Field fence could cost $400K
Suzie Harrison
City and school district officials hope they are nearing the ninth
inning in resolving simmering complaints about the high school
baseball field fence.
The baseball field ad hoc committee and the Laguna Beach Board of
Education have been meeting with neighbors for months to address the
concerns, which have been causing strife since fall 2004.
Some neighbors have complained that the fence around the field
ruins their views and does not keep balls from breaking car windows.
“We live directly across the street from the baseball field and
had a beautiful panoramic ocean view,” said neighbor Stephen
Crawford. “They installed 30-foot poles above the ridgeline of our
house, so now we have one obstructed view looking through a fence and
a totally obstructed view because of a 10- by 50-foot mesh fence
behind the dugout.”
Crawford said another big problem is that balls are going over the
fence, hitting parked cars on Wilson Street and St. Ann’s Drive.
“My windshield was broken by a ball that hit my car in my
driveway,” Crawford said. “The season has only been two months and
we’re looking at 18 baseballs that have been hit just out of left
field alone. Now it has become a safety issue.”
The committee met April 18 and decided that the answer to the view
problem may be a retractable fence that could be lowered when games
are not in session. Proposed modifications to the fence could cost
around $400,000.
“They need to be innovative and open up their pocketbook and help
the neighbors with view problems and help with the safety factor,”
Crawford said. “Then it’s a win-win situation for everyone.”
District director of facilities and grounds Eric Jetta has issued
a request to look into the viability of replacing the existing
stationary fence with a telescoping retractable pole and fence system
with netting that could be lowered.
A draft of the proposal was distributed at the meeting for the
neighbors to review before the final document was issued this week to
contactors, structural engineers and fence companies.
The retractable system would reduce or perhaps eliminate view
obstructions for homes located on the north side of the baseball
field, Jetta explained.
The four-page proposal details the field’s needs and asks that
firms submit their proposals no later than June 30.
The committee was formed in October to resolve neighbors’
complaints and consists of school board members El Hathaway and
Robert Whalen, City Council representatives Jane Egly and Steve
Dicterow, and field neighbors Stephen and Jamie Crawford, Christian
Feist, David and Michele Nelson, David Smith, Greg Broska, as well as
baseball boosters Dan Bolar and Gary Monroe.
“I think most people agree the new field is an improvement in
terms of playability,” Whalen said. Whalen said the board has been
working diligently to address neighbors’ issues, especially safety
issues.
So far, the district has made a number of modifications in
response to the neighbors’ complaints. It has reduced the height of
the existing football field scoreboard; painted perimeter fence
poles, backstop and dugout poles, the baseball field scoreboard and
support poles to reduce glare; provided vinyl-coated fencing in lieu
of galvanized chain link; installed underground electrical conduit
for future retractable netting and pruned trees at the northwest
corner of the baseball field.
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