Why they don’t dig parking plan
Roger Von Butow
The Village Flatlanders Neighborhood Assn. is grateful for the
opportunity to correct numerous inaccuracies regarding our petitions
to the city and the developers of the site formerly known as The
Pottery Shack.
We did not, as your June 17 editorial stated, get something we
wished for, but rather the Brooks Street LLC got a sweetheart deal
that no private homeowner would ever get.
The City Council, without any site plan or details posted at the
hearing on June 7, with nothing available but rumors prior to the
meeting, approved a series of major alterations before they were
properly considered by their own appointed committees (Design Review
Board, Planning, Parking and Traffic Circulation, and Heritage).
We have consistently demanded during the entire process that a
subterranean lot be implemented to comply with ordinances, and it
should have been the fiscal burden of the developers to assure
on-site employee and visitor parking demands are met. We kept “on
message” and never strayed from that goal.
Forty new spaces, only 10 earmarked for the shopping center. And
who is going to monitor the lots, with no attendant even discussed?
The council made no demands on June 7, only capitulations, and the
developers will be able to lease the additional 30 spaces for
personal corporate profit.
The council originally prescribed no valet parking for this site.
They have now overruled themselves, and does anyone in their right
mind believe that surrounding commerce will lease these expensive
spaces for dishwashers, waitresses or maids? It will be a shopping
center and not carry the famous Pottery Shack name, which has rallied
false, nostalgic sentimentality among the community.
When you bulldoze 75% of the site, when you demolish the only
historic structures like the rear building, when you get council
approval for a complete reconfiguration of the parking lot to create
a traffic circulation conundrum (including a subterranean level) with
multiple access/egress points, and when you remove a 75-year-old
sycamore tree without remorse or a second thought, you’re not in
compliance with the original spirit of the rehabilitation, so what’s
in a name anyway?
The city has agreed that our neighborhood is under-parked by
hundreds of spaces, so how does this pitiful increase legally
mitigate that?
The Village Flatlanders Neighborhood Assn. collected almost 500
signatures, asking for an environmental report a year ago, with
then-council candidate Jane Egly one of those concerned locals.
When Councilwoman Egly claimed confusion two weeks ago regarding
our demands, she obviously forgot this. She also forgot that we met
with her and stated our position in no uncertain terms: The lower
level would meet the increased demands for site or at minimum become
a city-operated and owned lot.
Apparently that theatrical hat she threw into the campaign ring a
while back is empty-headed. Ditto for our ex-parte communications
with Councilwoman Toni Iseman and Mayor Elizabeth Pearson-Schneider.
Council members are hypocritical when it claims they’re seeking more
satellite parking. Iseman said it costs $40,000 per space in Laguna,
in this case another $1.6 million dollars for the additional 40
spaces in a neighborhood already over-whelmed.
So where and when does the city expect to find spaces if it
refuses to pay for them or force commercial developers to pay as they
play? Couldn’t the city have demanded that the developer create this
underground facility so the city could have meters there for mutual
public benefit and city coffers? What kind of council believes its
residents are immature thinkers and expect more spaces to come free?
Didn’t we learn anything from the failures and lapses of the Treasure
Island project?
Our reasoning has not been “tortured,” as your editorial said, but
consistently logical. We are like strict constitutionalists: We do
not believe that any governing body should stretch, ignore, or
circumvent municipal procedures and the California Environmental
Quality Act for private financial gain. Nor should the wealthy have
options, entitlements or advantages denied the general population.
Lastly, name-calling should be beneath this paper, and demeaning the
real watchdogs like neighborhood associations is sad. Breaching their
entrusted electoral responsibilities, the city didn’t look out for
us. If we are the “purists” you described, it’s because we’ve studied
our terrain and laws thoroughly, know them better than our council
and staff. The developer’s investment group got everything it wanted
and more without any restraint or concessions.
Our city weakly rolled over when these developers threatened
litigation and, worse, a boogeyman Village Faire Mall redux early on.
The council waved a white hanky in cowardice before the first
hearings last year. If they can’t negotiate firmly and intelligently
for residents, if our council is bamboozled so easily when it has
leverage as it did at Treasure Island, where is this city going? Or
is it already there?
* Roger Von Butow is the environmental officer of the Village
Flatlanders Neighborhood Assn.
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