PUBLIC COMMUNICATIONS Roger von Butow announced the...
PUBLIC COMMUNICATIONS
Roger von Butow announced the first Adopt-a-Beach cleanup of the
year.
The “First Flush” cleanup will be held from 9 a.m. to noon
Saturday at Main Beach.
For more information, call von Butow at (949) 497-4816 or Rick
Wilson at (949) 492-8170.
Entre-Manure, the company that collects pet waste for the city,
reported a decline in total pounds collected at the Bark Park, Top of
the World, Dartmoor Street, Laguna Canyon, Riddle Field and Moulton
Meadows.
The company collected 351 1/2 pounds this year, compared to 384
pounds in 2003 and 534 pounds in 2002, the first year it was
contracted.
Eleanor Henry asked council members who have accepted campaign
donations from Athens Group to recuse themselves from voting on any
expansion of the golf course at Aliso Creek Inn into parkland.
COUNCIL/STAFF COMMUNICATIONS
Council members Toni Iseman and Steven Dicterow met Monday with
representatives of Montage Hotel and Spa to discuss the city’s role
in rumored projects.
Iseman and Dicterow were appointed by the council as a
sub-committee to work with Montage and Athens Group, after there were
published reports -- though not confirmed by the hotel developers or
owners -- of possible projects discussed in closed meetings with the
county about real estate holdings in South Laguna.
The sub-committee meeting was not open to the public.
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COMMITTEE OPENINGS
The City Council will interview applicants for seats on city
committees at the Feb. 15 meeting.
Feb. 8 is the deadline to submit applications for the three
openings each on the Heritage Open Space, Parking Traffic and
Circulation and Telecommunications committees and four openings on
the Housing & Human Affairs committees.
WHAT IT MEANS
Serving on committees is a way to participate in city government
and a good education on how much time and energy is required.
SMOKING BAN
The City Council approved the purchase of 50 ash urns to be
installed and maintained at beach access points and “No Smoking” to
be added to signs already in place.
The total cost will be $15,000, $13,000 of it for the urns.
WHAT IT MEANS
The urns, which are actually a removable tubes inside concrete
stanchions with a tiny hole in a soup-can-shaped top, required a
demonstration to understand how they operate. Smokers, who are
inclined to just toss their butts on the ground, may not take the
time to figure out how the urns will work.
CURB RESTRICTIONS
The City Council voted unanimously to amend the city code to
change the time limit for green zones from 20 minutes to 30 minutes
and to add blue zones for disabled parking to the municipal code.
WHAT IT MEANS
The changes bring the code into agreement with what was already
being practiced.
HOUSE TAKEN OFF
HISTORIC REGISTER
The council voted unanimously to remove a house from the city’s
Historic Register.
A proposed new addition that almost doubled the size of the
residence was a concern to the Heritage Committee, which recommended
that the property owner ask the city to take the house off the
register and reimburse the city for the waived fees.
WHAT IT MEANS
Restitution of fees can be made, and garage space that was usurped
for living space that leaves a property under-parked may be regained
for vehicles, but foundations and rooms are not easily removed from
setbacks.
The council directed the Heritage Committee and the Planning
Commission to consider the process for removing a home from the
register, which the city cannot under the present ordinance enforce
without the property owners permission.
OPEN SPACE
COMMITTEE REVISED
The council voted unanimously to expand the horizon of the Open
Space Committee, henceforth to be called the Environmental Committee
with an increase to seven members.
“This does not mean a decrease in the importance of open space,”
Dicterow said. “But we need to look at things like pollution.”
Dicterow said the city was active in improving water quality, but
had no official body on issue.
WHAT IT MEANS
Open Space was removed from the list of committees which are to
have members appointed at the Feb. 8 meeting.
Dicterow and Councilwoman Jane Egly will meet with the Open Space
Committee and report back to the council with recommendations for the
structure of the expanded committee.
APPEALS
The council denied, by a 3-2 vote, an appeal of an administrative
decision that eight lots on Baja Street were a not legal building
site. Neighbors opposed legalizing the lots. Kinsman and Mayor
Elizabeth Pearson-Schneider voted against the denial.
WHAT IT MEANS
The property owners will not be able to build a home based on the
entire square footage of the contiguous nine lots they own, one of
which is a 25 by 100 foot, legal building site, unless the lots are
combined. The Design Review Board majority indicated at a concept
hearing that they did not favor a lot combination.
A 4-1 council majority denied the appeal of a property owner who
wanted to build a new 2,690 square-foot home at 382 Ledroit St. on a
lot with a water course. Neighbors opposed the construction based on
size and privacy issues.
The project was denied 3-2 by the Design Review Board after three
meetings.
“This is the most egregious invasion of privacy I have seen,”
Iseman said. “I am surprised it got any [DRB] votes. The top floor
has to go.”
Pearson-Schneider voted against the denial because the council had
previously told the applicant to move the house out of the
watercourse on the property, which limited where it could be located.
WHAT IT MEANS
The property owner asked for the council to vote, rather than send
the project back to the Design Review Board. A revised proposal now
would be considered a new project, starting from scratch, with all
applicable fees.
The council revisited its denial of a telecommunications facility
in office space in South Laguna and voted 4-1 to reverse its position.
“We got sued on this and it was a slam dunk loss,” said Dicterow,
an attorney.
The facility had been approved by the Planning Commission. Iseman
appealed it and the council upheld the appeal, based not on the
installation of antennas, but rather on the location of ancillary
mechanical equipment.
Nextel Communications filed a law suit in federal court to
challenge the denial, based on other the location in the same
building of other telecommunications mechanical equipment.
Iseman voted against the revision.
WHAT IT MEANS
The city cannot ban telecommunication antennas by federal law. If
the city wants to deny installation of mechanical equipment
associated with the antennas in areas designated for commercial or
retail use, the council could direct the Planning Commission to
explore and evaluate alternatives, including a possible amendment to
the city’s telecommunications ordinance.
SNAPSHOTS: “Just call me Mayor Pearson, it will cut five minutes
off the meeting time,” Pearson-Schneider said.
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