Mailbag - June 21, 2002
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On behalf of the Hobo & Aliso Canyons Neighborhood Assn. and the Save
Hobo Aliso Ridge Task Force of the Sierra Club, we would like to address
Morris Skenderian’s comments in his letter of June 14 to the Coastline
editor (“Think opportunity, not fantasy”).
In early January of this year, a meeting was held with Highpointe
Communities Land Development and Morris and Todd Skenderian to address
Sierra Club concerns over the development of the Esslinger Family Trust
property. The entire property was the issue, not just a portion of the
property. The developer advised us Sierra Club members that, in fact, a
portion of the land would be dedicated. This came as quite a surprise as
this had never been mentioned publicly or put in writing.
Following that meeting, a letter was sent from the Sierra Club to
Steve Vliss of Highpointe Communities Land Development on Jan. 8
requesting that his “commitment” be put in writing. After receiving no
response, a second letter with the same request was sent on Jan. 28.
Simultaneously, a letter was sent to the Esslinger Family Trust
requesting a meeting with the landowner’s fiduciary agent to discuss the
purchase of the land for open space.
This is the “actual” sequence of events, and all letters previously
mentioned are available on file at the city’s planning desk in the
Driftwood Estates file. The Sierra Club has always been interested in
making sure the public was aware of this offer of dedication, even if it
was not the entire acreage as had been requested.
In his June 14 letter, Skenderian chooses to ignore the fact and
empirical data supplied by the city of Laguna Beach staff in their May 8,
2002 decision to limit any development of the Esslinger property to seven
homes.
No development would be allowed on the critical habitat or watercourse
areas or on the steep slopes adjacent to the Laguna Terrace Mobilehome
Park. This decision is a result of a diligent effort by city staff to
balance community health and safety concerns and quality of life issues
with the Esslinger’s rights as property owners.
Unfortunately, the decision that is best for the community does not
coincide with Skenderian’s personal profit speculation, and this is the
basis of his bitter attack on Penny Elia and other residents, the Sierra
Club and, seemingly, anyone else who opposes his Driftwood Estates
project.
Skenderian is incorrect in his statement that “to my knowledge no one,
including Elia, had expressed any interest in purchasing the property.”
On March 20, 1990, the City Council adopted a resolution to acquire the
235-acre Esslinger Trust property by power of eminent domain. The staff
was directed to negotiate “in a vigorous fashion” with the trust and $1
million was set aside for land purchases outside of Laguna Canyon,
including the Esslinger property.
As a 30-year resident of Laguna Beach and self-styled visionary, it is
curious that he is unaware of prior attempts to purchase this property.
Perhaps Skenderian should become more familiar with those “neighborhood
associations . . . hastily formed in order to stop ‘those greedy
developers.”’ He might then learn the long history of this property,
including the past unsuccessful attempts to develop it over the last
35-plus years.
We take great offense at Skenderian’s self-portrayal as one who “was
asked to participate in the project . . . to correct a blighted condition
. . . [and] develop a small portion of the property and donate the
remainder to the city.”
Neither he nor the developer, Highpointe Communities Land Development,
had ever agreed, in writing, to dedicate any portion of the land to the
city of Laguna Beach until Monday, June 3, 2002 when Todd Skenderian
included a short, unsigned, informal memo in a filing to the city’s
planning department.
Skenderian attempts to dangle an offer of free open space over the
heads of residents as if he was holding a piece of candy just out of the
reach of a small child. The promise of a free park at Treasure Island has
made all of us realize that a developer’s promises of a win-win deal does
not necessarily include the community as one of the winners.
Skenderian’s original “vision” of Driftwood Estates would dump a vague
collection of 18 estate-size homes on endangered habitat, force the city
to seize 50 feet from adjacent homeowners’ properties to build a road,
pave a watercourse and direct storm runoff into a narrow canyon filled
with existing homes.
His “vision” is to grade out over 30,000 cubic yards of soil,
transport 2,000 truckloads of fill through narrow, residential streets
and run double-trailer dirt-hauling trucks through the Albertson’s
Shopping Center. Skenderian’s plan does not correct blight, it would
create it.
The Sierra Club and the Hobo & Aliso Canyons Neighborhood Assn.
continue to wait for a “willing seller.” Our “vision” is open space.
We don’t agree with Skenderian’s viewpoint that this involves
compromise. The only compromise is to the land -- it has been compromised
for decades.
Now is the time to restore this land to its natural beauty and
preserve it as open space -- no more grading, no more chemical
defoliation and destruction of natural resources.
The Esslinger Family Trust property can be acquired outright as open
space. It is a beautiful property that is visible to anyone who travels
through Laguna on Coast Highway and is a perfect backdrop to the new
hotel at Treasure Island. The entire parcel deserves to become permanent
open space.
Let’s not make any more compromises, Skenderian.
BETSY BREDAU, vice president, Hobo & Aliso Canyons Neighborhood Assn.
