Budget review workshop set
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A workshop to review the proposed city budget for 2004-05 will be
held at 9 a.m., Saturday in Conference Room A at City Hall.
The draft was prepared before the League of California Cities and
the Governor reached an accord to balance the state budget. The
agreement allows the state to draw on city and county revenues for
the next two years, with the understanding that the legislature will
approve a ballot item that will protect local revenue after that.
Laguna Beach took the hardest hit per capita of any city and the
budget will be revised to reflect the loss.
“A lot of pet projects are going to be delayed,” said Councilwoman
Elizabeth Pearson, who represented the city in Sacramento.
City Manager Ken Frank prepared the budget with an assumption that
the state would take $550,000 from city revenues and once taken,
probably would never come back. The city’s hit was $674,990, but only
for two years.
“It’s better than a sustained loss,” Frank said.
Pearson urged the public to attend the budget workshop to help the
council identify priorities.
“We have all been urging people to come,” Mayor Cheryl Kinsman
said.
Council members Wayne Baglin and Steve Dicterow will not attend.
Dicterow said Tuesday that he had a long-standing family commitment.
The workshop was scheduled in July 2003 and has been included in
subsequent tentative agendas.
City code requires the city manager to submit a proposed budget by
May 1 of each year. The 2004-05 draft was distributed to council
members in April.
The proposed budget does not include community assistance grants,
which will be reviewed by Baglin and Pearson. Both have publicly
stated that nonprofit organizations must try to better fend for
themselves financially, rather than leaning on the city --
particularly for operating expenses.
The next budget hearing will be at the June 15 City Council
meeting, at which the council is expected to approve the budget. By
law, a balanced city budget must be in place by June 30, unlike state
and federal budgets.
-- Barbara Diamond
Laguna Beach wins twice in court
City Atty. Philip Kohn announced two victories for the city in
recent litigation.
A Laguna Beach man fessed up two days into a trial that he had
done some unpermitted construction on his home and built an illegal
second unit.
After Mark Bayless switched his plea from not guilty to guilty,
the court sentenced him to three years probation and he agreed to
bring his property up to code and pay $10,000 restitution to the city
for the costs of tracking him down and taking him to court.
The restitution was paid out of the escrow on the sale of the
home, completed after sentencing.
Kohn complemented the city’s Community Development Department for
its diligence in pursuing the case.
In a separate court action, the Orange County Superior Court
upheld the city’s refusal to extend roads or grant variances that
would have made legal building sites out of vacant lots in Arch Beach
Heights owned by Arnold Lutz.
Lutz wanted the property designated as legal building sites and
took the city to court when his request was denied.
-- Barbara Diamond
Public invited Taxpayers Assn. meeting
City Manager Ken Frank will be the guest speaker at the Laguna
Beach Taxpayers Assn. luncheon and membership meeting, set for noon,
May 25 at Montage Resort and Spa.
The public is invited. The luncheon is $50. Valet parking for $5
or public parking are available.
For more information, e-mail [email protected] or call (949)
497-7053.
-- Barbara Diamond
Free compost offered to residents
Laguna Beach residents can scoop up free compost from 8 to 10
a.m., Saturday, near Santa’s Hut in the City Employees Parking Lot
across from the Festival of Arts Grounds.
Bring containers and tools. The compost is for residents only and
not for commercial use.
The compost is offered on a first-come-first-served basis by
Tierra Verde Industries, the green waste processor for Waste
Management of Orange County, the city’s trash hauler.
Last year, Laguna residents diverted about 4,200 tons of green
waste from landfills, 43 percent of all recyclable materials
collected in the city.
For more information, call (949) 497-0323.
-- Barbara Diamond
Grant would pay for police at schools
The city has applied for a federal grant that would help pay the
costs of a police officer dedicated to Laguna’s public schools.
The City Council voted to apply for the grant on Tuesday and Capt.
Danell Adams said she has already mailed the application.
The officer would be a veteran that would not only respond to
traditional school-related safety concerns like fights and substance
abuse but would also serve as a mentor to students, Adams said.
The grant opportunity is part of the Dept. of Justice’s Community
Oriented Policing Services in Schools program. If the city’s
application is approved, the federal government would provide
$125,000 over three years to cover part of the cost of a new police
officer. The city would have to keep the officer for at least one
year after the grant expires.
