Laguna can’t afford move to ACT V
Toni Iseman
On Dec. 2, on a 3-2 vote, the Laguna Beach City Council authorized
the city manager to charge ahead on the $5 million move of our
maintenance yard, our nursery and vehicle storage to the ACT V
parking lot in Laguna Canyon.
This lot, where visitors pick up the summer shuttle, holds more
than 400 cars at the height of our summer season. When this 2-plus
acre facility is built, ACT V will drop from more than 400 to 106
parking places. (With a paid attendant, you can add 84 more cars
after 5 p.m. and on weekends when city employees take their cars from
the lot).
Last year the Corporate Yard move was going to cost $4 million.
This year the city manager says $5 million. The Treasure Island Park
at the Montage was first estimated by the city at $1.5 million. It
came in at just under $9 million.
The state budget crisis could well mean an annual budget reduction
of nearly $1 million because of the vehicle license fee reduction.
Plus funding the new retirement benefits to our police and
firefighters could mean another million.
When asked, the city manager acknowledged that he anticipated
lay-offs in future years due to revenue losses. Will it be
lifeguards, park maintenance, inspections, community development,
recreation, water quality? Where are the fiscal conservatives? We
should be saving money, like our neighboring communities, for our
uncertain future.
If we don’t address our congestion in the summer, we lose our
ability to enjoy our own town. For our quality of life, beach traffic
must be kept out of Downtown. Two years ago, three members of the
council agreed that a parking structure should be built behind Laguna
Playhouse to serve the festival and playhouse visitors.
An increase in close-in parking could be achieved if our city
manager would examine our current uses and clear some areas in the
summer months. And what about Gary Alstot’s suggestion to privatize
some uses? Moving the yard creates a net loss of parking. We owe it
to our festivals to have places to park visitors.
The corporate yard includes fuel tanks, painting, welding and
storage of toxic and flammable materials. Laguna Canyon Wilderness
Park surrounds this area on three sides. Would a spark from the yard
start the canyon on fire, or would a fire in the canyon ignite our
city yard?
Our current corporate yard has decayed over the years. The council
discovered at a public meeting that we were threatened by the state
with a sanction to repair our fuel tanks. The first two warnings from
the state were not shared with your elected officials. No one on the
council was aware of this. I guess the city manager thought we didn’t
need to know.We will spend more than $100,000 on this fix at the
current site and other repairs are in order. This is a less than
ideal working situation that needs to be addressed. However, we do
not have to eliminate more than 200 parking places or drastically
reduce the heart of the shuttle to make these improvements.
If you are concerned, go to Santa Ana and appeal to the Orange
County Board of Supervisors. Our hearing will be on Tuesday at an
uncertain time between 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. (Sorry if you want to
attend and happen to work.)
Why Santa Ana? In order to avoid local scrutiny, this area was not
annexed into our city limits. Why are we wasting the supervisors’
time listening to our problem? Do you think we would let a private
application bypass the Laguna Beach Planning Commission? This town
pays more attention to your 400-square-foot remodel than our
20,000-square-foot project.
Making room for the Village Entrance is the primary reason for the
corporate yard move. Will there be money after the move to ACT V?
Piecemeal planning is costly. We do not have the revenue to fix
costly mistakes. This is one of those things that you read about that
other towns doThe corporate yard move will haunt our town for decades
to come. We need the Village Entrance, a parking structure and
beautification of the area. We are not achieving these goals with
this move.
Creative solutions can be found to minimize the loss of space at
ACT V and to reduce the cost of the corporate yard renovation. Other
resort communities have recognized that the way to limit traffic
congestion is peripheral parking.
ACT V is being squandered. There has been no room for debate on
this project.
It’s political football and it’s a game we’ll all lose.
* TONI ISEMAN is a Laguna Beach Council Woman.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.