CURT AND JANET BARTSCH
MARIA BOLDING
PAUL FLORANCE
DON AND SHARRY JONES
BILL AND SHARON LARIMER
GAIL PROTHERO, conservation chair, Sierra Sage Angeles Chapter/Orange
County
CLAIRE ROBINSON
Laguna Beach
The fantasy is the developer’s
According to Morris Skenderian’s letter (“Think opportunity, not
fantasy,” June 14), the city staff, Penny Elia, the Hobo & Aliso Canyons
Neighborhood Assn. and anyone else who opposes the proposed Driftwood
Estates is in some kind of fantasy.
The opportunity on the other hand, as the architect sees it, is for us
to fall for the old “bait and switch” routine. That is to allow a
development that is not wanted or needed and is unsound in exchange for
open space.
But wait, as we expected, there is a catch. Nearly 10 acres of that open space (actually zoned residential/hillside protection) that has
potential access off Loretta Drive will be represented with a lot line
adjustment at a later date. Look out Arch Beach Heights, the next
subdivision may be coming your way.
The fantasy here belongs entirely to Skenderian. Take some of his
figures. He said that only six of the entire 228 acres (minus the nearly
10 acres off Loretta Drive) are being considered under the development
proposal. The staff report states that the subdivision includes 15
single-family lots consisting of 10.6 acres. He also states that the
project is 3% of the entire property (207.9 acres are currently zoned
open space). The more important figure to look at is that the proposed
subdivision represents an approximate 20% increase to our small enclave
neighborhood.
He goes on to reason that because the property supports “hundreds of
sandbags, exposed pipes, chain link fences, uncertified fill slopes,
overhead power lines, erosion and flooding of the existing homes below,”
it should be able to support his subdivision. Good developer reasoning, I
guess. And I guess this also means that illegally graded land, defoliated
of its highly sensitive habitat, used as a dumping ground and allowed to
continue to be a hazard to surrounding homes is the perfect candidate for
development. Besides setting a bad precedent, we think that this property
is the perfect candidate to clean up, to treat with respect, to be
restored and revegetated to its natural state and preserved for
generations to come. But that is our fantasy.
He then says that neither Penny Elia nor anyone else in the
neighborhood made any attempts to purchase, correct or improve the
situation and that our interest in the property was only “perked” when
the current developer came along. This is blatantly wrong and insulting.
We backed the city’s attempt to purchase the property in 1990. We are the ones who tried to stop the trucks in the middle of the night as they took
their loads of garbage up the hill to dump. We are the ones who have been
vigilant in ridding the property of people who have exposed the land to
fire hazard and abuse. We are the ones digging trenches and filling
sandbags to try and stop flooding from coming down into our homes. We
have not been interested? Not only have we been interested but we have
been fully informed and supportive of the dialogue with groups interested
in the purchase of this property.
Letters as to our intent have been on file with the city and have been
discussed at many meetings. This is no secret.
What we are not interested in is this developer’s vision for this land
and apparently neither is the city staff. Currently the findings
necessary to grant variances cannot be made and the proposed design of
the subdivision is inconsistent with some policies in the city’s open
space/conservation element of the general plan.
Apparently, though, this developer plans to continue to pursue his
vision and his profit opportunity.
Our neighborhood association and other groups will not go away during
or after this battle. We have a lot of work to do. Part of that work is
preserving as much open space in Laguna as possible. We may see the
opportunities and the fantasies of this particular project very
differently from how this developer sees it. But one thing is true for us
-- and this is based on fact, not fantasy -- that there is a wonderful
opportunity for this property, for the neighborhood and for the city, and
Driftwood Estates is not it.
TERRY SEHI
Laguna Beach
Think quality, not opportunity
Morris Skenderian would like the residents of Laguna to believe that
he is doing us a favor. His graciousness is similar to cutting off your
arms and telling you to be glad you have your legs, because someone else
might have cut them all off.
Skenderian would like us to believe that we are missing the
opportunity of a lifetime in not appreciating the wonderful offer he is
making us. Well, one might consider the flip side to that thinking.
I think many builders would consider themselves quite lucky to have
the opportunity to build in our little town. And even luckier that we
don’t already have a building moratorium prohibiting all building until
our vision process is in place. Or that it is not 10 years from now, when
the price tag to handle watershed issues would cost more than your profit
margin. So what opportunities does this proposal offer? Lets take a
closer look.
We get noise, people, pollution, buildings, traffic congestion,
increased municipal costs not offset by property taxes and we lose our
serenity, habitat, identity, character, heritage and view. Sounds like a
real bargain -- not!
You see, Skenderian, we value the quality of solitude when fewer
people are around.
We value watching nature in motion, which means leaving it in its wild
state, from which it establishes its balance.
We value the diversity in which nature has helped to contributed to
our culture and shape our heritage.
These are not tangible or monetary things. I don’t really expect you
to understand this. Penny Elia may have myopia from watching nature for
too long, which I would prefer to Skenderian’s dubious, double, dollar
diplopia any time.
Elia has spent a great deal of her personal time and expenses in her
efforts to keep our neighborhood intact. They have not gone unnoticed.
Her integrity and perseverance makes her a role model for our community
that others can only aspire to.
SHARON PAGET
Laguna Beach
An opportunity that presents itself
Me thinks the architect doth protest too much.
