Another look at view issue
Barbara Diamond
Property owners in Laguna Beach who want to add as little as 10%
-- say a luxurious bathroom -- to a 1,500-square-foot home may have
to re-landscape their yards in the near future.
The Planning Commission is reviewing the city’s View Preservation
Ordinance, with direction from the City Council to evaluate and
propose alternatives to achieve view equity and preservation through
a design review process. Some residents will not be satisfied with
anything less than “a right to a view†ordinance and restoration of
their views to the date they purchased their property.
“Views need our protection,†said David Connell. “They are our
second -- location is first -- most valuable asset.â€
The Planning Commission sought council guidance Tuesday night on
preliminary recommendations for revisions to the city’s view
ordinance, which has been characterized by some as “toothless.â€
A council majority gave a nod to a proposed recommendation that
would require the Design Review Board to evaluate all existing and
proposed landscaping for the restoration of neighboring views in
order to achieve view equity, even if the addition is not what is
obstructing the view and only adds 10% to the square footage of the
structure.
View equity is typically considered during the construction of a
new home to insure existing homes do not lose all their view to the
new neighbor.
If adopted, virtually every addition would have to go before the
board. At present, only additions of 50% or more require a review
board hearing.
“I have a dear friend who has a beautiful view of Catalina Island
that is blocked,†said North Laguna resident Ben Blount. “Those
things exist in Laguna Beach. Dozens of them, hundreds, thousands.
“Views are wonderful, but if the people in my part of town look
anywhere, they see trees. There are two sides to it and I am for the
side of the people who don’t have views.â€
A “right to a view†is the one of the most perplexing issue before
the commission and raises the most hackles.
“My problem with a right to a view is that it is absolute and
uncompromising,†said Councilman Steven Dicterow. “I want to preserve
views and I believe in restoration, but I don’t know how to restore
without a right to a view.â€
The council approved the planning commission’s request that city
attorney Philip Kohn research alternative methods to restore views
that do not involve granting the right to a view and provide a
mechanism other than tree height that could initiate a view
restoration process.
“I hope arbitrary decisions are approached with sensitivity,†said
Councilwoman Toni Iseman. “We can’t lose the trees that give Laguna
Beach its soul.â€
However, it is view blockage that dominates any hearing on
development in Laguna.
“It is the most controversial issue in town,†said Councilwoman
Cheryl Kinsman, who wholeheartedly supports a right to a view.
Kinsman, a former planning commissioner, worked on the original
view preservation ordinance when people were still arguing it had to
do with health. She was inspired to run for office after the council
removed from the ordinance what the commission considered the
centerpiece -- a right to a view.
“I am very close to saying this belongs on the ballot. I don’t
know that we can ever resolve it.â€
One thing is sure, some folks are going to end up unhappy.
“If this was easy, we would have fixed it years ago,†said Mayor
Wayne Baglin. “There are certain trees that I think are a problem,
but I can’t be comfortable saying they don’t belong here.
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