Here’s a look at what took place...
Here’s a look at what took place at the March 15 meeting of the Laguna Beach City Council:
EXTRAORDINARY BUSINESS
The Laguna Beach High School Girl’s Varsity Basketball Team was
honored by the city for winning their California Interscholastic
Federation division.
“They are outstanding examples of participants in Laguna Beach
sports,” Mayor Elizabeth Pearson-Schneider said.
The team of Lauren Kelley, Lisa Avila, Brittany Clark, Andrea
Ventura, Lauren Delgado, Emily LaRose, Claire Vevaqua, Chelsea
Hairston, Tess Grogan and Haley Eaves was coached by Stacy Howard and
assistant Dan Breece.
THE PUBLIC SPEAKS
*Sarah Kasman announced she has returned to her old job as
executive director of Laguna Shanti, which used to be headquartered
in Laguna Beach.
“I want to thank the city for its financial support,” Kasman said.
“The city has the dubious distinction of the highest per capita
incidence of AIDS in the country.”
*Rik Lawrence asked to have the word “tenants” included or
determined implicit in the parking section of the resolution
approving the redevelopment of the Pottery Shack.
*Chamber of Commerce Executive Director Verlaine Crawford reported
that the chamber had created a government affairs council in January
and will begin to track legislative actions and set priorities.
AIRSPACE 4-1
The council approved a tentative parcel map airspace subdivision
at 575 North Coast Highway that will create three attached
residential condominium units.
Two live-work rental units at 346 North Coast Highway were
submitted as the required replacement of two rental units that will
be lost due to the development of the 575 project.
The council asked for a legal opinion on whether artist-live-work
units were valid replacement for standard rental units, which also
was questioned by two members of the Planning Commission. They didn’t
like the answer.
Councilwoman Toni Iseman voted against the approval, despite City
Attorney Philip Kohn’s opinion that the council could not legally
veto the proposed replacement of residential units with live-work
units under the current wording of the city’s housing element.
“We didn’t intend this result, but that is not what the provision
says,” Councilman Dicterow said.
WHAT IT MEANS
The council then directed staff to send the housing element to the
Planning Commission for clarification about replacement units.
“I don’t ever want to see this happen again,” Councilwoman Kinsman
said. “It’s wrong.”
CONSENT CALENDAR
Consent calendar items are approved in one motion unless a member
of the council, staff or public “pull” the item for separate review,
which then requires opening it to public comment and a vote.
*The council accepted a $4,390 donation from the Laguna Beach
Relief and Resource Coalition to fund Cold Weather Shelters, which
costs about $250 every time one is opened.
Shelters are opened when there is a 50% or greater chance of rain
and a temperature of 50 degrees, or a temperature of 42 degrees or
less.
“This year we faced some very cold, wet nights,” said Ed Sauls,
president of the coalition. “We went to members of the community and
asked if they could help and $3,300 was raised. We told folks it was
for the cold weather shelter. If any money is left over, it will
carry over to next year.”
Expenses include security guards, cleaning blankets and the
purchase of cleaning equipment. The program is administered by the
city’s Community Service Department, which does not charge for staff
time.
*The council approved a $9,926 contract to Weston Solutions to
complete an ocean bacteria evaluation.
TRASH TALK 5-0
The council voted unanimously to hold off taking final action on a
proposed amendment to the city code relating to the placement and
storage of residents’ three allowed trash containers.
This was the third council hearing on the trash container measure,
heard originally Feb. 1.
On Feb. 15, the council voted that trash cans could be left on the
street for pick-up, but the rest of the time the containers had to be
stored out of public view from any street, unless stored in alleys.
Containers were also required to be hidden except on properties
where it was deemed “practically impossible” or would cost more than
$2,000.
The public-view requirement was questioned at the second reading
of the amendment.
“I would support this if it can be done in a reasonable way
without forcing people to spend money,” Councilman Dicterow said.
City Manager Ken Frank said aesthetics drives most of the
complaints about the containers.
WHAT IT MEANS
Residents who fail to hide their trash containers as approved
under the original amendment could be cited and fined.
“It’s a safety issue when the cans are left on the street, but
it’s not a safety issue when the cans are put on private property,”
Kinsman said. “To require someone to build a trash enclosure that
requires design review is going overboard.”
The three-container system was approved by the council to reduce
the trash stream to the dumps or be subject to hefty fines, as
mandated by the state. Recyling and green waste containers do not go
to the dumps.
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