Former mayor’s passions revealed
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BARBARA DIAMOND
Friends, family, admirers and colleagues of Councilwoman Cheryl
Kinsman gathered Feb. 4 to honor her contributions to the city during
her term as mayor in 2004.
“So many people came last year when Toni was honored that I was
afraid no one would come today,” Kinsman said. “This means a lot to
me.”
About 90 people attended the annual Laguna Beach Woman’s Club
Luncheon Honoring the Outgoing Mayor and Dessert Contest held Feb. 4
at the clubhouse on St. Ann’s Drive.
Been there. Done that. Former mayors Toni Iseman, Phyllis Sweeney,
Laguna’s first woman mayor, and Kathleen Blackburn and Mayor
Elizabeth Pearson-Schneider were there. Blackburn reprised her
tongue-in-cheek “Top 10,” which began a few annual luncheons ago with
“The Top 10 Things I Always Wanted to Say at A City Council Meeting
(but couldn’t, shouldn’t, wouldn’t).” This year it was the “Top 10
Ways You Know Cheryl Kinsman is Passionate about an Issue.”
You know Cheryl is passionate about:
10. Retaining the ambience of the Pottery Shack when she
commissions a life-size sculpture of her beloved dog, Storm, to adorn
the roof of the new building;
9. Children when rocket ships have been installed in every city
park in Laguna Beach, including Treasure Island;
8. Animal preservation when she submits an application to the
Design Review Board to build a large salt water swimming pool in her
office parking lot for rescued sea lions and their pups;
7. “Soup” on the first Friday night of the month, when she
announces that she is expanding it to Pancakes and Eggs on Monday
mornings;
6. Opposing an airport at El Toro when she is seen flogging Los
Angeles Mayor Jim Hahn, while he insists that his promotion of an El
Toro Airport is only a campaign strategy;
5. Improving the city’s financial health and computer systems when
she is constantly e-mailing Bill Gates, Alan Greenspan, Warren Buffet
and Steve Jobs and insists that the city manager throw away his
abacus;
4. Public parking, when Joshua and Nicholas (Kinsman’s sons) have
applied to be parking lot attendants at the new Corporate Yard/Act V
Parking Lot;
3. Bringing culture to Laguna Beach when she asks (Pacific
Symphony Orchestra Maestro) Carl St. Claire to write a symphony for
her next conducting appearance with the Community Band at the Artists
Theatre;
2. Her occupation as a certified public accountant when she
changes her birthday to April 15 and applies for a name change to
Cheryl CPA Kinsman;
1. Saving the hospital, when she signs up for the rock climbing
and repelling class on Half Dome on her annual trip to Yosemite, so
she can get herself down from the South Coast Medical Center tower.
Kinsman’s announcement at a City Council meeting that “Our
hospital isn’t leaving. I may be strapped onto the tower, but it’s
not leaving,” was delivered in her usual dry fashion, which may lead
observers to assume she doesn’t care as much about an issue as some
more dramatic speakers.
“I met Cheryl 18 years ago, when I was on the board of the North
Laguna Community Association,” Pearson Schneider said during a
biography of Kinsman. “She stormed into a meeting, upset by a hotel
being built on North Coast Highway.”
Kinsman owned a business near the project and joined the
association until she, and her husband and partner, Michael Kinsman,
moved the company to South Laguna.
“A couple of years later, I went on the Planning Commission and
two years later, I talked her into applying,” Pearson-Schneider said.
“She was appointed and we served for about six years, which included
the endless meetings on Montage.”
Kinsman was elected to the City Council in 2000, joined by
Pearson-Schneider in 2002, and re-elected in 2004.
“I am delighted to have her as my friend,” Pearson-Schneider said.
Kinsman comes by heritage to public service.
She was raised in Riverside, the fifth generation Brown in the
town. Her father served as mayor for three terms, her mother was a
school principal.
Kinsman’s two sisters, Susan Baltagi, a principal at a Riverside
Middle School, and Becky Westerdahl, introduced by Kinsman as a
professor of worms, attended the luncheon. Also seated with Kinsman
at the head table: family friends Corrine Law, Karyn Godfrey and Lee
Childress, founder with her late husband of the Macy Awards, the
Oscars of high school productions.
“Everyone in this room is special to me,” Kinsman said.
Becky Jones, who frequently disagrees with Kinsman’s votes but
considers herself a friend of long standing, offered to go with her
to pick out an outfit to wear to the luncheon. It hadn’t occurred to
Kinsman that she needed a new outfit, but she did perk up her black
pants outfit with a peach, velvet burnout scarf.
“I have never worn a scarf before in my life,” Kinsman said.
She bought the scarf on a trip to Paris -- at the airport, not at
couturier or even an atelier.
That’s Kinsman for you.
Among those honoring her with presentations, accolades or both:
Martha Lydick, president of the Laguna Beach Taxpayers Assn.; Dennis
Myers, board member of the Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce; Ilse
Lenschow, representing Laguna North community association ; Planning
Commissioner Anne Johnson and Peggy Ford, president of the woman’s
club.
Bree Burgess Rosen sang one of her clever vocal spoofs.
Veronica Nice chaired the luncheon, catered by Bobby Fader of
Tivoli Terrace and Too. Burgess and “Lagunatic” cast members Randy
Hatfield, Adam Hemming and Pam Plummer entertained.
Luncheon guests spanned the spectrum of Laguna’s diverse
population, including Laguna Canyon Foundation President Carolyn
Wood, Montage General Manager James Bermingham, Laguna Greenbelt Inc.
board member Marv Johnson, North Lagunan Art Casebeer, Festival of
Arts President Anita Mangels and Planning Commissioner Linda
Dietrich.
LEST WE FORGET; Winners of the Dessert Contest were Cathy Crumm’s
Chocolate Chambord Cake and Myers’ Almond Pear Tart.
* OUR LAGUNA is a regular feature of the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. Contributions are welcomed. Write to Barbara Diamond, P.O. Box
248, Laguna Beach, 92652; hand-deliver to Suite 222 in the
Lumberyard, 384 Forest Ave.; call (949) 494-4321 or fax (949)
494-8979.
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