Surf and Sand sent packing
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The City Council voted Tuesday that the Surf and Sand needs to apply
for a permit before it can park customers’ vehicles at the Pottery
Shack.
Councilman Wayne Baglin appealed an administrative decision that
permitted the valet parking by hotel staff. It was referred to the
Planning Commission, which hears permit applications.
The commission also was directed to review the city code for
clarification of valet parking. Staff members were directed to stop
valet parking for hotel customers at the Pottery Shack until and if a
permit is issued.
Mayor Cheryl Kinsman’s motion, approved 4-0 -- Councilman Steve
Dicterow was absent -- did not include hotel staff parking, raising
Baglin’s hackle. He demanded to be notified if the hotel is permitted
to park employees’ vehicles without obtaining a permit.
“We know there is a parking problem,” Pottery Shack neighbor Rik
Lawrence said. “This is not the answer. The [administrative] decision
must be reversed.”
Council members struggled with Baglin’s appeal, which reduced
off-street parking in the neighborhood.
The residents’ complaints might not bode well for neighborhood
pocket parking, supported by council members Toni Iseman and
Elizabeth Pearson.
“If we don’t have valet parking, customers will park in the
neighborhoods,” hotel spokesman John Gates said.
Public parking is permitted on public streets unless specifically
prohibited.
However, residents, who call themselves Flatlanders, bitterly
resent public use they claim usurps all of their neighborhood
parking.
“I know where they parked before [leasing the Pottery Shack] -- on
the street in front of my house,” Annette Stephens said. “When they
lose the lot, I know where they will be -- in front of my house.”
Many of the businesses in the area have little or no parking
facilities. They were grandfathered in when the city’s parking
requirements were codified.
The goal of grandfathering was to ensure that businesses would not
be forced out by the rules that were later approved. Once a property
is grandfathered, it is virtually impossible to un-grandfather it,
Pearson said.
Businesses without sufficient parking to meet their needs --
grandfathered or not -- have resorted to off-site parking, valeted in
some cases.
A recent Planning Commission recommendation, not yet reviewed by
the council, requires a conditional-use permit for all off-site
parking, which must be approved by the council. The permits are good
only for the length of the lease of the off-site parking, renewable
when the lease is renewed.
-- Barbara Diamond
Longtime Laguna
resident honored
City officials honored longtime Laguna Beach resident and
businessman Harry Lawrence Tuesday night with a proclamation
extolling his contributions to the community.
Lawrence will be 90 on Oct. 1. He has spent more than half of his
life in Laguna, starting in 1946 when he bought a one-room gift shop,
called Warren Imports, now an internationally known store catering to
buyers of jewelry and Asian art and furniture.
He had been in Laguna only a couple of years when he began an
illustrious career in community service that ranges from helping to
reactivate the Post World War II Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce to
bringing Grand Opera to Orange County, performed on the Festival of
Arts grounds.
Many consider his efforts to acquire Main Beach for a city park as
his crowning achievement.
The City Council on Tuesday approved a request from his friends
and relatives to buy and install a bench with a plaque in his honor
at Main Beach.
A dedication ceremony will be held when the bench is installed.
-- Barbara Diamond
Come on down and meet the mayor
Mayor Cheryl Kinsman will continue her “Mondays with the Mayor”
meetings this month.
An informal meeting will be scheduled between 2 and 4 p.m. on
Monday. The meetings are an opportunity for Lagunans to meet and
discuss matters of interest with Kinsman.
Appointments can be made by calling Carol Bright at (949)
497-0308.
Come on down and meet the candidates
The Laguna Beach Election Festival will be an unprecedented
opportunity for Lagunans to meet candidates and learn about current
issues.
All candidates running for city offices and the Laguna Beach
Unified School District Board are scheduled to attend. Candidates
running for U.S. Senate, the 48th Congressional District, the 70th
State Assembly District and Municipal Water District of Orange County
are also expected to show up. Guests will be able to ask candidates
questions at public forums. Proponents and opponents of ballot
propositions will also be on hand to answer questions.
For entertainment, there will be performances by the Laguna
Community Concert Band and Native American flute musician Evran Ozan.
The free event will be held from noon to 4 p.m. on Oct. 2, at
Laguna Beach High School, 625 Park Ave. Information: (949) 494-9928.
A little help from your financing friends
Certified Financial Planner and Laguna Beach resident Laura Tarbox
will discuss financial planning at sessions of the “It’s Your Money”
workshop series.
The first seminars will be from 10 to 11:30 a.m. on Sept. 24 and
Oct. 1 at the Assistance League Center, 547 Catalina St. For
reservations and information, call the Laguna Canyon Foundation,
(949) 497-8324.
Remarkable woman honored for work
Entrepreneur Valinda Martin, who owns the Art for the Soul gallery
on Forest Avenue, is set to be one of five honorees recognized at the
ninth annual Remarkable Women Awards Luncheon in October. The
ceremony will be presented by the National Assn. of Women Business
Owners’ Orange County chapter.
Martin, who lives in Corona del Mar, has needed a wheelchair since
she broke her back in a boating accident 11 years ago. After her
injury, she had to leave her job before starting her own business.
“I’m confined to a wheelchair, and I pretend I’m not in it and
keep on trucking,” she said.
Martin was a sales representative selling women’s clothing before
her injury. She got the idea to open a gallery after she was hurt
when she started collecting unusual items while traveling, she said.
She opened her first gallery on Balboa Island about six years ago and
expanded to Laguna Beach in the past year. Her galleries feature a
varied collection of whimsical, often brightly colored creations.
Despite her injury, Martin said being able to own her own business
and live along the Orange County coast makes her feel more privileged
than most.
“I love what I do, and I say that’s why I’m luckier and more
blessed than a lot of other people,” she said.
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