Moving the maintenance yard will create more parking
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Elizabeth Pearson
As someone recently said to me, “The debate over the maintenance yard
can be easily summed up by asking: Do you want more parking close to
town or more parking out in the canyon?”
The Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce and Downtown business
community, as well as the 17 arts groups that make up the Laguna
Beach Arts Alliance (not a small minority, by the way) have a strong
opinion about it: They want more year-round, close-to-town parking --
instead of more parking out at the Act V lot -- which is primarily
used two months out of the year. For example, while the Laguna
Playhouse publishes the fact that the Act V lot is available for
parking when people come into town for plays, I understand it is
rarely used. People want to be able to park close by and walk to the
theater. I would think that this is especially true in the middle of
January, when it is cold and rainy. Residents tell me they aren’t
going to go and park out there, and then come to town. They want more
parking close to the Downtown.
There have been some claims that by moving the Maintenance Yard
out to the back of the Act V lot, it would mean that we would stop
our summer (and now expanded) shuttle service to that parking lot.
Nothing could be further from the truth. We would still have hundred
of spaces in the front of the lot. There’s not a person on our City
Council who doesn’t want to continue the shuttle service out to the
Act V lot.
The majority of the City Council has worked, since I began serving
on City Council almost two years ago, to move forward with plans that
were originally approved, then over-turned by a different council, to
move the city’s “motor pool” to the back of the Act V lot. There are
two key reasons for this. We wanted to create a maintenance yard that
would give our employees who work out of those old buildings better
working conditions -- and we wanted to clear the space and make way
for a beautiful village entrance with a large garage. Almost two
years of work.
After the majority City Council voted to move forward with the
maintenance yard move and the county’s Planning Commission approved
the project at the Act V lot, local activists attempted to overturn
the Planning Commission’s decision by appealing to the county’s Board
of Supervisors -- however, the board denied the appeal and approved
the project unanimously.
Then, Councilmember Toni Iseman appealed the project to the
California Coastal Commission -- a body on which she serves. She can
vote on this issue, even though it is clear she is not objective on
the subject. City staff and Mayor Cheryl Kinsman and I presented to
the Coastal Commission, and after five hours of presentations and
input from the public, it was continued to a future date.
Recently Iseman and I began meeting informally to discuss ways in
which a compromise be reached.
I have indicated publicly that, in my view:
* It is in the best interest of the city to maintain peripheral
parking at the Act V lot and that the summer (and extended time)
shuttle should continue;
* We need more parking closer to the Downtown -- which is what I
promised the arts groups and Downtown businesses I would work for if
I was elected;
* There are ways to reduce the size of the footprint in the
proposed Act V maintenance yard. This would allow us to either make
room for more parking spaces or allow us to pull the project away
from some of the open space in the back. I have suggested some
alternatives;
* A Maintenance Yard move and the creation of a beautiful Village
Entrance (you will recall that I served with dozens of other
hard-working Lagunans almost 10 years ago, as a planning
commissioner, on a Village Entrance Task Force) with a parking garage
that can park 450 to 650 cars right next to the Downtown is something
we should pro-actively pursue. The funding is earmarked for the move
and building of the new maintenance yard. Funding is still required
to build the Village Entrance and garage. I have gone on record as
saying I could support financing for that project if it were paid
with dedicated parking revenues for the next 20 years, not taxpayer
dollars.
The current Act V parking lot was expanded after the initial
engineering for the maintenance yard project at that location was
completed. The expanded parking lot never received permits and is
probably illegal. Why didn’t the additional grading and encroachment
into the open space -- and the lack of permitting -- ever receive
scrutiny?
At the council meeting Tuesday, Iseman and I agreed to be the
“official” team on the council to try to work out a compromise. I
agreed to do this only under the condition that we not drag out the
time between our meetings. I’m ready to get something done. Iseman
and I work well together. However, in moving forward, it is my hope
that she and I will agree that neither of us will take an “all or
nothing” approach to reaching a compromise. That she will not say,
“Nothing can be built on that lot except parking.” And that I will
not say, “All the facilities at the current location have to be on
the back of the Act V lot.”
For my part, I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: “I’m
willing to compromise.”
* ELIZABETH PEARSON is a member of the Laguna Beach City Council.
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