Conservancy united on Act V
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Barbara Diamond
Corporation Yard relocation opponents Toni Iseman and Wayne Baglin
were asked to preach to the choir Monday at the Laguna Canyon
Conservancy dinner meeting.
“Our history as an organization is protecting the canyon,”
conservancy President Carolyn Wood said. “Moving the Corporation Yard
to Act V is very much a concern to us. I hope our speakers provide an
interesting program tonight.”
Both council members voiced opposition to relocating some of the
city’s maintenance yard functions to the fringe of the open space in
Laguna Canyon.
“Personally, I feel as strongly about this as I did about water
pollution,” said Baglin, a leader in water quality issues.
He said a cooperative effort raised the quality of the waters off
of Laguna from probably the worst to among the best on the coast and
the same kind of cooperation is needed now to reach a satisfactory
decision for the maintenance yard.
“Many see this as a petty council squabble,” Iseman said. “It is a
squabble. It is not petty. I think it is the most important political
decision we will make -- and it shouldn’t be political.”
Mayor Cheryl Kinsman and former Mayor Kathleen Blackburn, who
attended the dinner meeting, support the relocation, as do Council
Members Elizabeth Pearson and Steve Dicterow.
“I would love a compromise,” Kinsman said, when asked Monday if
she had any comment.
Asked what compromise she would suggest, Kinsman said she
personally favored the recommendations of the Village Entrance Task
Force, on which she served as a planning commissioner.
The task force was a broadly based group led by the commission,
which met for months before unanimously recommending the removal of
the Corporation Yard, but without specifying the location.
Unanimity eroded when the council selected Act V as the relocation
site, and groups began choosing up sides.
More than 30 meetings have been held on the Village Entrance and
Act V, not including the Act V design committee chaired by Blackburn.
Baglin, who did not initially oppose the relocation, later came
out strongly against it, at first in the council majority, now in the
minority.
“I am confused about how we got here,” Baglin said Monday. “We are
not doing this by city standards. We are doing it through the county
and when was the last time you remember the county doing anything
environmentally sensitive?”
Neither the council nor the public had an opportunity to
thoroughly scope the plan before it was presented at a California
Coastal Commission hearing on the project, Baglin said.
Assistant City Manager John Pietig, however, conducted a tour of
the maintenance yard a few days prior to the meeting, attended by
many of the people at the conservancy dinner. The plan was displayed.
Modifications include the elimination of one building, the
construction of a Caltrans-required de-acceleration lane and the
repositioning of the driveway.
The development will cost public parking spaces on the lost on the
periphery of town and according to Baglin’s calculations a cumulative
loss.
Baglin and Iseman support a combined maintenance yard and parking
structure at the present site, identified as the Village Entrance.
Such a plan won the Village Entrance Design Contest conducted by the
city, which specified joint use.
Baglin estimates the combination plan would cost about $15 million
and would have only 30 less parking spaces than the optimum predicted
if the maintenance yard was relocated, while avoiding a loss in
peripheral parking that makes the city’s successful shuttle system
viable.
Iseman said 600 spaces at the Village Entrance would be fully
utilized only two days a week, two months of the year, during
festival season.
“The rest of the days it will be empty and it will require all of
our parking revenue to build,” she said.
The conservancy members gave a voice vote of approval to
Conservancy President Carolyn Wood’s proposal to ask the City Council
to hold a public workshop on the relocation.
Few people dispute the need to improve working conditions for the
city employees and most people, if they care at all, seem to agree
that the city should have a Village Entrance that defines the city.
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