o7The following is from the Sept. 6...
o7The following is from the Sept. 6 meeting of the Laguna Beach City
Council.
f7
SIDEWALK CLEANING
Eleanor Henry asked that ficus trees downtown be replaced with
trees that do not litter the sidewalks. She suggested that merchants
might clean up the sidewalks in front of their businesses. She also
asked about the drainage problem at the bottom of the Third Street
hill.
“They say a spring is causing the flow at the base of Third Street
-- right now it’s a flood and cattails are growing in the planter
box,” Henry said.
Georgina Valdez said if the city puts sidewalk power-washing out
to bid, she would like her company considered.
Councilwoman Toni Iseman said city sidewalk cleaning apparatus is
the victim of the budget cuts to fund the restoration and
winterization in Bluebird Canyon.
Merchants, Iseman said, have a problem with individual cleanups,
because they must capture the water they use rather than let it flow
into the storm drains, which empty into the ocean.
Mayor Elizabeth Pearson-Schneider said the city sidewalks are a
disgrace and something must be done.
OVERNIGHT PARKING
The Council directed the Flatlanders Task Force, a council
subcommittee, to consider a ban on overnight parking of vehicles
without shoppers’ permits in the Village Flatlanders Association
neighborhood. The permits are available only to residents.
“No sticker, get a ticket,” Iseman said.
Village Flatlanders Neighborhood Association President Tom Girven
said he believed the ban is the only way to resolve parking problems
in the neighborhood.
A task force headed by council members Steven Dicterow and Egly
has been meetings on the neighborhood parking problems. Residents
complain that parking has been usurped by employees of businesses in
the area, including hotels and restaurants.
The city commissioned a study to determine whether free parking on
Glenneyre Street in the area would reduce parking demand.
City Manager Ken Frank said City Hall is getting complaints about
the temporarily deactivated parking meters and that the experiment
with free parking is not working.
“It’s been an awful summer,” Glenneyre Street resident Annette
Stevens said.
FINANCIAL ITEMS
The council:
* approved the purchase of a new fire engine, which will replace
a 1985 vehicle to be traded in;
* awarded a $15,000 contract to Cash & Associates for an
engineering design for the Main Beach Boardwalk and stair
replacement;
* awarded a $145,086 contract to Psomas to provide surveying and
design services for a sidewalk from Hinkle Place to M Street and on
Nyes Place;
* awarded a $14,000 contract to SFC Consultants for environmental
services for the Coast Highway sidewalk project;
* approved general warrants totaling $7,319,850 written July 29 to
Aug. 25 and payrolls for Aug. 4 and Aug. 18; and
* allocated a $5,000 appropriation from the street lighting fund
to place underground the utilities serving the Laguna Beach
Historical Society building at 278 Ocean Ave.
TAXI VOUCHER INCREASE
The Council approved an increase in the cost of taxi vouchers to
$3, an increase of $1, and an increase in the reimbursement level
from $8 to $10.
LANDSLIDE
* The Council extended a Resolution declaring the June 1 landslide
an emergency. The resolution is valid for only 21 days, and
extensions are needed until slide issues are resolved.
PARKING, CIRCULATION & TRAFFIC
The Council unanimously approved the following recommendations
from the parking, circulation and traffic committee:
* a green zone with 30-minute parking in front of 355 Broadway
and 31616 Coast Highway;
* stop signs on both sides of Glenneyre Street at the
intersection with Oak Street and on Madison Place at the intersection
with Bluebird Canyon Drive; and
* replacing double yellow lines on Bluebird Canyon and
Morningside Drives with a single yellow broken line during the
upcoming street resurfacing project.
HISTORIC REGISTER REMOVAL
The Council agreed to remove from the historic register a
structure being remodeled at 362 Brooks St.
WHAT IT MEANS
The project was returned to the design review board for
consideration of variances for additions into the setbacks and the
payment of past fees waived under heritage status.
HARDSCAPE ALLOWANCES
Iseman asked the council to consider how to reduce the percentage
of allowable hardscape on new projects. Iseman said impervious
surfaces increase storm flows, which create drainage problems, and do
not allow for adequate landscaping to soften new construction so that
it blends into the existing neighborhood.
She asked for a staff report in October describing the current
city regulations on lot coverage. The report will contain provisions
from other cities.
The proposal was also sent to the planning commission for revue.
WHAT IT MEANS
Including driveways, patios, walkways and other structures in
lot-cover calculations could result in diminished allowances for the
footprint of a project, although square footage would not necessarily
be affected. The footprint is the amount of ground on which a
structure sits, regardless of the number of stories.
APPEALS
The council:
* sustained a design review board denial of a project at 511 Oak
St. and returned it to the board for further consideration at the
request of the applicant. Vote: 5-0.
* overturned design review board denial of a proposal to extend
decks on a building at 31755 Coast Highway. Vote: 5-0.
* overturned design review board denial of a proposal to add 866
square feet to a home and build a new two-car garage at 2387 San
Clemente, which required a variance. Vote: 4-0, Iseman recused.
* tabled indefinitely an appeal of an administrative decision
requiring an environmental impact report for a three-lot subdivision
at 1770 Thurston Drive. Vote: 5-0. The appellant has agreed to the
report, with the city paying about 50% of the costs through reduced
or exempted development fees. The project includes a request for a
tentative tract map, coastal development permit and a variance to
extend the road and subdivide a 13.38-acre parcel into six lots,
three of which would be residential sites.
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