We are becoming the MTV Laguna It...
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We are becoming the MTV Laguna
It becomes increasingly frustrating to read the letters and
articles in our local papers these days, as they continue to reflect
the changing climate in our beloved town.
This is made crystal clear by the ongoing griping about “view
loss” as displayed on the cover article in last week’s Coastline
Pilot.
I’m not surprised Chris Toy is in shadow in the photo -- I’d be
ashamed to show my face too if I lived in such splendor and was
complaining about view loss. Look at that photo! Have you any idea
how many millions of people in this country, state, etc. would give
their eye teeth to have even part of what so many have in Laguna? Not
to mention those who have o7nothingf7.
Mention is made of vintage photos of Laguna with virtually no
trees -- well guess what? There weren’t any o7housesf7 either! I’ve
got a great idea for view restoration/preservation -- tear down all
the houses on those hills so o7myf7 view isn’t blocked!
The selfishness and greed taking over this town from within and
without sickens me -- we are slowly but surely becoming MTV’s version
of Laguna Beach.
On a related note, when our City Council continues to waste
millions of dollars on endless studies, projects, etc. while
continuing to ignore the basics, much less the underprivileged and
elderly, I do not believe every person in Laguna should pay an extra
tax to fix Bluebird Canyon -- regardless of when you built or
purchased your home. If you live there, you belong to the haves --
you choose to live up there, and Laguna chooses to allow it. The city
and the people who choose to live in that area need to come up with a
way to repair and winterize the canyon without taxing the rest of us
or selling off property that makes a difference to our citizens.
There is no excuse for our city to not have funds put away as well
as plans for the inevitable “rainy day.” It amounts to incompetence,
too much living on champagne with a beer budget.
Let’s be thankful for what we have, and work to preserve the
compassion, atmosphere and consciousness that made Laguna what it
once was!
And how about placing some displaced gulf victims in some of these
beautiful, large homes?
KURT MAHONEY
Laguna Beach
Experts needed in financial crisis
With the terrible news from FEMA on the slide, I think we need to
regroup, get outside expert financial assistance and decide the right
steps to take in solving this problem.
However, I do not think we have the financial expertise in the
council majority or the staff to solve this by themselves. Why do I
say this? Their record in recent large financial decisions is
terrible. For brevity I will concentrate on the big issues. When it
came to build the park next to Montage, Ken Frank published a flier
before the vote on Montage that said the park would cost the city
only $1.5 million. The sad news, as we all know, is that the bad
contract, coupled with mismanagement that was so horrendous, created
the cost overrun at a price of $8.9 million. (Wouldn’t that $8.9
million look good to us now?) And, if you can believe it, no one lost
their job after such a gross error. Many local groups of citizens
continuously went in front of the council at the time, begging them
to control the costs, but they said we were short-sighted and didn’t
appreciate what Montage would bring us.
Then, realizing that they were stuck with a large interest rate of
10% on $8.9 million adding to the cost, they thought it was ingenious
to save the interest payments by stripping reserve funds of millions
of dollars from various city accounts to pay off the debt and then
patting themselves on the back, but have still not repaid these funds
all the money. To my knowledge, reserves are necessary in order to
have money set aside and be available for rainy days.
Well, it has rained and our stripped budget is quite empty and
unable to help us in any substantial way. So, who was short sighted?
Now they think we should sell the Girl Scout property to help cover
the costs, but, as Ann Christoph says, “This is like selling the back
yard to buy groceries for today.”
What makes this all worse is that Ken Frank was in his job at the
time of the 1978 landslide and is fully aware of the impact another
slide would have on our budget. The council majority has been around
forever and, with Ken Frank, should have realized that such a slide
would occur sometime in the future. But, unfortunately they didn’t,
and stripped us of needed reserves. In 1995, FEMA announced it would
no longer cover slides. They should have immediately begun a program
to reserve significant funds against the possibility of another
slide. But they didn’t. Now they are scrambling to see how this
financial burden could be prevented in the future, be it by increased
taxes or whatever. But it’s too late to close the barn door now
because the horses are out.
I urge the council majority to accept their shortcomings and seek
outside expertise to make sure all alternatives are considered. To do
less would be a breach in the responsibilities they accepted when
elected.
They should begin a series of commentaries in the paper alerting
us to all their thoughts, alternatives and directions in which they
are leaning, before making any rash decisions.
If not, they no longer deserve to represent us on the council.
JOHN SELECKY
Laguna Beach
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