City should control spending
Mayor Elizabeth Pearson claims that because of Laguna’s beaches, we
have fiscal expenses that many other cities don’t have. Let’s be
accurate as to the general structure of this budget. First of all,
many of our beaches are under county jurisdiction, which means the
city doesn’t pay anything for their lifeguards and other services.
All of South Laguna can be included in this category.
Laguna is not the only city to have unique expenses. Anaheim has
Disneyland. For some reason other cities manage to make these unique
items profitable. What is Laguna’s problem?
Fire Safety. Pearson claims that due to our terrain we have
special challenges. If this is so, why did Pearson recently vote
against the recommendation of city staff and the fire department to
require the grade of driveways, for example, not be greater than 10%.
When it came to voting for policy that would have promoted the safety
of our firefighters and residents, she voted against greater safety
and for developers.
The truth is that in the event of a fire, both local and county
firefighters respond. They are all equally well-trained to deal with
the multitudes of circumstances they might encounter. Pearson’s
statements are a slight to county firefighters and offensive. They
deserve an apology. We have special challenges all right, but it’s
not the terrain.
Pearson claims that because we have older buildings, we don’t have
adequate parking. Let’s again look at Pearson’s recent voting record.
She voted to approve the Pottery Shack redevelopment project under
the historical parking guidelines -- modern-day intensification of
use with historical parking. What she approved would not meet the
parking needs for Pottery Shack employees, let alone provide any
parking for the patrons.
A few months later, Pearson also approved a modification of the
previous approval, which included eliminating more than half of the
on-site historical structures in order to build a parking lot -- not
for patron parking but to be rented out as a separate capital
venture. Her voting record speaks for itself.
Pearson claims Laguna “is committed” to ocean water quality. Let’s
be crystal clear on this subject. Laguna in recent years has spent an
enormous amount on water quality -- not out of concern about water
quality but rather because Laguna was mandated to do so by the
Environmental Protection Agency.
Laguna water had gotten so bad, the EPA took over our city’s water
quality management in order to bring this city back into the realm of
the compliance standards. In addition to this, one of the reasons the
EPA had to do this was because Laguna had not been spending the money
over the years for upgrades and such, while other cities have been
allocating funds in their budget for such things. Yet, this is an
itemized fee on property taxes. Where has this money been going, Ms.
Pearson?
o7Chris Martin owns a Laguna Beach business.
f7
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.