Yard move goes to state
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Barbara Diamond Coastline Pilot
A revised plan to relocate much of the city’s maintenance yard to the
Act V parking lot in Laguna Canyon will go to the California Coastal
Commission with the blessings of the full council.
The revised maintenance yard plan is based on a compromise
presented to the community in January by Mayor Elizabeth
Pearson-Schneider and Councilwoman Toni Iseman and further refined by
them, ending years of vitriolic community wrangling.
“I was mayor when I had the crazy idea of putting Toni and
Elizabeth in a room together and see what comes out,” said
Councilwoman Cheryl Kinsman. “This is nothing short of a miracle. I
wouldn’t change a thing.”
The City Council voted unanimously at the April 5 meeting to take
the steps needed to present the plan to the commission. Approval of
the compromise plan will open the way for the development of the
Village Entrance in which the community can take pride and park. That
proposal has been in the works for a decade.
“Through the spirit of compromise, every one wins in this
project,” Iseman said.
Iseman and Pearson-Schneider paid tribute to the contributions of
the city staff to the revised plans.
“Staff worked so hard and came up with great ideas and created a
better project,” Iseman said.
Key refinements presented at the council meeting included 264
public parking spaces at Act V, compared to the 173 in the previous
plan; one two-story building, instead of the two one-story buildings,
reducing the footprint by 33% ; a 22% reduction in the fuel
modification zone; more trees and a bigger budget.
The local coastal plan permits one-story buildings on the site,
but the two-stories proposed will be under the height limit for one
story.
“It will require coastal commission approval, but the staff seems
generally in favor of it,” assistant city manager John Pietig said.
“It will take strong commission support.”
Iseman is a member of the commission and is allowed to vote on
projects in her district.
“The other key issue is the estimated budget, which has increased
from $5.4 million to $6.4 million,” Pietig said.
Pietig expects the city to cover the increase by boosting the
sales price of the city-owned Olive Street lots to $700,000 each and
requesting additional funding from the Orange County Transportation
Authority for its portion of the project.
Village Laguna President Doug Reilly said the group appreciates
concessions made in the projects that provide more parking at Act V
and leaves the shuttle bus stop where it will attract riders, but
still has some concerns.
“We feel the presence of gas tanks will greatly increase both the
risk of the spread of fire into the wilderness park and the risk that
a wildfire in the park will destroy the maintenance equipment on
which the city depends,” Reilly said.
Iseman, the standard bearer for Village Laguna, said she too would
prefer the fuel station closer to the fire department, but the
proposed plan won’t work unless all vehicles are in one location, and
she has been assured it is safe.
“Early on, the gas tanks were a sticking point for me -- I said
no, no, no,” Iseman said. “But I was educated by the staff.”
Reilly also said Village Laguna was pleased that the Act V
maintenance yard and the Village Entrance are now being considered as
a single project.
However, the addition of street level parking will not take place
until Act V is ready for occupancy and only as interim use until the
Village Entrance project is undertaken. Funding will be separate.
“We have pretty much have enough money for Act V,”
Pearson-Schneider said. “Toni and I would like to see the Village
Entrance construction start within five years. But we have do some
work on the funding.”
Current thinking is to float a bond issue to cover the estimated
$20 million cost for the Village Entrance.
Reilly urged the council to direct City Manager Ken Frank to
prepare a plan for a bond issue as soon as possible.
“Five years is a long time,” Reilly said. “When we heard about the
interest in a bond issue, we hoped the time [construction start date]
would be shorter.”
Revised plans for the Village Entrance project presented at the
meeting showed 580 public parking spaces in a parking structure, with
accesses from Forest Avenue and Laguna Canyon Road and possibly a few
more spaces clustered around the Sewer Tower Plaza.
“I generally am in favor of building the Village Entrance, but I
have a lot of concern about cars downtown,” Loma Terrace resident
Michael Hoag said. “I fear the Village Entrance [parking garage] will
act like a magnet. Any way to keep cars out of downtown is worth
considering.”
The revised plan also included some maintenance and storage
facilities, meter and sign shops previously proposed for Act V, flood
proofing of facilities in the flood plain, a public park and possibly
a pedestrian bridge across Laguna Canyon Road. Staff has already
secured a Cal Trans grant to install a stoplight at the location.
Studioneleven prepared the plans for the ultimate reuse of the
current yard, but not the interim plan for employee and 190 public
parking spaces.
Staff was directed to seek permits for the interim conversion and
will bring back a modification to the 2006-07 capital improvement
program to include the funding.
A work plan and cost estimates for Village Entrance will be
presented to the council for consideration in June.
Iseman and Pearson-Schneider will host workshops to keep the
public updated on progress and any plan changes.
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