strip, which now accounts for 70 off-site
parking spaces, was included in the study, but not as part of the
solution.
If used as part of the solution -- which the council discouraged
-- striped parking would by reduced by landscaping requirements.
Frank estimated that perhaps 45 spaces could be eked out of the
parcel. The LSA study recommended 60 more spaces to meet peak
seasonal needs.
Progress has been made in the less-than-one-year the hotel has
been open, resort spokesman Bill Claypoole said.
“Mr. Baglin has asked us what we are prepared to do,” Claypoole
told the council. “Our intent is to solve the problem. If the [next]
study shows we have maximized the parking, fine. If not, we will
purchase land.”
The resort does not need off-site parking to meet requirements.
“They are using off-site parking because they think it is more
efficient,” Frank said.
Required parking for the resort was determined in the
environmental report on the project.
“The requirements were established by a licensed traffic
consultant and approved in a peer review by a different consultant,”
Planning Commissioner Norm Grossman said last year. “What else could
we do?
“We cannot legally require more spaces than the parking management
plan determines are necessary. There has to be a nexus.”
In other words, the city cannot not demand 700 parking spaces
simply because it wants more parking. It can, however, decide where
the cars can be parked.
If the resort fails to meet the parking goals set by the city, the
council could limit the number of employees or the number of
banquets. Enforcement could be as little as a citation and as great
as a criminal misdemeanor complaint, City Atty. Philip Kohn said.
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