A look back at 2003
Jury finds Councilman Baglin not guilty
1Councilman Wayne Baglin stuck to his guns and his attorney shot
down the prosecuting attorney’s charges that Baglin had broken the
law when he took a commission for brokering a real estate deal with
the city.
A jury of eight women and five men found Baglin not guilty of
violating state code 1090, which prohibits elected officials from
profiting from a contract with the agency they represent.
Baglin had maintained for two years that he was entitled to take
the $36,000 commission from clients he represented in the sale of
their Third Street property to the city, even though he was in office
at the time
“I felt I had earned it,” Baglin told the jury.
Baglin was his own best witness.
The councilman said he didn’t know the city was still interested
in buying the property when he ran for office in November 2000,
because the last show of interest was in May of that year. He signed
a contract with the property owners on Jan. 19, 2001, about 1 1/2
months after he took office.
Baglin never made a secret of representing Dorothy and Edgar
Hatfield in the transaction. He also never voted on the acquisition
of their property by the city, which would have been a violation of
the state Political Reform Act, totally separate from 1090-1097
violations, which deal with money changing hands. Defense attorney
Michael Molfetta told the jury that Baglin thought the city was going
to use eminent domain to acquire the Hatfield property, which would
make it legal for him to accept a commission.
Eminent domain is the procedure by which a governing body can
obtain a property whether or not the owner is willing to sell.
Molfetta said city officials lied in their testimony that Baglin
was warned about the potential of conflict of interest violations and
that he knew the city no longer planned to gain title to the property
through eminent domain. Assistant District Atty. Jeffrey Winter
contended in his closing arguments that Baglin may have earned the
commission, but taking it was a crime. Representing his clients in
the sale of property to the city was not a violation of state code
1090-1097, but accepting a check was.
“On Feb. 6, Mr. Baglin learned that the city was not going forth
with eminent domain,” Winter told the jury. “Twenty days later, he
takes a check for $36,000, cashes it and keeps it.”
-- Barbara Diamond
Eight-year old murder case closed
2A jury in Orange County convicted a man in December for murdering
a Baskin-Robbins owner and attempting to murder her husband in 1995.
Santa Ana resident Gilbert Garcia, 32, faces life in prison after
a jury of nine women and three men found him guilty of killing
53-year-old Simindokht Roshdieh during a failed robbery.
Capt. Danell Adams said a dark cloud was lifted from the
department following the verdict, but that it took so long because
authorities wanted to be absolutely certain they had the right man.
The lengthy investigation included the arrest of a man shortly
after the crime that several witnesses, including Roshdieh’s husband,
Firooz, positively identified as the killer. A closer look into a
Tustin robbery committed the same night led police to release the
first suspect about a month after the murder.
Laguna Beach police arrested Garcia in 2001 after a database of
gang members’ tattoos matched Garcia’s with those of the man on a
surveillance tape. Garcia was already serving a 25 years to life
sentence for carjacking.
-- Mike Swanson
Yard moves closer to ACT V
3The City Council voted 3-2 in December to spend $5 million to
relocate the corporation yard from City Hall to Act V and the county
gave them the go-ahead.
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 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
-- 170 without supervision, 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; 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.
The council approval came before City Manager Ken Frank made his
dire mid-year budget report at the Dec. 16 meeting and before the
council tapped city funds and project appropriations to pay off the
$8.1 million Treasure Island Park debt.
ACT V 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.
Mayor Cheryl 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 county Planning Commission and the city’s Design Review Board
approved the project. The Board of Supervisors denied an appeal of
the commission’s approval filed by the Laguna Canyon Conservancy.
Kinsman and Pearson testified in favor of the project at the
supervisors’ hearing on Dec. 16. Councilman Steve Dicterow, who also
supports the relocation, did not attend. .
“I wasn’t surprised by the denial,” said Carolyn Wood, president
of the conservancy. “But it doesn’t mean we are going to roll over
and play dead.”
Councilwoman Toni Iseman said she would be surprised if the
California Coastal Commission didn’t review the project because of
the commission’s parking requirements at ACT V for the Festival
Season. Calculations of parking spaces vary.
Iseman and Councilman Wayne Baglin have consistently voted against
the project.
Other projects, including sewer repairs, might also be doomed by
the costs of the relocation, according to Baglin.
“This is a faucet that we cannot turn off and it will drain the
city,” he said.
Laguna Greenbelt Inc. and Village Laguna also oppose the
relocation, deeming it detrimental to open space and the Laguna Coast
Wilderness Park.
