No Festival news still may be good news
Barbara Diamond
The city and the Festival of Arts have been negotiating a new
lease for almost six years, mostly behind closed doors.
It’s time already to get it signed and that could happen soon,
officials on both sides of the table said this week. If it doesn’t,
it may be time for the negotiations to come out of the closet and let
the public know what is stalling the talks.
“If the city and the festival have not come to an agreement by the
end of this season, it is my personal opinion that both sides should
offer an outline of their positions to the press and to the public,”
said Mayor Wayne Baglin. “It should be verbatim, rather than an
interpretation.”
However, Baglin thinks negotiations could be concluded
satisfactorily in a week, certainly by the end of the month, based on
the report made Monday night in a closed session by city negotiators
Paul Freeman and Steven Dicterow.
This was the team’s second tour of duty. They took over from the
mayor and Councilwoman Cheryl Kinsman. Baglin served during both his
most recent non-consecutive terms in office. Kinsman had previously
been paired with Freeman.
Turnovers in the city team were a pretty good indicator of the
frustration level, according to one former negotiator.
“Steve and Paul were happy to get back in the fray,” Baglin said.
“They met Sunday with the festival negotiators and all four worked
very hard.
“Cheryl and I had worked on three or four deal points -- the
amount of the lease, capital improvements, length of the lease and
how to deal with an impasse between the festival and the city. Paul
and Steve expanded that to 10 or 12 points.”
Freeman and Dicterow described in the closed session the points on
which they felt they had reached an agreement with festival
negotiators. The council quickly -- the whole meeting lasted less
than an hour -- and unanimously endorsed the proposals and directed
City Manager Ken Frank to forward the deal as outlined by Freeman and
Dicterow to the festival negotiating team.
“Of course the devil’s in the details, but Steve and Paul came to
the meeting with extremely encouraging information,” Baglin said. “I
think we are on the road to put this behind us.”
It is not the first time that city and festival representatives
have expressed optimism only to find themselves still at the table.
At the November 2001 festival membership meeting, the mood was
upbeat.
“We’re negotiating as a partnership,” said Councilwoman Kinsman at
the time. “We’re negotiating as friends, not adversaries.”
However, when budget time rolled around this spring, no long-term
lease had been signed. According to Frank, the city expected to get
$230,000 from the Festival for the 2002 season. The money was
designated for grants to community agencies. There was no allocation
to the general fund or the capital improvement fund projected for the
2002-03 fiscal year.
That last city offer made public was in December of 1999 to a
board that was subsequently recalled and replaced.
Kathleen Blackburn, who was elected mayor for the second time that
month, announced the unilateral offer at the Dec. 16 meeting. In a show of good faith, she said, the city would deposit half of the 1999
lease payment and future payments in a special fund for capital
improvements of the festival grounds and building; reserve 36% of the
revenue for grants to strictly local organizations and put the
remaining 10% into the general fund to offset the city’s expenses
related to the festival and Pageant of the Masters.
However, just two months later, the festival board announced that
it planned to move the Pageant of the Masters and the Festival of
Arts out of town.
Councilwoman Toni Iseman, the only current council member who has
not served as a city negotiator, said this week that she remembers
being astonished at the number of people who said, “Good riddance.”
Other residents, business people and particularly the festival
artists harshly condemned the proposal.
By the time the festival board actually voted in August 2000 to
move to San Clemente, negotiations between the Festival and Laguna
Beach, which had been underway for more than four years, had already
begun to go south. The city initiated the negotiations in 1996 under
then-mayor Wayne Peterson, five years before the lease was due to
expire in September 2001.
Trust eroded on both sides in the four years of fruitless
discussions. Some board members accused the city of looking at the
festival and pageant as cash cows. Much lower leases for other
city-owned property looked pretty tasty to festival negotiators and
came back to bite the city.
City negotiators agreed on day-one that the rent was exorbitant,
but were unwilling to relinquish all financial benefits from the
property owned by the people of Laguna.
But the day the board announced its intention to take the festival
and the pageant on the road the slow, painful downhill slide in
relations escalated. It culminated in the recall of the board led by
Sherri Butterfield, then mayor of Mission Viejo.
Attorney and festival exhibitor Bruce Rasner was in the vanguard
of the festival artists and members who challenged the outcast board.
He now chairs the festival’s lease committee, which negotiates with
the city team.
“We have met recently and we are optimistic about the possibility
of signing a lease in the very near future,” said Rasner.
“I think we have been well advised to discuss these matters in
private since each side has all the details of some fairly complex
issues.
“You have to remember we are negotiating a 40-year lease and we
are resolved to make it a long lease so neither side has to deal with
it again for a very long time
“On the issue of complexity, we are discussing the redevelopment
of the grounds; we are discussing a public park that both sides are
bent on enhancing for the use by the local community and the patrons
of the festival and the pageant; we are trying to intelligently
address parking.”
The viability of the pageant is based on a substantial number of
volunteers who need parking, according to Rasner.
“And we have some ambitious programs making the festival a center
of arts and perhaps culture in Orange County,” he said. “We don’ t
take that lightly.”
If the council and the festival board actually do come to terms,
the city won’t have to add the word former to the “Welcome to Laguna
Beach, Home of the Festival of Arts and Pageant of the Masters” signs
at the city’s boundaries, as it has had to do with Ballet Pacifica,
the Laguna Beach Chamber Music Society performances and almost, the
Laguna Art Museum.
* BARBARA DIAMOND is a reporter for the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. She may be reached at 494-4321.
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