Corporation yard to move to ACT V
The City Council on Tuesday reversed a reversal of a proposal to
move the corporation yard to the ACT V parking lot.
In other words, the council voted to relocate the yard to make way
for a Village Entrance project, a plan for which the ACT V had been
purchased in 1996 and subsequently abandoned in 2000. The vote was
3-2. Mayor Toni Iseman and Councilman Wayne Baglin were opposed.
“The corporation yard is a collection of 50-year-old tin shacks,”
said Councilwoman Cheryl Kinsman, who has never wavered from her
support of moving the yard since it was first suggested by the
Village Entrance Task Force on which she served during her term on
the Planning Commission. “We have to do something with that area.”
Iseman, who sided with environmental groups that oppose
development on the west or north side of Laguna Canyon, made a
desperate plea to swing Councilman Steven Dicterow into her camp,
based on his support for peripheral parking. However, Dicterow said
the ACT V lot was not peripheral enough for him.
“I don’ t consider what we are talking about at ACT V as
development,” Dicterow said.
Representatives of Laguna Greenbelt Inc., Village Laguna and
Temple Hills Community Assn. and some residents disputed Dicterow’s
view.
Resident Ron Chilcote spoke against the relocation on his own
behalf and then read a letter from Laguna Greenbelt Inc. President
Elisabeth Brown: “Not only will the proposed development intrude upon
the Laguna greenbelt and forever destroy a beautiful canyon, it would
draw deeply from taxpayer-generated funds that would be more
beneficial for other projects, including the acquisition of greenbelt
open space within the city.”
The Village Entrance Task Force recommended moving the yard, but
did not specify a location.
“We studied this for a year and determined there was no other
location except ACT V,” Pearson said.
Some functions will remain at the present site. It was deemed too
expensive to move a sewer pump that ships North Laguna sewage to the
treatment plant at Aliso Creek. Police and emergency vehicles also
will stay, but the wash rack to clean them would go. Records that are
stored in bins by city departments could be moved, but that might
prove inconvenient.
The estimated costs of corporation yard relocation and
construction have not been updated. There also is no cost estimate
for the construction of the Village Entrance and no funds for it,
Kinsman said.
Removing the corporation yard would not materially change the look
of the award-winning design, Pullman said, requiring only the
substitution of parking for the corporation yard originally included
on the ground floor of the proposed parking structure.
The revised plan would provide more parking on the site, but would
eliminate about half of the parking at ACT V, which tourists are
encouraged to use to reduce downtown congestion. The net loss would
be 75 to 110 spaces depending on who is counting.
“We will spend $3 million to lose 110 spaces,” Councilman Baglin
said. “That doesn’t seem logical from an economic view and it doesn’t
help parking. We should concentrate that money on the Village
Entrance.”
The council majority on Tuesday authorized City Manager Ken Frank
to contact Orange County to see if approvals of the ACT V project are
still valid. Council members agreed to postpone discussion on
annexation of the property, also on Tuesday’s agenda, until Frank
reported back on the status of the county approvals.
-- Barbara Diamond
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