Scouts strive to save house
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The city of Laguna Beach needs $7 million to shore up Bluebird Canyon
in time for winter rains, and on Tuesday, the City Council will
consider selling eight city-owned lots -- including two occupied by
the Girl Scout House.
While the city needs the money, the Girl Scouts say they need
their house, which has stood for half a century on the site and
serves as a meeting place and headquarters for many Scouting
activities.
“I don’t think we should sell it because we’re selling it for one
reason and that reason will pass by and then our Scout house will be
gone forever,” said fourth grader Amanda Dial, a junior Girl Scout.
The Girl Scouts are planning a rally in support of their Scout
House from 10 a.m. to noon on Labor Day, Monday, at Main beach.
The single-story “cottage-type” structure has a main room, a
kitchen, a fireplace, and the complex includes a small amphitheater.
The city has leased the land on which the house stands to the Girl
Scouts for one dollar a year since the house -- which dates from the
1930s -- was moved to it’s current location on High street in the
mid-1950s.
A lease agreement was made in 2004 allowing the Girl Scouts to
continue leasing the land for $1 a year till June 30, 2007. At this
point the lease is still in affect, said City Manager Ken Frank. This
lease agreement allows either party to exit the lease with a 30 to 60
day notice.
City officials have told the Girl Scouts they could most likely
still occupy the house until January 2007 even if the land is sold.
The house is located on two of eight lots city officials would
like to sell to help pay for moving the park division operation and
the landslide reparations. The city is under great pressure to find
money to pay for reparations that need to be completed before winter
in order to ensure winter rains don’t cause further damage.
The total cost takes into account the costs of restoring the
drainage channel, the stabilization of the landscape, and the
winterization of the slide including miscellaneous costs. These are
estimated to cost around $3,500,000, $2,000,000, and $700,000
respectively, totaling to around $7 million. Winterization and the
other repairs will hopefully be finished by November first.
Frank’s proposal may be a difficult sale to the Council.”I very
much want to avoid selling the property,” said Councilwoman Jane
Egly. “Selling the property would only help in the short term, and
then it would actually turn out worse in the long term. If we sell
it, the land is gone forever. I think we should really look at a tax.
I don’t know of what kind yet, but it will turn out worse if we sell
land now.”
But Frank says the city is in a bind.
“We don’t have any choice,” Frank said. “We need the money from
the sales of multiple lots. As far as the Girl Scout house is
concerned, we have to find money somewhere, and nobody seems to have
a great idea of where to find $2 million, so I don’t think there is
any choice.”
The price values of each of the eight lots vary, but are estimated
to be around $800,000 to $900,000 each. If all eight lots are sold,
they could provide $6.4 million to $7.2 million. But all these
proceeds are not slated to go toward the landslide.
Five of the lots suggested to be sold are occupied by the parks
division operation. The proceeds from these sales would go directly
to moving the operation to the Act V parking lot on Laguna Canyon
Road, where the city is building a new city yard complex.
“That money is already all committed to the new corporation yard
project, the money form the other lots is not,” said Frank.
After the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s recent decision to
refuse federal funds for the landslide, the desire to sell the city’s
lots increased, but was not the impetus for the decision, according
to Frank.
“It [FEMA rejection of aid] certainly makes our financial position
precarious,” Frank said. “But even without the FEMA decision we still
need to find money for the permanent restoration of Flamingo. So we
are looking at every possible source. The FEMA decision just makes it
worse, but it was bad even before the FEMA decision. We need $5 to $8
million dollars more for the permanent restoration.”
The other three lots are the two on which the Scout house stands,
and another vacant lot on Poplar street. Proceeds from these sales
would go directly toward the emergency repairs, and the winterization
of the landslide area.
Scout leaders and others argue that, if the Girl Scout House land
is sold, Laguna would be losing what many consider to be a
significant part of the community.
“This was my scout house when I was growing up. I spent the night
here, and we had ceremonies here like our court of awards,” said
Stephanie Andrews, the Girl Scout Service Unit Manager for Laguna
Beach.
