o7The following took place at the Oct....
o7The following took place at the Oct. 4 meeting of the Laguna Beach
City Council.
f7
LANDSLIDE
The council approved another extension of the declaration of
emergency for the June 1 landslide, and allocation of $2,775 to James
Moore and John Gustafson from funds donated for the landslide
victims.
Mayor Elizabeth Pearson-Schneider said housing has been found for
18 months for six families displaced by the Flamingo Road landslide
and for one year for one family.
DONATION
Carolyn Wood brought a gift for the council -- a podium light so
overhead lights can be doused during slide presentations, improving
television viewing. Wood also requested a public workshop on the
Senior/Community Center.
POLICE CHIEF
Councilwoman Toni Iseman’s request that the City Council approve
a bench and plaque in honor of retiring Police Chief James
Spreinewas approved by acclamation.
The request originated with members of the HIV Committee, for whom
Spreine has served as staff liaison.
RODENT INFESTATION
Georgina Valdez voiced concern about the rodent population
downtown, particularly on Forest Lane.
The council approved:
* settlement of a claim by Sandra Monahan, whose vehicle was
damaged when a fire engine backed into it in August. The claim was
for $6,000, the exact amount to be determined when repairs are
completed and vehicle rental is added;
* general warrants of $2,047,996.84 and a $589,934.38 payroll;
* revocable license and encroachment permits at 320 Moss St. and
455 Legion St.;
* a $251,300 contract to VanDell and Associates for the design of
fiscal year 2005-06 street rehabilitation project;
* acceptance of a $100,000 Federal Citizens Option for Public
Safety grant to pay part of the salaries of two police officers hired
under the program;
* guidelines for artist-designed benches at the Laguna Beach
branch of the Orange County Library;
* a lot line adjustment for properties at 31451 and 31456 Coast
Highway.
* authorization for the city manager to sign an agreement with
Caltrans for construction of a traffic signal on Laguna Canyon Road
at the Arts Festival grounds. The construction probably will not
begin until December of 2006.
OPEN-SPACE PURCHASE
The council approved a bid for parcel 644-467-16 in Arch Beach Heights, which is in the process of being sold for back taxes. The
minimum bid on the nonlegal building site is $3,750, the money to
come from the city’s open-space fund, which has a balance of slightly
more than $500,000.
WHAT IT MEANS
The city has a policy of purchasing such unbuildable lots for
modest amounts to retain them as open space.
EMERGENCY PLAN
The council approved the standardized Emergency Management System
Letter of Promulgation.
WHAT IT MEANS
The city’s plan is an extension of the state’s management plan and
must be reviewed and periodically revised to meet changing
conditions.
NO STAKE IN STAKES
Amendments to the Local Coastal Plan and the zoning ordinance of
the municipal code were approved on second reading. Anyone with a
financial interest will be precluded from certifying the building
envelope survey -- staking -- for a project to be reviewed for
design.
WHAT IT MEANS
Amendments to the municipal code take effect 30 after the second
reading is approved by council. The city will request that the
California Coastal Commission certify the amendment to the Local
Coastal Plan.
PRIVATE SUPPORT FOR PUBLIC IMPROVEMENTS
City staff introduced a proposed amendment to the municipal code
to set specific criteria for privately built retaining walls that
support public streets or other public facilities.
WHAT IT MEANS
The criteria would make the walls more durable, city building
official John Gustafson said.
TREE PROTECTION
Walls and drainage will be built to protect a rare pine tree in
the unimproved public right-of-way near a project at 572-576 Cliff
Drive. The construction plan proposed by an arborist was reviewed and
approved by a second arborist, as requested by Councilwoman Iseman.
WHAT IT MEANS
Iseman was persuaded to accept the approval after learning the
height of the wall was deemed sufficient to give the 41-inch-diameter
Torrey pine the best possible chance for survival.
LAGUNA CREEK RESTORATION
Senior Water Quality Analyst Craig Justice presented a rendering
of landscape plan for the restoration of a segment of Laguna Creek
and updated the council on the project, which he described as a small
community restoration.
WHAT IT MEANS
No council action was required.
A ROSE BY ANY OTHER NAME
The council approved a proposal to change the telecommunications
committee’s name to techcomm committee.
WHAT IT MEANS
The committee feels the new name better reflects its mission.
NEXT MEETING
The council will meet at 5 p.m. Tuesday in closed session and at 6
p.m. for the public meeting, in the City Council Chamber, 505 Forest
Ave. On the agenda will be the Zimmerman storm drain, lifeguard
towers and more.
-- By Barbara Diamond
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.