-- Barbara Diamond
Montage Resort and Spa opens in Laguna
4This year Laguna Beach saw the completion of the Montage Resort
and Spa. The development was a long-time controversy in the city, but
on Feb. 22 the upscale resort opened its doors and welcomed people to
Treasure Island Park.
The Montage Resort traveled a bumpy road to completion when crews
broke ground in October 2000. The Montage Hotels and Resorts and the
Athens Group purchased the project formerly known as the Laguna Beach
Colony Hotel in June 2002.
The 30-acre site was purchased for $190 million and then renamed
the Montage Resort and Spa, Laguna Beach.
The principle amount the city paid for the park was $8,707,000.
Because the resort was fronting the money the city is paying
interest. As of Dec. 18, when the city paid off the money, it paid
$950,000 in interest.
City Manager Ken Frank estimates that the resort will bring in 2.5
to 3 million in bed tax.
The 262-room resort has brought some jobs to Laguna with 550
people working behind the scenes.
Having public art was a requirement for the resort. Four works of
public art by noted regional artists were commissioned and are on
display throughout the resort: a porcelain-tiled wall mural depicting
sea life by Dora De Larios; an ornate bronze sculpture of a
California landscape by Terry Thornsley; an in-laid Pate de verre
style glass work by John Barber; and two bronze sculptors of mythical
creatures by Cheryl Ekstrom.
The controversy continues in issues of parking in the area
especially during peak tourist season in the summer.
-- Suzie Harrison
Proposed cuts threatened schools
5Laguna Beach Unified School District had to issue preliminary
pink slips to more than 50 district staff members in response to
former Gov. Gray Davis proposed budget cuts in March.
The district had to be prepared for the worst-case scenario in
which the school district budget would decrease from $22,887,521 to
$16,453,253.
Davis had proposed a $126,000,000 cut to basic aid school
districts like Laguna Beach’s. Basic-aid districts receive most their
revenue from local property taxes.
However, the state Legislature unanimously rejected Davis’
proposal, which would have cut $6 million from Laguna’s school
budget.
Supt. Theresa Daem and the board continued to hope the “equitable
case” scenario they had proposed, which would involve budget
reductions but the fewest final layoff notices, would make up for
Davis’ proposed budget.
The Laguna Beach school board passed an interim school budget that
allowed it to rescind layoff notices in March. If it had not made
that decision, each person who received a notice would have been
forced to wait until May 14 to see if they were still employed. May
15 was the scheduled deadline to cancel layoff notices.
Gov. Davis ultimately decided to treat basic-aid districts more
equitable, which resulted in a budget that was $4 million more than
the interim budget passed by the school board.
-- Suzie Harrison
Worker rescues child from ocean
6A 26-year-old construction worker took some time off work April
2, sprinting down a steep bluff to pull a drowning 4-year-old girl
from the ocean off Crescent Bay Beach.
Ben Bonin of Capistrano Beach then successfully administered CPR,
something he’d never done before, but had seen on television several
times.
Bonin noticed a woman and her two children out on some rocks at
Crescent Bay Beach while he worked on an ocean-front home in the
morning. He looked away for a minute, then looked back and saw the
woman and only one child on the rocks. She was waving her arms, and
Bonin hit the sand, shedding clothing along the way.
Serena Guadalupe of Henderson, Nev., was blue and not breathing
when Bonin pulled her from the ocean, but she was happy and alert in
the hospital later that day.
The City Council honored Bonin at the following week’s meeting for
his heroic action.
-- Mike Swanson
Hospital officials contemplate moving
7South Coast Medical Center officials hold out little hope that
the hospital will stay in Laguna Beach.
Hospital spokespeople said in October that the community that
built the hospital is too small to support it and too isolated to
draw the number of outside patients needed to make up the difference.
“It takes 100,000 exclusive people and about 300,000 in a broader
community to support a hospital,” said Gary Irish, center chief
executive officer. “South Coast Medical Center had 84,000 visits in
2002, about 16,000 by Laguna Beach residents.”
It was the city’s isolated location that led a concerned community
to acquire the land in the 1950s and raise the funds to build the
not-for-profit hospital here. Residents and community activists
rallied to the cause in response to the death of a wounded police
officer who failed to survive a long ambulance ride to the nearest
hospital.
Hospital officials claim the state mandated earthquake safety
updates to the facility make the move almost inevitable.
“The bottom line is that we don’t have the $72 million and if we
did, it doesn’t pencil out,” said Joe Orsak, president of the
hospital’s fund-raising foundation.
