Responsibility for So. Laguna beaches People have...
Responsibility for So. Laguna beaches
People have known for years that some of the six stairways to the
beach in south Laguna need
repairs and are dangerous for pedestrians to use. The six
stairways and the beaches of south Laguna, which were offered as a
gift by Orange County recently, were turned down because, as Mayor
Pearson-Schneider said:
“They are in very poor condition. If somebody trips and falls...”
Four council members voted no to accepting these stairs and
beaches for liability reasons, and yet the city attorney as long ago
as 2000 said any lawsuit regarding the bad condition of some of these
stairways would involve the city because they are within the city
limits.
These stairways and beaches should be owned by the city of Laguna
Beach, since they are within the city limits of the city.
One of the stairways needing repairs more than others is at 31351
So. Coast Hwy., less than 3/4 of a mile from the Montage Hotel and
Aliso Creek Inn and Golf course.
Why can’t the Montage donate the money needed to repair this
stairway, as a example of what can be done, and why didn’t city
officials tell the whole story, which includes requests for grants
from the Coastal Conservancy.
As a Conservancy board member said in 2001: “I don’t care if a
homeowner wants to challenge us. Let them...Our mandate is to
preserve public access.” (L.A Times, Dec. 7, 2001)
Hats off to Councilperson Jane Egly for voting to accept the gift
of the stairs and beaches.
ROGER CARTER
Undue influence on City Council
In Sean Schlueter’s recent letter to the editor he thanks
Councilman Steve Dicterow and credits him for his insistence on
demanding a two-year Conditional Use Permit for the Montage off-site
parking in South Laguna. Sean should have waited two short weeks for
his praise because at the March 15th Council meeting, Dicterow
reversed his decision by [voting to] eliminate the two-year
restriction.
The Montage came back to the Council on March 15th for, as Council
member Jane Egly so aptly put it, “a second bite of the apple,” after
having agreed on March 1st to the two-year restriction on the CUP for
its off-site parking on the former Unocal gas station site.
At that March 15th Council meeting, Egly stated that she was mad
that this agenda item was back after only two weeks. Many of us who
have been following the bad neighbor practices of the Montage over
the past three years were also mad. We were mad because, for the
Montage to come back to the Council so soon, they must had have some
confidence, regardless of neighbors complaints, that a decision would
be decided their way. And so it was.
The two-year restriction on the CUP was supposed to give the
Montage the incentive to find adequate parking for their needs within
that two-year time period. Dicterow’s motion to eliminate the
two-year restriction was couched in language that made it sound as if
the Montage was not really getting exactly what they came back for,
but they surely did. His motion passed with a 3-2 vote, Elizabeth
Pearson-Schneider and Cheryl Kinsman making up the Council majority
and in essence telling the folks directly affected by the overflow of
cars from the Montage to ‘stuff it’. It’s now blatantly obvious that
Jane Egly and Toni Iseman are the only two left on the Council who
recognize the magnitude of the adverse impact the Montage has had on
the surrounding neighborhood.
Now that the two-year CUP has been removed -- and given the
present City Council majority -- many of us believe the Montage will
not be required to solve their parking problems in the next two
years. In fact, after Tuesday’s Council meeting, we can now not only
fully appreciate the influence the Montage is able to exert but also
see the extent of their unwillingness to adequately solve the
problems they have created.
JOHANNA FELDER
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