District still on the fence
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Andrew Edwards
Like a baseball game that went into extra innings, more meetings have
been scheduled as part of an effort to resolve a dispute over the
height of a fence being built around Laguna Beach High School’s
baseball field.
The Laguna Beach Unified School District’s board presented a
possible compromise at its meeting on Tuesday, but did not vote.
Under the proposal, 30-foot poles that have been installed around the
field would be lowered to 20 feet with a retractable net installed as
the leftfield fence to prevent home runs from flying into houses
along St. Ann’s Drive.
Other ideas in the eight-point proposal include a guarantee that
no lights will be installed at the baseball field, a rule preventing
banners from being hung above four feet and painting the poles black
or green, according to neighbors’ preference.
The school board will vote on the ideas at a special meeting this
Tuesday, school board president El Hathaway said. The meeting is set
to be preceded on Monday by a meeting with Hathaway, school board
member Robert Whalen, neighbors and baseball boosters.
The proposal received greater support from baseball supporters
than neighbors living along St. Ann’s drive and other streets near
the high school.
“It’s a compromise we could live with,” baseball boosters
President Daniel Bolar said. Boosters were let down by the proposed
rule limiting banners, which have been traditionally used by the team
as a revenue builder.
Neighbors had hoped the poles could be lowered even more.
At the meeting, Stephen Crawford, who lives across from the field
on St. Ann’s Drive, showed diagrams for a high-tech telescoping fence
that he said would allow netting to be extended up to 40 feet, and
lowered down to 10 when the field is not in use.
The estimated cost for telescoping poles ranges from $100,000 to
$200,000, Crawford said. He suggested neighbors could hold a
fundraising drive to pay for the poles, and said he would pledge
$10,000 for the project.
“It is possible, and it just takes money,” Crawford said.
The school district will consider Crawford’s idea along with other
designs for a retractable fencing before Tuesday’s vote, Hathaway
said. However, neighbors worry there will not be enough time to fully
consider Crawford’s idea by Tuesday.
“The time simply isn’t there,” neighbor David Smith said. Though
Smith and other neighbors had been encouraged by earlier discussions
with Hathaway and Whalen, Smith was disappointed by the likelihood
that poles will be 20 feet tall, instead of 10-footers.
“We thought we were getting there, then we took a step backward,”
Smith said.
Plans for the field called for construction to be over at latest
by around Oct. 8, said Carl Neuhausen, the district’s construction
projects administrator. School officials have been in talks with
neighbors since August, and much construction has been put on hold.
“There’s two things that are critical, getting the fence up and
getting the lawn planted,” Neuhausen said.
Because of the delay, the field will have to be sodded, and it is
less than certain that the grass will be ready when the season starts
in February.
Though neighbors want a lower fence, school board member Jan
Vickers said the district has an obligation to make sure the Breakers
have a field by next season.
“If we were to not finish our commitment to the baseball program
to finish that project, we could be accused of violation of that
trust,” she said.
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