Take care with Shack parking
- Share via
It’s clear that Laguna’s leaders want to do what’s best for the
city’s residents, but time after time issues come up that place
developers against residents and residents feel they can’t compete
with the insider’s game and the offers of increased taxes for the
city.
What developers of the Pottery Shack want shouldn’t be more
important than the needs of its neighbors.
This time the city made a great move. At Tuesday’s council
meeting, they voted to approve the Pottery Shack project, with plans
for the parking still to be negotiated. Residents don’t have much
issue with keeping businesses where there has been a business for a
long time. The issue has been adequate parking -- a parking situation
that wouldn’t bring down the whole neighborhood.
It’s not that developers are inherently the enemy -- they have
little to gain by upsetting the neighbors -- but there is a dance
that must be done between them and city leaders. If you come into
Laguna with a plan for change, you must be willing to negotiate and
help maintain the feel of the city.
Remember when Montage was being discussed and residents expressed
plenty of concern about the parking situation? They worried that the
proposed parking wouldn’t be sufficient for all the Montage employees
as well as visitors to Treasure Island Park.
It wasn’t long after the resort opened that the reality hit, and
it turned out there really were more people parking in the
residential areas, but there was no longer anything the city could do
about the Montage design.
There is still something the city can do about the Pottery Shack
parking situation. The Pottery Shack stands empty, and it will be
good to have it filled with merchants and a restaurant, but this
positive event for the city shouldn’t mean a major negative for those
who live on the neighboring streets.
Neighbors can go to the meetings all they want, they can complain
and the rest of us can find the situation upsetting or annoying, but
only the city’s leaders can do something about it. Only the city’s
leaders can ensure that a new business center won’t create a dark
cloud over the neighborhood.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.