Zone changes to Act V parcel questioned
Barbara Diamond
The proposed annexation of the Laguna Canyon parcel known as ACT V,
includes a zone change that has some environmentalists scratching their
heads.
“We disagree with the proposed ‘institutional’ zoning,” said Greenbelt
Inc. President Elizabeth Brown. “ACT V is a buffer area for all of the
greenbelt, the (Laguna Coast Wilderness) park and the Nature Reserve.
Zoning should allow for only low-impact intermittent uses. Institutional
zoning allows for uses, which are too urban and intense for this parcel.”
The city’s Public/Institutional Zone allows public, quasi-public and
private institutional facilities, including, but not limited to civic and
government buildings; schools; public or private parks and playgrounds;
long-term, low-income housing; child-care, preschools and nursery
schools; medical or dental offices and clinics; public utility buildings
and structures; and philanthropic and charitable institutions.
All uses would require a conditional use permit.
“I favor the annexation, but I opposed the zone change and the change
in the code when this came before the Planning Commission,” said
Commissioner Anne Johnson. “I did not think enough people had been
notified.”
The commission approved the package, 3-1, and sent it to the City
Council, which voted 4-1 for preliminary approval at the April 16
meeting. The council could give final approval at the May 7 meeting.
Councilwoman Cheryl Kinsman also favored annexation but opposed the
change in the zoning code.
“The two things should have been separated,” Kinsman said. “I would
have voted for the annexation, but I can see no reason to change the
zoning code.”
Under the county’s jurisdiction, ACT V was zoned tourist/commercial or
community/commercial. Permitted uses, subject to county Planning
Commission approval, included destination resort and commercial
recreation uses, restaurants, health facilities, public or private golf
courses, cultural facilities and public works facilities and commercial
recreation that totaled no more than 75,000 square feet.
“The city’s proposed zone is better than the county’s, but I still
think it should have been more restrictive,” Johnson said.
The change would allow a skateboard park on the parcel or tennis
courts in the city’s Public/Institutional land-use category.
Councilwoman Toni Iseman, who was among the leaders of the opposition
to the relocation of the corporation yard to ACT V and also opposed a
skateboard park on the site, said she will take a closer look at the
proposed city zone when it comes before the council.
ACT V has been traditionally used for peripheral parking, particularly
during festival season, when trams shuttle people from the lot to town.
The city purchased the 8.52-acre parcel from the Irvine Co. The
proposed annexation would bring the parcel into the city’s jurisdictional
boundaries. The Laguna Beach County Water District has already filed an
annexation application with the Local Agency Formation Commission.
All annexations are subject to LAFCO approval. The county, Irvine
Ranch Water District, the Laguna Beach County Water District and the
California Coastal Commission also must approve the city’s application.
* BARBARA DIAMOND is a reporter for the Laguna Beach Coastline Pilot.
She may be reached at 494-4321.
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