Council holds back on extra dough for Big Corona
June Casagrande
City staff members recommended this week that the city pay an
architectural firm $71,500 more than originally awarded by the city
in order to design improvements at Corona del Mar State Beach. But at
Tuesday’s City Council meeting, officials were at a loss to explain
why.
City Councilman John Heffernan pulled the matter off the consent
calendar to ask why the city was being asked to up Robbins Jorgensen
Christopher Architects’ contract to $214,500 for planning, design and
construction services at the soon-to-be-upgraded Big Corona beach.
“What are we getting for our $70,000?” Heffernan asked.
Staff members couldn’t give a detailed explanation of what the
city would get for its additional expense.
“How is it we’re spending this money if we don’t know what we’re
spending it on?” asked resident Dolores Otting, a council regular.
After the questions, Mayor Tod Ridgeway suggested postponing the
item until Public Works Department staff could give more details.
“Staff was ill-prepared to tell us why we were raising the
contract $73,000,” Ridgeway said Friday. “So I just said let’s just
continue it so we can get an answer.”
Ridgeway’s motion was approved unanimously.
Plans to improve aging beach amenities were approved in the summer
amid considerable controversy. Councilman Dick Nichols, whose
district includes the beach, had objected to a lifeguard station on
top of the new concession stand on the basis that it might obstruct
views. Others said they were concerned that the $2-million-plus
project was overpriced. And others said that it amounted to too much
concrete at a beach that should be as natural as possible.
The city plan includes building two 1,231-square-foot restroom
buildings and a 2,225-square-foot building to house concession
vendors, lifeguard and first aid services, and a marine life
resources facility with a lifeguard observation room on top.
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