Council half-bails Day Labor Center
Barbara Diamond
The City Council voted 4 to 1 Tuesday to offer its traveling money
for a matching grant to keep the Day Labor Center in operation
through June 30.
Councilman Wayne Baglin voted against the proposal made by Mayor
Cheryl Kinsman to reallocate the unused City Council training, travel
and dues budget to the Crosscultural Council, which runs the center.
Private donations had already been pledged in the wake of the
council’s decision at the May 4 meeting not to fulfill the
Crosscultural Council’s request for $8,000 to see the center through
the fiscal year. Village Laguna promised $1,200.
Council members Toni Iseman and Steve Dicterow both supported
taking the $8,000 out of the city’s $3 million-plus reserve, as
requested, but Kinsman, Baglin and Councilwoman Elizabeth Pearson
refused.
Pearson voted for the matching grant, but with some reluctance.
“I am concerned that we are giving so much to nonprofits,” Pearson
said. “They should fund themselves and become less dependent on us.
“We have been generous. We have given them the site. We have given
them bathrooms. We have given them benches. We have given them water.
But they need to be more self-sustaining.
Pearson offered to advise nonprofits on fund-raising. She has
advised the Laguna Beach Seniors Inc. on fund-raising for a proposed
senior center on Third Street, for which the city purchased the land
and agreed to a $1 a year lease.
The council city granted the Crosscultural Council $24,000 at the
beginning of the fiscal year, $10,000 less than requested, and said
come back if you must.
Operating the center costs an estimated $50,000 a year, some of it
raised by contributions from contractors and homeowners -- about
$18,000 for the year. Adding that to the $24,000 granted by the city
-- $4,000 of which went to other Crosscultural projects -- left the
center about $12,000 short.
The center site on Laguna Canyon Road was chosen in response to
multiple complaints on a daily basis from North Laguna residents
where the laborers gathered on street corners with no bathroom
facilities and no supervision. Even after the move, there were
complaints until the Crosscultural Council’s oversight began,
including paid supervisors.
“If I were on the [Crosscultural Council], I would give it back to
the city and say do it yourselves,” Iseman said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.