Plans to move have been discussed in-house for more than a year,
but only lately became public. CEO Irish said in October that no
formal decision had been made.
Orsak asked for the community’s understanding of the hospital’s
position.
“I do not think the council would ever support a move,” said
then-Mayor Toni Iseman. “Too many creative, talented successful
people who live in and love Laguna know how much the hospital means
to this community. It would be like an amputation.”
-- Barbara Diamond
Memories of 1993 linger
8Some are bitter, some are sweet.
It takes only a whiff of smoke or the sound of the Santa Ana winds
rustling in the eucalyptus trees to bring back memories of Oct. 27,
1993.
Memories were perhaps even more vivid this year, the 10th
anniversary of the firestorm that destroyed or damaged more than 400
homes in Laguna Beach and Emerald Bay.
Not a soul in town was untouched by the fire. But some of the
memories are actually sweet -- tales of heroics and tenderness
abound.
The experiences and the memories gave Laguna a special empathy for
the victims of the fires that devastated Southern California this
past October. And Laguna was quick to offer assistance.
“We can identify,” said David Horne, whose Laguna Beach home was
destroyed in 1993. “The main message is: It’s going to be
overwhelming, but it’s doable.”
Even before the 2003 fires were under control, City Manager Ken
Frank had organized an outreach group to meet with San Bernardino
city and county officials to pass on what they had learned from
Laguna’s firestorm.
The group included Ed Sauls, president of the Laguna Beach Relief
and Resource Center, which grew out of the 1993 Fire Relief Coalition. Sauls was among the organizers of community groups that
sprang into action, raising funds and accepting donations of
clothing, toys and household goods to tide over the victims of the
latest holocaust, as others had come to the aid of Laguna in 1993.
Horne said the fire victims have to take it a little bit at a
time.
“It’s not fun but, believe it or not, I think people come out of
it stronger,” said Horne, founder of the Laguna Beach Red Flag Patrol
that watches for the first signs of brush fire on high risk days.
“They shouldn’t get discouraged. Just keep looking at the main goal
of moving back into a rebuilt home.”
-- Barbara Diamond
Election donation increases rescinded
9Councilman Steve Dicterow bowed to the will of the people when he
withdrew support from an increase in individual campaign donation
limits that he had sponsored.
“I have found in the last month absolutely no support for my
position,” Dicterow said at the Nov. 4 City Council meeting.
Dicterow had proposed at the Oct. 7 meeting an increase in
donation limits and a decrease in the voluntary spending pledge
limit. He said the $250 limit in place made donation collection too
time consuming and reporting it too onerous.
Councilwomen Elizabeth Pearson and Cheryl Kinsman supported him.
According to Dicterow, virtually everyone else in town opposed the
hike to $750 from the previous $250. There had been talk of a
referendum.
“There was an unprecedented lack of support,” Dicterow said.
“People who normally oppose me were opposed to my position. People
who normally support me were opposed to my position.”
The council unanimously voted to reduce the limit to $310, which
reflected a consumer price index increase of $60 over the $250 limit
put in place in 1994. Then-Mayor Toni Iseman, who voted against the
increase, suggested the new limit.
Future increases will be based on the index for Los Angeles and
Orange Counties as of Jan. 1 of each odd year.
Linda Brown, co-chair of the Laguna Beach branch of the League of
Women Voters, was among the most outspoken of the critics of the
increase and one of the first to publicly thank Dicterow for his
turnabout.
The league branch was the primary sponsor of the 1994 donation
limit.
Dicterow said he hadn’t changed his belief that the donation limit
was too low, but he didn’t want to be the kind of elected official
who does not listen to the electorate.
A companion proposal by Dicterow to lower the voluntary spending
pledge from $30,000 to $15,000 was not rescinded. Critics of that
change claim that no one will sign the pledge, which benefits those
who have no intention of limiting their spending.
-- Barbara Diamond
Groups gain docent programs
10The volunteer docents descended upon three of Laguna Beach’s
most popular summer sites in 2003.
Fred and Jan Sattler started the craze with the Tidewater docent
program in the spring. They and about 40 others began setting up post
at Laguna’s coves, telling visitors what they should and shouldn’t do
and teaching them about life on the coves.
Laguna Coast Wilderness Park came next, offering docent-led hikes
through the young park on weekends to keep Lagunans aware of what was
out there.
The Festival of Arts followed suit, offering tours of the artists’
booths and activities that allowed children to make art the way the
real artists do it. Like the other two docent programs, every guide
volunteered their time.
-- Mike Swanson
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.