Spots for post office parking reallocated
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Andrew Edwards
Downtown Laguna Beach has much to offer -- stylish boutiques, fine
dining and more within a stone’s throw from the beach. But before
people can have fun, they have to find a place to park.
Parking can be scarce, and one lot formerly open to all is now
restricted. Parking meters previously operated by the city near the
post office have been removed and the parking spaces have been
allocated to the post office and Levin and O’Connner, LLP, a law
firm. Parking is now reserved for postal employees and the firm’s
customers.
City Manager Steve May said the meters were removed around January
after Koss Real Estate Investments, the company that owns the parking
lot and the Lumber Yard Mall, chose to make a different deal.
“They decided they’d rather lease it to the tenants,” May said.
Levin and O’Conner were offered parking spaces as part of their
lease agreement after negotiations with the city broke down, said
Megan Herbert an administrator with Levin and O’Conner.
“They gave us a price and said, ‘Hey, do you want them,’ and we
said ‘Yes,’” Herbert said.
Anthony Haas, who manages the Lumber Yard for Koss, said the
decision to not lease parking to the city was made before he managed
the property.
City officials have no plans to make up for the parking spaces,
May said.
But the lost spaces are creating a problem for Lagunans needing to
drop by the post office.
A few people have been towed for parking in the lot, said Richard
Mikhael of Laguna Beach Towing and Recovery. Though he added he has
not seen a major problem there.
Marcia Jacklich did not know the parking lot had become private
until she parked in the lot on Wednesday and realized she had stopped
her car right in front of a no parking sign. Without parking,
Jacklich said she would have to use another post office.
“I’m not very happy about that and I’ll probably have to use the
Laguna Hills post office now because I don’t want to get a ticket,”
Jacklich said.
She was not the only person caught by surprise when the no parking
signs went up. Realtor Michael Shawn O’Leary said having to park
elsewhere was a hassle for him.
“It just seemed like one day it was here and one day it was gone,”
he said.
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