City to vote on state funding
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City officials expect to participate Wednesday in a vote in
Sacramento on ways to preserve local property tax revenue.
“An initiative has qualified for the November ballot, but now the
governor has started to work with the cities and counties fashioning
a compromise,” said City Manager Ken Frank.
The initiative would require the state to submit reductions in
property tax revenue to cities and counties to a vote of the people.
In the past, the state has reduced the revenues when it faces a
budget crisis, as it does now.
Gov. Schwarzenegger is expected to offer to put the initiative on
the ballot in two years, in return for state use of the funds to
recover from its present financial crisis.
“Nobody wants to tangle with the governor,” Frank said.
The governor’s plan would bulk up the state revenues by some $1.3
billion a year. Actual amounts are being discussed.
“That would cost the city about $1 million a year, but it’s better
than a sustained loss,” Frank said.
The city will be represented by Councilwoman Elizabeth Pearson.
Police Captain Paul Workman accompanied Pearson and Frank to
Sacramento.
-- Barbara Diamond
Council denies funds for Dayworker Center
The City Council voted 3 to 2 Tuesday to deny bridge funding to
carry the Dayworker Center through the fiscal year.
“If a nonprofit has to depend on the city for operating costs, it
needs to write an obituary,” Councilman Wayne Baglin said.
The Crosscultural Council, which organized the Dayworker Center on
Laguna Canyon Road, had requested $8,000 from the city.
Baglin, Councilwoman Elizabeth Pearson and Mayor Cheryl Kinsman
voted against taking the $8,000 out of the city’s $3.3 million
general fund reserve.
The fiscal year ends June 30.
Any dip into the reserve requires four votes.
The council voted 4 to 1 at the April 20 meeting to appropriate
$15,000 from the fund to supplement an existing budget to hire
consultants to help the city retain needed medical services.
City Manager Ken Frank said the council has in the past, albeit
infrequently, found creative ways around the four-vote requirement to
dip into the reserve.
“You could take it from something else,” he said.
The Crosscultural Council applied to the city in the 2003-04
budget for a $34,000 community assistance grant for its projects. It
was given $24,000, $20,000 of which went to operating the day worker
center.
Contractors and homeowners also contribute to the center’s
operating costs of about $4,200 a month.
“We made a decision at the budget hearing that we would help,”
said Councilman Steven Dicterow. “I am very disappointed.
“This is a solution to a neighborhood problem and a direct benefit
to the city. It is different than other nonprofit organizations --
more like an outreach program.”
Before the center was put into the canyon, dayworkers gathered on
street corners, heavily concentrated in North Laguna. Residents
complained bitterly and police were routinely called to patrol the
area.
Police response to residents’ complaints cost a lot more than the
city’s grants to sustain the dayworker center, Councilwoman Toni
Iseman said.
“This is a moral threshold,” Iseman said.
-- Barbara Diamond
Parking fees to rise Downtown this summer
Parking fees are set to go up this summer at two Downtown parking
lots.
The City Council approved a $1 increase in daily parking rates at
the lumberyard and city employee parking lots, raising the cost of
parking to $9. Both lots are located along the intersection of Laguna
Canyon Road and Forest Avenue. The higher rate would be in effect
during the summer, from the last weekend in June to Labor Day.
The council set the 2005 summer rate to $10. In April, the daily
rate at the Act V lot rose to $7. Council members said it should cost
more to park near Downtown and the beach.
“The closer you’re in, the higher the rate should be,”
Councilwoman Elizabeth Pearson said.
Councilwoman Toni Iseman said she wanted the council to return to
the Act V lot.
“I think a lower price would make the parking that much more
attractive,” she said.
City backs tide pool protection plan
The City Council unanimously approved a resolution on Tuesday
calling for the full implementation of the Marine Life Protection
Act.
The resolution calls for the state to implement the act as soon as
possible. The act, passed by the state legislature in 1999, called
for the Department of Fish and Game to set aside areas along the
coast as marine life preserves and a deadline was eventually set for
April 1, 2005. However, the state announced last January that the
work to put the law in effect would go on hold indefinitely.
The chairman of Laguna’s chapter of the Surfrider Foundation, Rick
Wilson, said the group worked with Councilman Wayne Baglin to draft
the resolution, which does not change existing local laws.
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