Corporation yard move approved
Barbara Diamond
Relocation of the city corporation yard moved a step closer to
reality on Tuesday when the Orange County Board of Supervisors voted
3 to 0 in support of the county Planning Commission approval of the
project.
Fifth District Supervisor Tom Wilson and Supervisor Chris Norby
said they would defer to the City Council majority, which favored the
move, 3 to 2.
The Laguna Canyon Conservancy had appealed the county Planning
Commission approval. Piecemeal processing of the ACT V corporate yard
relocation and the Village Entrance, changes in the ingress and
egress to ACT V without an opportunity for public review, conflicting
evaluations of the number of parking spaces for the festival season
and alleged damage to a blue line stream were among the 26 reasons
cited for the appeal.
Although the ACT V parcel is owned by the city, it is in the
county’s jurisdiction because the city never annexed it -- a bone of
contention for opponents of the relocation project.
The parcel was purchased from the Irvine Co. with the notion of
moving the corporation yard. The City Council approved a project in
the late 1990s, a plan was drawn, a coastal development permit issued
by the county and some preliminary work was done on the site. Then
the council rescinded its approval of what City Manager Ken Frank
called the “gold plated project” -- it included gravel color-matched
to the dirt on the parcel.
Kinsman never gave up on the project and got the third vote she
needed to revive it when Elizabeth Pearson, who sat with Kinsman on
the Planning Commission and the Village Entrance Task Force, was
elected to the council in 2002.
The approved plan calls for two buildings, totaling 20,000 square
feet, storage and service for 102 vehicles and work space for 86
employees, screened by landscaping; parking for 190 public vehicles,
also screened by landscaping; and a bus stop and turnaround for
festival trams.
Assistant City Manager John Pietig proposed at the Dec. 5 City
Council meeting funding for the relocation from a hodgepodge of
sources: $600,000 that had been earmarked for public parking in South
Laguna; an estimated profit of $2.46 million from the sale of lots in
North Laguna that now house the city’s nursery and assorted vehicles;
$900,000 from the Orange County Transportation Authority; $300,000
from the city’s Capital Improvement Fund; and $500,000 from the
general fund.
That approval came before the council heard the dire midyear
budget report on Tuesday or tapped city funds and project
appropriations to pay off the Treasure Island Park debt of $8.1
million.
The California Coastal Commission is expected to review the
relocation project.
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