Driftwood dialogue continues
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Barbara Diamond
After 10 Planning Commission meetings and a public tour of the
property on Saturday with the City Council and staff members, one
might suppose there would be little left to be said for or against
the proposed Driftwood Estates development.
One would be wrong.
“This project is breaking my heart,” choked-up neighbor Penny Elia
said.
More than 85 people showed up Tuesday for the hearing on the
proposed subdivision of the 228-acre South Laguna hillside parcel
into 15 lots zoned for single-family residences on 10 acres and the rest zoned for open space in perpetuity. Driftwood Drive is proposed
as the main access to the development, with an emergency access road
planned to Ocean Vista Drive.
“We’d all like to see no building there,” said Sharon Larimer, a
resident of Driftwood Drive for 21 years. “That won’t happen, but we
need a reduction to seven lots. This is a nice neighborhood, and we’d
like to keep it that way.”
The council listened to about 1 1/2 hours of testimony Tuesday --
another half-hour was taken up with procedural questions -- before
calling a halt to the hearing shortly after midnight. The hearing was
continued to 6 p.m. Feb. 25, when it will be the only item on the
agenda.
Most of the 25 speakers Tuesday opposed the project.
“A packet delivered to the city listed names of people supporting
the project,” said outspoken environmentalist Kimberly Leeds of
Bluebird Canyon. “I wondered why anyone would do this. Ten were not
even residents, and others live on Loretta Drive.”
Loretta Drive resident Richard Leo said the Porto Fino
neighborhood sees the dedication of 218 acres of open space as an
enormous benefit to the whole town. Mayor Toni Iseman has made the
point that projects affect all the residents, not just those within
the 300-foot noticing radius.
“You need to look at the larger issues,” said architect James
Conrad, a resident on Barracuda Drive whose home overlooks the
proposed project and the open space that approval would bring to the
city.
Asked what discretion the council has in the project, City Atty.
Philip Kohn said state law defines the legal restraints, but options
include approving the subdivision, denying it or modifying the
proposal. Under state law, the council must able to justify their
decision, whether in favor or in opposition to the subdivision,
according to Kohn.
“You have to make findings that meet the applicable requirements,”
he said.
Christopher Koontz of the Sierra Club conservation staff said that
the project could be denied because it requires general plan/local
coastal plan amendment.
“You can deny any general plan amendment on the grounds that there
is no need to amend it,” Koontz said. The Planning Commission has
recommended that the council approve the subdivision as proposed and
approve a request to delete a portion of a watercourse from the city
map, as well as certify the environmental impact report required for
the project.
Substantial changes have been made to the proposal since it was
first submitted to the commission, said Morris Skenderian, architect
of record.
“We started with 19 lots and we are now down to 15,” said project
manager Todd Skenderian.
Other changes included an increase in the open space, deletion of
a variance request for indirect access, drainage improvements and a
reduction from 33,000 to 8,000 cubic yards of dirt to be exported.
Driftwood Drive neighbors remain concerned about the effects of
construction and traffic on their homes. The homes were built and the
streets laid under county jurisdiction.
“The narrow streets have always been a problem,” said resident
Larimer, who lives on the ocean side of Driftwood Drive. “The other
side of the street has little, short, postage-stamp driveways. Most
cars don’t fit, so they have to park on the street. That’s not going
to change.”
Sally Wilde said the city should not make the Driftwood Drive
resident endure the “hell” that Diamond Crestview residents have
endured.
“This project needs a specific plan,” Wilde said.
Specified staging areas are essential, she said.
“I hope you can learn from the mistakes you made with us.” Wilde
told the council.
Council members made specific requests of the staff for the Feb.
25 meeting.
Councilwoman Elizabeth Pearson asked staff to review whether the
California Environmental Quality Act considers views and for an
analysis of the size of homes on Driftwood and Marilyn drives.
Cheryl Kinsman wants the staff to identify the proposed trail head
location in relation to the trail into the open space, an explanation
of the requirements for the maintenance of common areas in the
development and what kinds of gates could be used for the emergency
access road that would make it possible for people to get out of the
area without driving through the gates.
Wayne Baglin asked the staff to look into the trail head habitat
for evidence of large leaf crown beard, a plant unique to South
Laguna; a traffic study of the effect of using the access road as the
main entry point to the development and evaluation of the city’s
noise element, which could be inadequate and might be crucial to the
project.
Mayor Iseman asked for an evaluation of the Design Review Board’s
ability to solve neighborhood concerns, such as views, privacy,
drainage and the effect on homes below.
Public comment at the Feb. 25 meeting will be limited to those who
did not speak Tuesday.
* BARBARA DIAMOND is a reporter for the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. She may be reached at 494-4321.
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