Montage should have opened sooner This letter...
Montage should have opened sooner
This letter is in response to your question regarding the opening
of the Montage.
We are delighted that it is finally opening and we wish it nothing
but success. Their success is our success and we should do everything
possible to help them become a class attraction and financial asset
to the residents of this city. Our only regret is that it didn’t get
to open two years ago, which would have been entirely possible
without all the needless self-serving opposition. The city would have
already received around $8 million during those two years for the
benefit of all of us.
DAVE AND DIANE CONNELL
Laguna Beach
Montage opens after a balance of activism
We are absolutely delighted that the Montage Resort and Spa is
finally ready to open. Development can be a positive thing, as well
as the balance of activism to curb it. It is through efforts and
agony on both sides that we maintain quality and controlled growth.
Yet, in the end, we must keep our city moving forward and keep making
it better. Now it is time to welcome this beautiful new neighbor into
our community.
We thank the Coastline Pilot for presenting a question every week
that challenges us to take time out of our busy lives and to get
involved, even in this limited fashion. So, we feel compelled to
write in support of a project like this which enhance our city.
JUDY, GRAY AND DARRIN TRUDEAU
Laguna Beach
El Morro country picnic was rockin’
I don’t know how many parents were able to take the time to attend
the country picnic with their kids at El Morro School this past
Monday, but “Waaahhoooo.” What a blast. In celebration of the new
soccer field/playground, the school, under the supervision of
Principal Joanne Culverhouse, offered a hoe-down as promised by El
Morro’s student body president, Sadie Drucker. Sadie’s dad is none
other but the legendary Lee Rocker, rockabilly aficionado
extraordinaire. He and his fellow bandmates offered up an hour of
non-stop, heel-kicking, booty-shaking music that had the wee ones and
their fortunate parents alike dancing through lunch hour.
Now I don’t know about you, but my friends and I followed Rocker’s
original band, The Stray Cats, through the ‘80s, dancing to their
infectious music in New York City at CBGB’s and Max’s Kansas City. I
smiled on Monday as my own son and his classmates watched Rocker’s
band and wondered if those kids realized just how lucky they really
were. More importantly, did their parents?
With the ocean breaking in the background, and Rocker generously
and soulfully plucking his shiny, silver base to the tunes of Hank
Williams in the fore, I was impressed with the sight of our little
folk appreciating the sounds of great music, at a great school in a
great town. When the bell rang and Culverhouse mournfully announced
that the first- through third-graders had to return to their
classrooms to study, my husband and I joined the students in the
collective “awe” and booing that emerged from the audience. I wanted
to scream out “just on more!” as I had when I watched them as a child
myself. School was never that fun when I was young.
Those dang hillbillies sure rocked our town on Monday and we loved
it. Thanks for your generous support of our schools, children and
town, Mr. Rocker. You are one hillbilly in a million.
LISA GENESTA
Laguna Beach
Reasons behind one of the dog problems
Yes. It’s about the dog pooh, again. A letter to the Laguna Beach
community thanking all the many dog owners who do a responsible job
of cleaning up after their dogs. There are many of us who remain
conscientious. A special big “thank you” to those many dog owners who
also pick up after other dogs whose owners still don’t get the
picture. Many dog owners do their utmost to keep peace in our
neighborhoods by cleaning up when they can even after other dogs.
These good citizens deserve an extra applause.
I have noticed what seems to be two major components of the dog
pooh problem and the ongoing battle of keeping both public and
private property clean of dog droppings:
1. Neighbors who simply open the door each morning and evening to
let their dog out to roam the neighborhood and relieve themselves.
These dogs are unattended and leave neighbors angry when dog
droppings are left on their property or on side walks close by.
2. The other culprit is the family nanny or housekeeper who must
walk the dog or dogs as part of their duties but who refuse to pick
up after the family dog. Some of these family helpers are frequently
pushing strollers and walking the family dog at the same time. It is
clearly the responsibility of the dog owner to inform their family
employee to clean up after the family dog during these walks.
JIM GOTHARD
Laguna Beach
A toll for Laguna would clear the streets
Kudos to the City Council members who passed the affordable
housing project on Glenneyre.
However, I was given another solution than attached parking on
National Public Radio the other morning: the bus. In London, the
streets are so clogged with vehicles that it is charging a toll to
drive on them. In Rio and other cities the streets are designed
virtually for buses only, streams of them. Subways are not practical
because of the expense of building them.
Thus the better use for that attached parking might be another bus
terminal. The bus system in Orange County has evolved over the years,
and it serves a lot of people, such as day workers and seniors.
Laguna’s could undergo a massive expansion.
The first think we should do to get the cars off Coast Highway and
Laguna Canyon Road is place toll booths at the borders of our town.
To drive through Laguna should cost $30. That will encourage people
to park and ride the buses. Residents would be exempted. Tourists
could get vouchers that would be stamped by merchants and motels,
etc. so they could at least receive a partial refund. The important
thing is to get the through traffic to go to the freeways inland and
stop clogging out streets and encourage others to ride the buses.
While there are magical cars of the future being designed by Ford
and General Motors and others, they do not solve the problem of there
being just too many of them on our streets and highways, no matter
how little pollution they produce.
ANDY WING
Laguna Beach
Design Review isn’t way to view issue
I don’t know a lot about city planning, but I know the wrong tool
for the job when I see it.
To say that the Design Review process is the proper means for
resolving the visual intrusion problems that will be created by this
tract map is like saying we have a fine Emergency Room and so don’t
need to practice good medicine.
This town is hopelessly wedded to the Design Review process, to
the point that our own Planning Commission can’t see when it’s
supposed to fulfill its commission -- i.e, plan. Design Review is so
busy because we have so many problematic legal building sites in
Laguna. To create more new lots with built-in visual intrusion
problems flies in the face of good planning and neighborhood
compatibility.
Instead of avoiding impacts by insisting on a down-sized tract
map, we are told this is a “good deal” and offered Design
Review-style measures like landscape screening and mansionization.
Maybe we should re-name them the “Dealing Commission.”
KEITH M. JOHNSON
Laguna Beach
State should take money offered by El Morro
Life is full of trade-offs. It looks like the residents of El
Morro Village have put something on the table that’s definitely worth
talking about.
In exchange for them paying higher rents, the state gets $10
million to complete Crystal Cove State Park. I like that. I also like
the fact that at the end of their lease extension, they agree to
leave El Morro.
In the end, everyone wins, which is a good outcome if you ask me.
STEPHANIE WALKER
Corona del Mar
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