Wood named Woman of the Year
- Share via
Barbara Diamond
Carolyn Wood is a tiny woman who casts a large shadow. She has a soft
voice, but a hard head when it comes to the presentation of accurate
information to the public, bureaucratic shenanigans or violence to
the environment. The highest point in Laguna Beach has been named for
her, a measure of the regard in which she is held by the city and the
county.
The Laguna Beach Women’s Club has selected Wood as the “2003 Woman
of the Year.” The public is invited to attend a luncheon in her honor
June 6.
Carolyn Martins Wood has lived in Laguna Beach with her husband,
Andrew, since 1968.
They met in the 1950s in Whittier, where they attended college,
but they had their first date in Laguna, sharing a dinner of abalone,
and came back often during their courtship and the early years of
their marriage.
He had a job teaching school when they moved here. She was looking
for work.
An opening in the Leisure World closed-circuit TV station that
attracted her also attracted numerous other candidates, all men. Her
application was dismissed, although a notebook presentation earned
her $100.
Undaunted, Wood made an offer the TV station couldn’t refuse: a
year of work for free. She was hired and worked for the station for
the next 22 years on a year-to-year contract.
“That’s such a woman’s story,” said Women’s Club board member Anne
Johnson, an admirer of Wood’s.
Wood’s public service in Laguna began with participation in a
citizen’s committee on traffic and parking. Even today, she sits on
the Parking Traffic and Circulation Committee.
“Roads have always been my passion,” she said.
Other passions include research and documentation. Her files are
legendary.
Preserving Laguna Canyon from development has been another passion
and one of her successes. Wood is a founding member of the Laguna
Canyon Conservancy, of which she has been president since 1988. She
also serves as secretary of the Laguna Canyon Foundation, which she
helped found.
In pursuit of her goals, Wood helped convince the California
Coastal Commission to deny a Caltrans project that would have ground
down the ocean-side hill at Big Bend and worked diligently to block
the Irvine Co.’s 3,500-home project at Laguna Laurel.
Wood was active in support of Proposition 70, which brought $10
million to Laguna Beach to purchase open space, including the
471-acre Laguna Heights where the Carolyn Wood Knoll is located.
Wood worked with Laguna Greenbelt Inc. to gather signatures in
support of the city’s Open Space Ordinance, which guarantees that
land purchased as open space cannot be sold without a vote of the
people.
She has served on the city’s Open Space Committee, represented
Orange County’s 5th District on the Orange County Transportation
Authority’s Citizen Advisory Board and is a board member of Friends
of Harbors, Beaches and Parks. Closer to home, she sits on the board
of Top of the World Neighborhood Assn.
She has been honored by the Women for Orange County and the
American Assn. of University Women for her efforts on behalf of the
environment and her community.
As a Women’s Club Woman of the Year, Wood joins a roster of
remarkable women that includes the Sandies, Cheryl Post and former
Mayor Kathleen Blackburn.
The luncheon in her honor will begin at 11:30 a.m. at the clubhouse, 286 St. Ann’s Drive. Reservations paid by Monday are $20.
Checks should be made payable to the club and mailed to the clubhouse
in time to make the Monday deadline or dropped in the mail slot to
the right of the chimney. Reservations paid at the door will be $25,
space permitting. Either way, call 497-1200 to secure seating.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.