“Follow the money,” as the whistle blower uttered in the movie “All
The Presidents Men.”
The remarks by Driftwood Estates subdivision architect Morris
Skenderian (“Think opportunity, not fantasy,” June 14) are certainly
about founding fathers -- as in “dead presidents” -- a slang term for big
bucks.
His repeated use of Penny Elia’s name, chair of the Hobo & Aliso
Canyons Neighborhood Assn., was shortened to “Elia” in a denigrating
diatribe of self-serving propaganda. He seems to have intentionally
dishonored her leadership stature for her group, as well as her
acknowledged Sierra Club status.
“Qui bono?” (who profits) is the mantra of detectives everywhere.
Skenderian’s motive: financial gain through this highly speculative land
deal, ala “Show me the money.” His modus operandi? Pretend it’s for the
betterment of the neighborhood and the city. Phony community spirit is
now a last refuge.
How unrealistic to be outraged when residents express concern. He has
zero tolerance for dissent, as counter-intuitive and exclusionary as one
can get.
Did he think that Laguna preservationists and the Sierra Club would
idly stand by while a developer plowed under even one square foot of
sensitive habitat? The opportunity he cites is really the chance for him,
his firm and his out-of-town client, Highpointe Communities Land
Development, to continue to rake in gross sums of revenue and prestige.
He did it at Treasure Island and he’s trying to do it at Driftwood
Estates. Judas Iscariot received 13 pieces of silver to betray Jesus, so
how much are you getting? You should have entitled your letter: “Think my
bank account, not reality.”
DANIEL CORRENTI ELIA
Laguna Beach
* EDITOR’S NOTE: It is the Coastline Pilot’s policy not to use
courtesy titles.
Put promise in writing
Morris Skenderian, architect and developer of the proposed Hobo Aliso
Ridge development on the hill over Treasure Island, says that the
developer promises to pave over only 3% of the 228 acres. He will “put it
in writing at the appropriate time.” He promised six months ago and so
far we have seen nothing.
As chairman of the 58,000 member Los Angeles/Orange County chapter of
the Sierra Club, I have seen many developers make promises to preserve
open space. Ten years ago the Rancho Mission Viejo Company told us they
would preserve endangered coastal sage scrub habitat. Now they want to
develop the area.
Most businessmen are men of their word. It is an important business
practice to have reputation for honesty. With a few notable exceptions, I
have not found this true of real estate developers.
Put it in writing. We will talk.
GORDON LABEDZ
Chairman, Angeles Chapter Sierra Club
Big thumbs up to Web site
Yes, I will absolutely give the city’s new Web site a chance.
I am happy to know the information posted will pertain to the
residents of Laguna Beach. It’s important to be aware of our city’s
spending and the direction Laguna Beach is heading.
LARA STIPANICH
Laguna Beach
* EDITOR’S NOTE: The Laguna Beach Web site can be found at
https://4.18.61.11/.
Serpentine rock not necessarily distant
Regarding your article on the Gwindingwi Gallery (“Set in stone,” June
14). The sculpture is magnificent and I encourage everyone to visit the
gallery.
There is one thing, however, that should be corrected. Co-owner Donnie
Wise states that serpentine (the stone from which many of the sculptures
are produced) is found exclusively in Zimbabwe. Such a statement is also
posted in the gallery. Serpentine, also known by the mineral name
serpentinite, is found other places in the world. In fact, it is common
in California and has been designated the state rock.
ALLAN SCHOENHERR
Laguna Beach
A time before the tower
The dedication of the refurbished Main Beach lifeguard tower brings to
mind memories of the area before the creation of Main Beach Park.
In the summer of 1951, the bowling alley, located where the basketball
court is now, was available to make “pin money,” which I took advantage
of.
I loved the fun times on Sunday afternoons at the Barefoot, which was
on the board walk adjacent to the tower and featured the “legendary”
local Joe Albany with his drummer Ed Clark to compliment his lyrical jazz
piano improvisations.
Then came the clean up and the Main Beach Park with its “window to the
sea.” While the Life Guard Tower is being dedicated, I celebrate and
remember the old Main Beach. Here’s to an earlier, perhaps better time in
our beautiful Laguna.
ANDY WING
Laguna Beach
Ever rising Treasure Island price tag
The cost of the public park at Treasure Island has gone up once again.
On May 7, the council passed a motion, on a 4 to 1 vote, including “that
a cap will be placed on the City’s obligation to Athens of $8.4 million.”
It was generally believed that placing a cap on the city’s obligations
was a very good idea, although many think that the limit should have been
more in the order of $4 to $5 million.
Also, and as a separate part of the motion, the city would collect all
the building permit fees for the condos and estate lots. The development
agreement had exempted Athens from these fees.
In spite of all this, at their meeting on June 18, the council was
presented with an operating memorandum to put the May 7 motion into legal
form. This operating memorandum provides “the total amount of improvement
costs for which the city is required to reimburse owner [Athens] . . .
shall be the sum of . . . $8,920,000.” It was adopted by the council.
That’s $520,000 more than the May 7 motion.
Oh well, its only another half million dollars of our money.
BILL RIHN
Laguna Beach
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