HIV/AIDS FUNDING The City Council approved the...
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HIV/AIDS FUNDING
The City Council approved the recommendation of the HIV Advisory
Committee on the allocation of direct services HIV/AIDS funds
totaling $8,000.
WHAT IT MEANS
The Laguna Beach Community Clinic will get $3,000. The funds will
be used exclusively to provide anonymous testing at the clinic, which
also offers HIV/AIDS education and outreach services to the
community.
AIDS Services Foundation, which was founded in Laguna Beach, will
get $1,500, to be used for the foundation’s Food Pantry program.
Other services include case management, information, referrals,
benefits counseling, practical assistance, community education and
support groups.
Aids Care Team in Our Neighborhood was awarded $1,500 to provided
nonsecular and nonjudgmental counseling and support for people with
AIDS.
Another $1,500 went to The Center Orange County to fund HIV/Aids
prevention services to the Latino community, including education,
prevention materials, workshops and street intervention at the Day
Labor job site on Laguna Canyon Road. The group also provides safe
sex kits to local bars.
A $500 allocation went to Shanti, to fund its Prevention for HIV
Positive program for people with AIDS. Laguna was dropped from the
name when the group moved out of town.
DIAMOND STREET WALL
The City Council unanimously rejected staff recommendations to
reject the one bid for the repair of the Diamond Street retaining
wall, to reevaluate the project for cost effectiveness and reopen the
bidding.
WHAT IT MEANS
The city will pay Peterson-Chase General Engineering Construction
Inc. $142,675 to repair the wall. The bid exceeded the engineer’s
estimate by $98,000 and was almost $9,000 higher than available funds
budgeted for the project.
Mayor Cheryl Kinsman wanted assurances that the lone bidder, who
has not previously been hired by the city, is qualified. The council
approval was contingent upon City Manager Ken Frank’s favorable
vetting of the company.
DECK THE TREES, DRAPE THE METERS
The City Council accepted a $15,300 donation from the Laguna Beach
Visitors and Conference Bureau, to bag Downtown on-street parking
meters from Dec. 17 to 24.
WHAT IT MEANS
Downtown trees will be lighted up for the holidays and parking
will be free.
“This will be a great way to end the year on a positive note,”
bureau President Karyn Philippsen said.
The city used to bag the meters at the request of the Chamber of
Commerce and ate the loss in revenue. However, in recent years the
chamber has opted instead to install lights on Downtown street trees,
which the city funds for $35,000
“It was a real heartbreaker when we had to choose between lighting
Downtown and bagging the meters,” Councilwoman Toni Iseman said.
ASSESSMENT DISTRICT
No property owner in the proposed Underground Utility Assessment
District 99-4 publicly opposed the project at the meeting, which was
an opportunity to submit comments and ballots.
Previous requests for re-evaluation of the assessments of
properties within the district were approved.
WHAT IT MEANS
Ballots will be counted and the results will announced at the Dec.
7 council meeting. Approval of the district requires only a simple
majority.
AGENDA SHORTENED
The regular agenda hearings didn’t begin until about 8:30 p.m.,
about two hours later than the usual time.
Five items on the agenda were continued due to the late start
following a report on watershed projects in South County by county
spokesman Larry B. McKenney, a tribute to outgoing Councilman Wayne
Baglin and a lengthy discussion on whether to cancel a scheduled
presentation on the relocation of the maintenance yard to Act V.
WHAT IT MEANS
An appeal of a project at 147 Agate St. and a city facilities
study will be reviewed Jan. 4 and a proposal to improve public access
to development plans going through the approval process will be heard
Jan. 18. A proposal to change the scope of a Downtown traffic and
parking study, a status report on a South Laguna parking lot will be
rescheduled for January.
An appeal of the approved conditional use permit, coastal
development permit and negative declaration of impacts for the South
Coast Medical Center Cancer Center was withdrawn.
* Compiled and written by Barbara Diamond
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