The balance of the cost would be split between the city and the
Laguna Beach Unified School District, City Manager Ken Frank said.
Between 2004 and 2007, the estimated cost for the officer is more
than $273,000 dollars. More than $68,000 would be contributed by the
police dept., and the school would provide more than $80,000.
ACT V parking rates won’t be reduced
A proposal to reduce parking rates at the ACT V parking lot died
at the City Council meeting on Tuesday.
In April, rates at the parking lot were raised to $7, but at the
May 4 City Council meeting Councilwoman Toni Iseman suggested the
body bring the fees at ACT V back down after the Council raised fees
at the lumberyard and city employee lots to Downtown during the
summer festival to $9.
In the agenda item, Iseman wrote the plan would encourage visitors
to park further away from downtown and ease traffic congestion.
However, when Iseman brought forth a motion for the idea on
Tuesday, no other member of the council provided a second, and the
proposal was killed without a vote.
Sea lion’s death is linked to trash
A California sea lion rescued by the Pacific Marine Mammal Center
died Monday and a veterinarian discovered the animal’s stomach was
full of trash.
Two sandwich bags, one trash bag, Styrofoam, four balloons, and a
piece of plastic were found inside the sea lion, according to a
release.
The animal, which was named Ping, was rescued near the Crystal
Cove Historic District on Sunday. Veterinarians who examined Ping
noted the animal was dehydrated and malnourished.
The fact that the animal ate litter was likely a strong factor in
its death, said Emily Wing of the Pacific Marine Mammal Center.
The Pacific Marine Mammal Center advises people to avoid
littering, not to release balloons, clip six-pack containers and to
participate in beach cleanups.
Arts and Planning commissions need help
The City Council will interview applicants for the Arts and
Planning commissions at their June 15 meeting. The bodies serve as
advisory panels for the council and respectively provide
recommendations for proposed ordinances and other council actions
regarding the promotion of the fine and performing arts in Laguna and
development and land use.
Members of the commissions meet twice each month and spend a good
deal of their own time performing their duties outside of meetings.
Arts commissioners receive a $60 monthly stipend, planning
commissioners are paid $90 per month. Four arts commissioners and
three planning commissioners will be chosen. Applications must be
filed with City Clerk Verna Rollinger by 5 p.m. on June 9. For
information, call (949) 497-3311.
MOMS Club holds annual Spring Tea
The MOMS Club of Laguna Beach, South Chapter, held its fifth
annual Spring Tea, “Tea and Cuddles,” to benefit the Costa Mesa-based
Project Cuddle on May 1 at the Laguna home of Jim Palmer and John
O’Neill. More than $12,000 was raised for Project Cuddle, a program
that since 1996 has incorporated a 24-hour crisis line to prevent
infants from being abandoned.
The state uses Project Cuddle to serve as its primary hotline for
mothers taking advantage of the 72-hour abandonment law that allows
mothers to abandon their babies in a designated safe-haven such as
police and fire departments, hospitals and private facilities within
the first 72 hours of the infant’s birth. For more information on
project cuddle, call (888) 628-3353 or https://projectcuddle.org.
Villa Rockledge program packs house
The Villa Rockledge program put on by the Historical Society had
the City Hall Chambers packed Monday.
Roger Jones bought Villa Rockledge in 1973 and restored it,
achieving the only residential property in Laguna Beach that is
listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Jones spoke to the audience while showing more than 70 slides of
historic photographs of the oceanfront bluff-top home. He talked
about the construction performed without power tools.
Villa Rockledge was built by Frank Miller, developer of the
Mission Inn in Riverside and a leading figure in promoting Mission
and Mediterranean influenced architecture in Southern California.
Construction took more than four years beginning in 1918, and cost
more than $100,000. Villa Rockledge incorporated Miller’s keen
interest in the art and architecture of the Mediterranean countries.
After the property suffered a disastrous accident in June 1973 when a
loaded cement truck severely damaged it, Jones completely restored
the damaged property and made improvements to the grounds.
The Laguna Beach Historical Society Murphy-Smith House is at 278
Ocean Ave. It’s open to the public from 1 to 4 p.m. every Friday,
Saturday and Sunday.
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