Cancer Center addition approved
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Barbara Diamond
The city gave two thumbs up for the addition of a radiation facility
to the Cancer Center on the South Coast Medical Center campus.
“A center must have a diagnostic unit, surgical, chemotherapy,
counseling and support systems, social services and radiation,” said
Dr. Gabor Kovacs, center medical director. “With this addition we
will have completed the Cancer Center.”
The Planning Commission voted 4-0, with Rob Zur Schmide absent
from the Sept. 22 meeting, to approve conditional use and coastal
development permits for the 4,188 square-foot addition. The following
night the Design Review Board unanimously approved the project design
and landscaping, without conditions.
“We have been waiting a long time for this, as have our patients,”
said former Mayor Kathleen Blackburn, a member of the medical center
governing board. “We need the cancer center for the viability of the
hospital.”
The hospital is studying ways of improving its financial
situation, including moving the medical center out of town. The
building, which houses the cancer center, is owned by the South Coast
Medical Center Foundation, with a separate identity and board. The
center could stay even if the hospital moved, hospital spokesman Tom
Larrimore said.
Neighbors voiced concerns at both meetings about drainage from the
campus.
Drainage from the campus has been an on-going problem. Documents
going back to 1991 were filed with the city from property owners
across the street from the campus.
“My family has owned the property at 31861 Coast Highway on the
beach across from South Coast Medical Center for some 70 years,” said
Carol Nilson. “Referred to by the hospital as the ‘Zimmerman
Property,’ we receive all the hospital’s surface run-off as it
transits to the ocean.
“The hospital is widely viewed as on the verge of financial
collapse and the proposed radiation [facility] is acknowledged to be
a lifeline.
“We continue to support the concept of this center ... but this
building should not be built at the expense of the environment, a
neighbor’s property nor in rank disregard for the Clean Water Act.”
City and Caltrans representatives are meeting with the neighbors
to try to resolve the problem. Hospital officials have not
participated in the past. In fact, foundation President Joe Orsak
said he was not aware of the meetings.
Orsak said both he and Gary Irish, hospital chief executive
officer, would be more than willing to cooperate. He stopped short of
accepting hospital participation as a Planning Commission condition
of approval of the project.
“It is not pertinent to the cancer center,” Orsak said.
Commissioners agreed.
“We need to recognize pre-existing problems with the drainage, but
that is not before us now,” Commissioner Bob Chapman said.
The project, which is less than 5,000 square feet, does not
trigger the Clean Water Act’s stricter requirements, according to
Chapman and attorney Gene Gratz, who represents the Zimmerman
property owners.
“But it imposes obligations on the city as the enforcer and the
hospital as contributor,” Gratz said. “It is not the intention of the
Zimmermans to impede this project, but rather it allows us to
encourage the hospital to participate with Caltrans, the city and the
Zimmermans to encourage a process of solution.”
Opponents of the project as approved have until Oct. 6 to appeal
the Planning Commission’s decision, and until Oct. 7 to appeal the
Design Review Board decision.
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