Council cancels Act V meeting
Barbara Diamond
The City Council voted unanimously Tuesday to cancel a public meeting
scheduled for Saturday on the proposed relocation of the Maintenance
Yard.
Opponents of the project, who had requested the meeting, suggested
delaying or supported canceling it rather than proceeding with it as
proposed.
“At the Sept. 21 council meeting, the Laguna Canyon Conservancy
submitted a request for a community workshop,” conservancy President
Carolyn Wood said. “Now, we understand the [meeting] plans are not
quite what we understood.”
Opponents of the relocation to Act V did not want the meeting
limited to the same presentations made by them and by city staff at
the California Coastal Commission project appeal hearing -- each side
taking about 15 minutes, not counting public comment.
“Rehashing the coastal commission hearing would not be
productive,” former mayor and project opponent Ann Christoph said.
The planned meeting was not on Tuesday’s agenda, which meant
little public input on the merits of the procedures or delaying it
for modifications. However, Wood said the conservancy would not make
a presentation if the meeting were held.
“I suggest you continue the [Nov. 20] meeting and modify the
procedure to go beyond issues raised at the coastal commission,” Wood
said.
She suggested Jan. 8 as an alternative date, but failed to get
council backing.
“I thought the workshop was supposed to be for the public to hear
what was presented at the coastal commission,” Councilwoman Elizabeth
Pearson said.
The council had appointed Pearson and Councilwoman Toni Iseman at
the Sept. 21 meeting to a subcommittee to work with Village Entrance
project consultants, Studio One Eleven, to seek compromise solutions
that would satisfy all factions. Iseman opposes the project. Pearson
supports it.
Pearson had requested at the September meeting that the workshop
be televised so an even broader audience would have the opportunity
to hear the presentations. Councilman Wayne Baglin also supported a
public hearing on the coastal commission presentation.
On Tuesday Baglin said that Councilwoman-elect Jane Egly should be
informed about the project before a public meeting was held.
Egly, who is on the board of Laguna Greenbelt Inc, which opposes
the relocation to Act V, denounced the proposed relocation project
during the election campaign. Egly’s victory and the re-election of
Mayor Cheryl Kinsman ousted Baglin from the council, but did not
change the 3 to 2 division on the council.
“I’d come in with a broken wing -- in fact I think I have
something else to go to,” Baglin said Tuesday. “It would be a waste
of my time, the staff’s time and the public’s time.”
Baglin said his absence did not signal a step back from
participation in public affairs.
“It was an in-your-face protest,” Baglin said.
Pearson would have preferred holding the meeting Saturday, as well
as a facilitated meeting in January, at which, she said, the public
could submit constructive ideas.
“We need positive ideas, instead of attacks,” Pearson said. “Ann
Christoph is one of the best at that. She comes to us and says, we
have a problem: here is a possible solution.”
The council could take no action Tuesday until it voted that the
proposal to cancel the meeting came up after the agenda was published
and was subsequently added.
Councilman Steve Dicterow made the motion to cancel the meeting,
with no future date set until sub-committee members Iseman and
Pearson come back to the council with a firm proposal for a
facilitated meeting and to allocate up to $5,000 to pay for the
facilitation. He said if expenses exceeded the limit, staff could
request additional funding.
“Let Toni and Elizabeth design a meeting that everyone wants it to
be, aimed at bringing us all together,” Baglin said.
Iseman and Pearson were directed to report back on their progress
to the council in three weeks.
The maintenance yard relocation to Act V has bounced around for
about a decade with little give on either side to date. Opposition is
to the proposed site on the fringe of the greenbelt, not to
relocation. Almost everyone favors a more aesthetically pleasing
layout on the highly visible corner next to City Hall, dubbed the
Village Entrance.
“I hope something can be worked out for Act V,” said Kinsman, who
supports the relocation. “I thought the proposal made 10 years ago by
the Village Entrance Task Force was the compromise.”
She said both sides of the issue have polls that show the public
favors the relocation two-to-one.
“If it needs to be a referendum ... so be it,” Kinsman said.
The city has not requested a definite date to resume the Coastal
Commission hearing on the appeal of the project approval, pending a
city-sponsored workshop, although a March date is anticipated.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.