What is the future of art in...
What is the future
of art in Laguna?
As a former resident in Laguna Beach (can’t afford it anymore) and
a current figure artist, I say YEAH to the letter from Gene Cooper.
How dare the city be so narrow-minded and “conservative” as to
prohibit the use of nudes in a public place in Laguna.
It is attitudes like that that makes me fear for the future of all
artists and artwork shown in a town that was one of the most liberal
(years ago). That is one of the things that lured me to Laguna many
years ago from Los Angeles.
Gene’s comments about the classic artists we all have loved our
whole lives, such as Rodin, Michelangelo, and my personal favorite,
Toulouse-Lautrec, would not be able to show their work now in Laguna!
Hopefully the galleries will not go the way of City Hall.
JOY PATTERSON
San Juan Capistrano
El Morro leases could help pay for services
The most important reason to extend leases at El Morro Village is
to generate needed cash of $50 million and rental income of $3.2
million per year for the California state budget.
Most of the California budget is spent on very essential services
for the people of California. School districts are being forced to
cut back from essential needs. The building of 60 campsites should be
put off until at least there is a surplus in the budget.
Crystal Cove Historic District residents were asked to leave to
make room for this park to be used by the public several years ago.
The public still has no access to the park or beaches. During this
period of time, the state did not collect $500,000 per year from the
former residents. More income to the state was sidelined for a
project that should have been delayed because the budget is out of
balance.
Fix up the 295 parks in California before any expansion of park
building. The unfinished maintenance to the park system is $1
billion, according to Ruth Coleman, director of California Parks and
Recreation. Where is that money coming from?
JAMES CROWELL
Santa Ana
El Morro lease biz smells bad
Apparently Assemblyman Chuck DeVore maintains that his proposal to
grant a 30-year [lease] extension, after the previous five-year
extension, after the previous 25-year extension, has nothing to do
with $66,000 of contributions to his campaign from El Morro owners
and arises only from his wish to raise funds to help the state solve
its budget crisis.
If that is his motivation, then why sell this lease at a bargain
rate? Why not have an auction and sell the 30-year extensions to the
highest bidders, rather than giving them away for about $470 per
space per month?
Certainly much more could be raised that way than by practically
giving it away as DeVore proposes. And if the motivation is to help
the state get over a temporary crisis, why a 30-year extension?
I usually vote Republican. Republicans are supposed to be good
businesspersons. This proposed deal makes no business sense for the
public. Something smells bad.
STAN FRYMAN
Laguna Beach
Why did Dicterow flip-flop on Montage?
Those with a penchant for following the doings of our City Council
may not have been surprised by the abrupt change of heart from
Councilman Steve Dicterow. In the space of only two weeks, Dicterow
changed his vote and absolved the Montage from having to meet parking
requirements that he had personally crafted just two weeks earlier;
conditions without which, Dicterow agreed, the city would lose
control of the Montage parking situation. Dicterow’s all-too-frequent
habit of changing his mind begs the question of whether he can
remember how he voted on an issue the last time it came before him.
However, in this case, with the reversal coming only two weeks on the
heels of his original vote, on conditions he was instrumental in
forging, we are required to look for another explanation.
And lo and behold, one can be found. The common thread? The
Montage. In February 2002, the council was discussing the runaway
costs associated with construction of our beautiful, yet very
expensive park next to the Montage. Estimated costs had far exceeded
the original estimate, and Dicterow said he felt the “costs were
neither reasonable nor bona fide and were the developer’s problem.”
Based on his lawyerly reading of the development agreement, he opined
that there was no “basis for proceeding with construction beyond the
$5.3 million” and “anything above that was the responsibility of the
Athens Group.”
What a difference a few months makes. When the issue came up again
at a May 2002 council meeting, Dicterow found that the $8,460,000
cost cap proposed by the Montage looked reasonable. As if to make
residents feel better, he expressed “frustration at the difference in
the current costs versus what had been expected during the campaign.”
The only member of council to vote against the decision to pay the
Montage $8,460,000, plus interest at 8.5%, for construction of the
park was Wayne Baglin. A group affiliated with the Montage
contributed $30,000 to the political action committee organized to
defeat Baglin in the last election. Coincidence? You decide.
Councilman Dicterow looked at the facts and decided that it was more
important to protect his political viability than to protect the
citizens who elected him. We should remember that when and if his
name once again appears on a ballot, asking us to support his desire
to “represent” us.
TOM GILES
Laguna Beach
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