“People move to Laguna Beach because of its community feel, and
this is the kind of thing that makes it a community; having a place
for our children to meet for Scouts,” said Laural Dial, leader of
troop 2032.
“Its a tradition too because this has been here for 50 years.
Stephanie Andrews had her childhood experience here, and that’s what
we want for our kids too. We want them to have wonderful memories of
Laguna Beach, and this is one of them,” Dial said.
Girl Scouts have occupied the Girl Scout house since 1930. When it
was first built, it was located at Wilson and St. Anne Street. In the
mid 1950s, the Lions Club helped moved the house to where it stands
today, as a service project. It was the Laguna Beach Girl Scout
Council’s Headquarters until 1968 when the council merged with the
Orange County Girl Scout Council.
Today the Scout house serves as a meeting place for girl scout
troops, weekend events, adult leadership meetings, and training
sessions, on a regular basis. The house is also a place for
sleepovers, camping, parties, and various Girl Scout ceremonies. This
house has been used for functions other than girl scout meetings, and
community events as well. The house is also sometimes used as a place
to vote.
Girl Scout troops from all over Orange County come to the House
for group activities with Laguna Beach girl scouts, and the site
houses all the Girl Scouts from Daisies to adults.
More than 20 troops who occupy the house at different times of the
week earn their badges, and do most of their activities at the house.
The outside amphitheater is used for snack time, play time, learning
activities and ceremonies. Troops also use it for songs, and planting
lima beans to learn about how they grow. The inside of the house is
used for arts, crafts, baking, and many other activities in which the
girls participate.
“We make our costumes for the food fair too,” Dial said.
“My favorite thing was bridging into a Brownie,” said Josie Goson,
a junior girl scout in fourth grade.
The Scouts make place mats for the senior center, fill bags for
the homeless, hold cookouts, and rehearse their dance routine for the
annual international food festival at the Festival of the Arts.
“We have 17 girls in our troop and they all want something
different, so they learn how to mediate and compromise,’ said Seanne
Contursi, the mother of Nicolette, a Brownie.
“Our troop sent off items to our local marines in Iraq. We sent
cookies, socks, gum, and candy,” Andrews said.
Many of the girls who are juniors now plan to continue through the
cadet and senior levels (through age 17).
“My sister is a senior girl scout, and she got to go to Europe,”
Dial said.
At the same time, emotions and memories attached to the Girl Scout
house grow stronger.
“250 girls are in Girl Scouts. That’s a lot of families that are
being impacted,” Laural Dial said.
“I’m willing to bet all the Girl Scouts want to keep the house,”
said nine-year-old junior Girl Scout Ronnie Hinmon.
Girl Scout leaders and members of the Girl Scout Council of Orange
County met with assistant city manager John Pietig on Monday to
discuss possible alternative locations for the Girl Scouts to meet.
The Girl Scouts were offered a small lot in the canyon for storage
space, the location behind the Sea Lion Marine Mammal Center,
coordination with schools and or churches to be able to use different
rooms, or Legion Hall. But none of the locations met the criteria the
Girl Scouts need in order to be relocated, and have a real home for
the Girl Scouts.
“We need a dedicated site for use by the Girl Scouts only, not a
shared space. We need to have a kitchen, bathroom, shower, outside
space, inside space, and storage space,” said Katie Lang Slattery, a
lifetime Girl Scout, and troop leader.
Slattery -- whose father was Frederick M. Lang, namesake of Lang
Park -- has suggested dedicating half of the Lang Park buildings to
the Girl Scouts. However, city officials said it would interfere with
the classes that are currently held there.
Girl Scout leaders, parents, and members of the Girl Scout Council
of Orange County met Tuesday to discuss their plan of action for the
September 6th city council meeting, and to discuss the meeting with
city representatives that took place on Monday.
They discussed the necessity for more time to sort out a solution
and discussed the option of a possible tax for future disaster relief
as a way to preserve their Scout House.
“We need time to evaluate the alternatives,” Slattery said.
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