Dealing with unfinished business
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Barbara Diamond
The Laguna Canyon Conservancy challenged Councilman Wayne Baglin to
set the record straight on city projects and policies termed
“Unfinished Business.”
Baglin responded Monday night at the conservancy’s March dinner
meeting at Tivoli Terrace, prefacing his talk with a caveat:
“Anything I say is my opinion and I can’t say that I will shed all
the sunlight possible on the issues.”
On the top of his list of unfinished business: South Laguna’s
perception of itself as a stepchild, years after it requested
annexation by Laguna Beach.
“It still doesn’t get the attention it should.” Baglin said.
South Laguna desperately needs parking, but the council is split
on how to proceed, according to Baglin.
“One position is to do nothing,” he said
He supports construction of parking on South Coast Highway, on a
lot across from the popular Ti Amo restaurant, possible in
conjunction with a new fire station to replace the outdated facility
on 2nd Avenue that the city inherited from the county.
“But the money for that is on its way to ACT V -- one of my
favorite subjects,” Baglin said.
But first, a brief detour to the visioning process. Baglin said
that never in all his time in Laguna had he seen so much community
participation resulting in so many ideas. Unfortunately, he said,
some of the ideas conflicted -- and those need to be resolved so the
process can move forward.
Parking produced a conflict: one recommendation was to accommodate
more vehicles Downtown and another recommendation was for peripheral
parking to keep vehicles out of Downtown.
After considerable tap dancing, the council voted 3-2 to move the
maintenance yard out to ACT V, and add parking to the Village
Entrance. Unfortunately, that would reduce peripheral parking at ACT
V, drastically, according to some calculations, acceptably by other
calculations.
“There never will be a corporation yard at ACT V,” Baglin said.
He was preaching to the choir.
The conservancy filed an appeal of the county’s approval of the
relocation with the California Coastal Commission, which Baglin
supports.
“Thanks to Carolyn Wood [who prepared the appeal], the Coastal
Commission is going to tell us to go to hell,” Baglin said.
He encouraged opponents to attend the June coastal commission
hearing in Long Beach at which the appeal will be heard.
Personal goals for Baglin include rehabilitation of the Lifeguard
Headquarters, better training and staff support for the Design Review
Board and much stronger wording about what prospective home builders
or remodelers can expect to be approved. Instead of a warning that
building envelopes and footprints for a specific lot are maximums and
may not be allowed, Baglin would prefer to see a bold-faced “There is
not a chance you can do this.”
A question and answer period followed Baglin’s talk.
Question: What is the city doing about pollution in Aliso Creek?
Answer: “Nothing.”
Q: Mansionization?
A: “We want to keep the scale of this town.” Baglin said he just
went along with an earlier council’s approval when he voted in favor
of an 11,000-square-foot home in South Laguna, calling it a
neighborhood in itself.
Q: Montage Parking?
A: “The [environmental impact report] was flawed. I don’t know if
the city, Athens Group and the consultant conspired, but they did a
lousy, lousy job. It is 50 to 70 spaces short. It appears they will
have to buy off-site parking to meet their needs. We got taken to the
cleaners.”
Q: Refinancing the city’s debt for Treasure Island Park?
A: Baglin credited council members Toni Iseman and Cheryl Kinsman
for putting aside their differences to work together to come up with
a plan to refinance the park costs, saving the city a considerable
amount in interest.
Q: Construction staging at Big Bend?
A: No.
Q: The city’s biggest problem?
A: “The City Manager.”
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