Public set to weigh in
Barbara Diamond
City and South Coast Medical Center officials want to know exactly
what the community will support to keep the hospital in town.
The City Council approved a public poll on Tuesday to gauge which,
if any, additional uses residents will accept to keep the hospital
from leaving town. The cost of the poll is estimated to be between
$15,000 and $20,000, and will be split between the city and the
hospital.
“I firmly believe keeping the hospital is the number one issue in
town,” Councilwoman Cheryl Kinsman said. “But I would like to get the
public’s opinion in a truly scientific poll.”
A joint city/hospital task force recommended the poll.
“We thank the city for its interest in the hospital and for
working diligently with us,” hospital President Gary Irish said.
The joint task force was formed after city officials reviewed in
September a study of city health care needs commissioned in response
to news stories that the hospital was considering a move to San Juan
Capistrano.
Even consideration of a move shocked city officials and residents.
“This is an example of what the city does and should not do,”
Kinsman said. “We take institutions like the Festival of Arts and the
hospital for granted. They’ve always been there and we think they
always will be there.”
Kinsman, Councilwoman Jane Egly, former Councilman Paul Freeman
and Assistant City Manager John Pietig represent the city on the task
force. Irish, and board members Kathleen Blackburn, Harold Kaufman,
Tim McMahon and Bruce Christian represent the hospital.
“We have been meeting once a month since October,” Pietig said.
The task force has discussed the difficulties in keeping a
financially viable hospital in Laguna while absorbing the estimated
$72 million to retro-fit the hospital to state mandated seismic
standards and upgrade infrastructure, while still operating under the
constraints of the campus.
However, relocating is also costly, probably more than $100
million. Land, financing and entitlements must be secured. And
selling the medical center is no piece of cake because of zoning and
limited uses.
“The hospital is now considering options for improving the
existing facility,” Pietig said.
A common, but untested, belief that the community might support
some additional uses at the site would be explored in the poll.
“Questions have not yet been formulated,” Pietig said.
One possible question is whether South Laguna would rise up in
wrath at the notion of rezoning the land behind the hospital for new
uses
“The city should stand firmly behind efforts to keep the
hospital,” South Laguna resident Will Harrison said. “In the last 18
months, my partner has gone twice to the emergency room for
life-threatening causes.
“The hospital is eight minutes from my house and I would hate to
lose that.”
State law does not allow a stand-alone emergency room. Without
hospital facilities, the city would be left at best with a walk-in
clinic.
The hospital opened in 1959.
Laguna Beach residents in the 1950s thought a hospital was so
important that they raised the money to build it on donated land,
prompted by the death of a police officer who died from a gunshot
wound while being transported out of town to the nearest medical
facility.
The hospital’s importance to the community will be tested by the
poll. Results should be available by the end of April to the council,
the hospital and the public.
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