City re-evaluates budget goals
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The long arm of the state and the ghosts of the increased parking
meter rates cast a pall on the mid-year budget update at the City
Council meeting Tuesday night.
“Each year, we return to the council to provide an update on the
budget,” City Manager Ken Frank said. “It’s a little more difficult
this time because, in the last month, we lost about $2 million a year
in revenue.”
The council’s decision to roll back parking meter rates from $1.50
per hour to $1 per hour resulted in a loss of $500,000 in projected
revenue, and the state budget cuts of revenue from motor vehicle fees
and gas taxes resulted in a total $1 million loss.
“We were in a very positive financial state a month ago,” Frank
said. “Things have gone downhill pretty dramatically since that
time.”
Frank proposed spending $20,000 for AIDS service agencies,
$450,000 for the Canyon Acres storm drain, $50,000 emergency repairs
to beach stairways, $12,000 for the city’s share of a parking garage
study, $140,000 for storm damage repairs on Cerritos and the transfer
of $1.2 million from the general fund to the capital improvement
fund. He recommended that the council approve the Arts Commission’s
revised plan for the Business Improvement District.
However, his recommendations for the promised allocations from the
parking meter revenues were troubling for the council.
Frank proposed an allocation of $25,000 for the acquisition of a
new finance / personnel computer system, $75,000 to the Laguna Beach
Boys and Girl Club, $25,000 to the Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce
and $150,000 to the Laguna Beach Community Clinic. Originally the
council designated $700,000 in one-time grants and allocations to
city projects.
Council members Wayne Baglin and Steve Dicterow pushed for an
additional $12,000 allocation to the Cross Cultural Task Force and
refused to step down from the promises the council had made back in
June when it approved the budget and the increased parking meter
rates.
But Mayor Toni Iseman, with council members Cheryl Kinsman and
Elizabeth Pearson, argued that the city should not spend money it
does not have.
“I didn’t vote for this originally and it’s not that I don’t want
to give this money out, I do. I want to give more but we don’t have
it,” Kinsman said.
The council voted unanimously to pass four of the recommended
actions, allocate $12,000 to the Cross Cultural Council and retain
the proposed $1.2 million transfer from the general fund. However,
Dicterow and Baglin dissented on the vote to reduced allocations.
“I hope this is the year we cure knee-jerk reactions on the Laguna
Beach City Council,” Baglin said. “We’re going to hurt this year and
for years to come.”
-- Mary A. Castillo
Baglin preliminary hearing rescheduled
City Councilman Wayne Baglin’s preliminary hearing on six charges
of felony conflict of interest was rescheduled Monday to March 14.
The charges stem from Baglin’s acceptance of a $36,000 check from
clients who sold property to the city. State law 1090 prohibits an
elected official from making money off a city contract while in
office.
Baglin pleaded not guilty to the charges at his arraignment in
December.
He contends that recusing himself from voting on the sale absolved
him.
Baglin was re-elected to the council in November of 2000. He
subsequently signed a contract to represent the property owners, whom
he had allegedly represented in other transactions.
-- Barbara Diamond
Seniors throw fund-raiser to benefit center
Laguna Beach Seniors Inc. will have its first fund-raising dinner
to aid in the completion of a Senior Center in the city.
The dinner will be Feb. 7 at Villa Romana Trattoria, 303 Broadway
at the corner of Beach Street. The cost is $20 plus tax and gratuity
per person and the restaurant will return $10 per person to Seniors
Inc. for the center.
The price includes soup or salad, a choice of four wonderful
Italian entrees and a choice of soft drink, coffee or iced tea.
To purchase tickets, payment should be made to Laguna Beach
Seniors Inc. and mailed, with your address and telephone number, to
P.O. Box 536, Laguna Beach CA 92652. Tickets will be sent by return
mail. Reservations for dining times between 4:30 p.m. and 9 p.m. may
be made with the restaurant after tickets are purchased. Payment may
be made until Feb. 1 and there are no tickets sold on the day of the
dinner. Information: (949) 497-2441.
Photo seminar offered by Festival of Arts
The Festival of Arts is having a free seminar on how to best
photograph artwork from 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday. The two-hour class will
focus as well on the Festival of Arts jurying process, including how
to choose slides for art shows and about the jurors review process.
Patrick Sparkuhl, an exhibitor at the festival and an educator,
will teach the seminar with accomplished photographer and festival
exhibitor Tom Lamb. Sparkuhl recently won acclaim in a New York
exhibit. Lamb is a photography instructor at Saddleback College.
Georgia Freedman-Harvey, who was a 2002 Festival of Arts juror,
will give her expertise on the jury process.
The jurying information is helpful for those applying for the
Festival of Arts summer show. The deadline is Feb. 21.
For more information, call 464-4268. The seminar will take place
at the Forum Theater on the Festival of Arts at 650 Laguna Canyon
Road.
-- Suzie Harrison
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