Zoning administrator moving on to Dana Point
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BARBARA DIAMOND
Dana Point has hired away another longtime city employee.
John Tilton’s new job as city architect will reunite him with his
close friend Kyle Butterwick, former director of the Laguna’s
Community Development Department, now serving in the same capacity in
Dana Point.
Tilton began working as Laguna’s zoning administrator in March of
1997.
“Everybody who has ever worked for him loved him,” said Martha
Anderson, who spent three years in the zoning department before
switching to the city clerk’s office.
Tilton expressed sorrow when Butterwick accepted a position with
Dana Point after working at City Hall since 1979.
They met in 1985 when Tilton was a practicing architect with a
particularly controversial project and Butterwick guided him through
the city processes. They share a love of boating -- guy trips to
Catalina -- and tennis, competing in tournaments and highly
competitive weekend matches.
Tilton and his wife, Jill, and two children lived in Laguna Beach
until last year when they moved to San Juan Capistrano.
A farewell reception was scheduled for Thursday at City Hall.
HALL MONITOR
Senior Planner Liane Schuller is serving as interim zoning
administrator until a permanent replacement for Tilton is hired. The
city will hold an in-house recruitment to fill Tilton’s former job
and for the planning administrator’s position in the Community
Development Department. The planning job has been vacant since John
Montgomery took over for Kyle Butterwick as head honcho of the
department. The position has been stripped of the assistant
director’s title.
Building plan checker Issam Shahrouri has completed his course
work and dissertation for a doctorate in economics from UC Irvine. He
used spatial econometrics to study the property tax structure in
Orange County and the change in property values due to the
expectation of large projects such as toll roads or airports.
City employee John O’Hara, who supervises maintenance in Downtown
Laguna Beach and Main Beach, has been certified by the International
Society of Arborculture. O’Hara, who has worked for the city for 23
years, is the first and, to date, the only arborist on the city
staff.
The city has had to seek the services of a consultant when the
City Council or Design Review Board members have asked for the
services of arborist on-site for projects that threaten trees that
the board feels should be saved. Board approval of the additions to a
home at Camel Point included such a request.
“It was a special tree and it’s gone,” board chair Steve
Kawaratani, a Coastline Pilot columnist, said at the March 4 board
meeting. “I am disappointed.”
The property owner claimed he loved the tree and tried to save it.
“I checked on that tree, and it hadn’t even been watered,”
Kawaratani said.
The tree is being replaced by a 20-foot high and 12-foot wide
stone pine.
“That’s about 100th the size of the original tree,” Kawaratani
said.
Board member Suzanne Morrison also expressed concerns about the
condition of two Monterey Cypress on the site.
Kawaratani, whose request for an arborist on-site in a project in
Sarah Thurston Park was also ignored, wants the Camel Point site
monitored twice a month and deviations from board advice reported.
“This was the third time I requested special care for trees [on a
development site]. In future, the board will ask for a bond.”
The Open Space Committee is wrestling with alternatives for a
pedestrian trail near a new house on Mar Vista, so large Councilman
Wayne Baglin referred to it a neighborhood in itself when the council
approved the project.
A trail proposal is due back before the council on April 20.
JOAN BENFORD MEMORIAL
A sculpture at the Laguna Beach Library will be dedicated to the
memory of the late Joan Benford at 3 p.m. Saturday.
Sculptor Marlo Bartels’ “Sakura Starburst” was purchased by
Friends of Joan Benford and the Community Art Project.
“It grew out of desire of her children, Mark and Alyson, and her
friends to do something to remember Joan,” said former Planning
Commissioner Becky Jones, a close friend of Benford.
Bartels and Supervisor Tom Wilson will attend the dedication.
The sculpture was originally displayed under the auspices of
Community Art Project at the Bank of America parking lot.
CAP’s goals are to increase the visibility and aesthetic value of
public art and its ability to enhance our community, to serve as a
catalyst to encourage art education in town and to help guide public
and private partnerships through the approval process.
FOA ONLINE
The Festival of Arts has launched a Gift Shop, open 24-hours a day
to online shoppers.
“[It] is the answer for art lovers,” said Sharbie Higuchi, veteran
director of marketing and public relations for the festival. “Our
streamlined checkout process, combined with online specials, saves
collectors money, as well as time.”
Surfing the shop takes online shoppers from posters to wine
glasses, from art aprons to scarves, puzzles, books, bookmarks, paint
sets, mugs, T-shirts, caps, collectibles and Pageant of the Masters
souvenirs, with sub-sections for men, women, children, home,
collectibles and posters.
Pageant tickets have been available online for more than five
years. Sales have quadrupled.
“According to the Nielsen/Net ratings, online consumer spending is
up 34 percent from 2003,” Higuchi said. “With this rapid rise in
e-spending and the doubling of souvenir items purchased by Festival
of Art and pageant patrons in the summer, launching an online gift
shop was the next logical step.”
Visit https://www.lagunafestivalof
arts.com to check out the merchandise. Proceeds will help pay for
operating costs.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
Friends of Evelyn Munro will gather Saturday to celebrate her 90th
birthday.
Munro was born March 15, 1914, in New Orleans.
Always tiny, Munro took on the big issues from unions to the
environment. She was named a Laguna Treasure in 2002.
* OUR LAGUNA is a regular feature of the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. Contributions are welcomed. Write to Barbara Diamond, P.O. Box
248, Laguna Beach, 92652, hand-deliver to 384 Forest Ave., Suite 22;
call (949) 494-4321 or fax (949) 494-8979.
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