End of the year events remembered
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BARBARA DIAMOND
JULY
July 2: Inspired by “Roadtrip Nation,” a book written by Nathan
Gebhard and Mike Marriner of Laguna Beach, three recreation vehicles
full of students began a tour of colleges across the country to talk
to students about alternative career paths.
* Wayne and Faye Baglin announced they would not file a lawsuit
against the city relating to his trial on suspicion of violating
state conflict-of-interest laws, of which a jury found him not
guilty.
July 9: Assistant City Manager John Pietig conducted a tour of the
city’s maintenance yard and explained plans for the proposed facility
at Act V.
* Despite objections from residential neighbors, the City Council
approved redevelopment proposed by the new owner of the Pottery
Shack, with the proviso that the property be put on the city’s
historical register. “I better be able to recognize the Pottery Shack
when you are done, or I am gonna come after you,” then-Mayor Cheryl
Kinsman said. Councilmen Wayne Baglin and Steve Dicterow voted
against the proposal.
July 16: Andrew Urdiales, who confessed in 1997 to killing Laguna
Beach college student Robbin Brandley, then 23, in the parking lot of
Saddleback College, was awaiting a judge’s decision on whether he
would go to death row for three other killings in Illinois.
July 23: Festival of Arts members voted on changing its by-laws to
prevent licensing of the Pageant of the Masters.
* The California Coastal Commission voted 7 to 2 on July 15 to
continue its hearing on the proposed relocation of the city’s
maintenance yard to the Act V parking lot because of conflicting data
delivered by proponents and opponents of the project and the lack of
a parking study. Choosing a seat at the meeting was like deciding on
which side of the aisle to set a Hatfield-McCoy wedding. Councilwoman
Toni Iseman, an opponent of the project who sits on the commission,
dropped a bombshell when she announced that the tin shacks at the
current site would not be removed.
* The California Newspaper Publishers Assn. awarded first place to
the Coastline Pilot for page layout and design for weeklies and
second place for general excellence among papers of the same size.
July 30: Bill Bryan took the title at the 28th annual Victoria
Skimboards World Championship of Skimboarding, held July 24 and 25 at
Aliso Beach.
AUGUST
Aug. 6: John Laurence Whitaker, 57, was arrested in Oregon on
suspicion of murdering Patricia Ann Carpenter in 1983 in Laguna
Beach. Whitaker confessed to the murder, another cold case solved by
Det. Paul Litchenberg, who reopened the case in January, assisted by
records manager Dawn Garner.
Aug. 13: Tiana Bryant of San Clemente donated a kidney to Laguna
Beach resident Dan Stafford, 26. The transplant was done Aug. 3.
* Festival of Arts members voted overwhelmingly in favor of new
rules to prohibit licensing the Pageant of the Masters.
* Laguna Beach High School broke ground for its new football
field, to be covered in artificial turf, at an estimated cost of $1.6
million.
Aug. 20: The Day Worker Center on Laguna Canyon Road celebrated
five years of success. “In the beginning, we said we’d try it for
three months,” staff member Irma Ronses said. “Five years is proof
that it works.”
* Fire Department Captain Kris Head was promoted to battalion
chief.
Aug. 27: St. Ann’s Drive residents began to muster opposition to a
30-foot-high fence around the athletic field at Laguna Beach High
School. The school district said the fence would prevent batted balls
from banging into their windows. Residents said the windows wouldn’t
do them much good if the fence blocked all their views.
SEPTEMBER
Sept. 3: Laguna Beach Republican Frank Ricchiazzi went to New York
as a member of the California delegation to the Republican National
Convention. Ricchiazzi, co-chair of the Laguna Beach Republican Club,
is a founder of the Log Cabin Republicans, a group that represents
gays and lesbians in the Grand Old Party, even when it doesn’t
represent them.
Sept. 10: The Bammer family settled the suit filed against the
Brecht family, whose daughter was driving under the influence of
alcohol when the vehicle overturned, killing Jennifer Bammer. Nancy
Bammer said a good portion of the $168,000 settlement will go toward
a scholarship fund in her daughter’s name.
* A grand opening was held Sept. 4 at the Boys and Girls Club to
show off the new, 25,000-square-foot clubhouse, a project five years
in the making.
* The Laguna Beach Unified School District completed the
modernization of city schools at a cost of $57.1 million, funded by
local and state bonds, the city and the California Department of
Parks and Recreation.
Sept. 17: The City Council gave preliminary approval at the Sept.
14 meeting to a smoking ban on city beaches. The vote was 4-0, with
Councilman Steve Dicterow absent.
Sept. 24: “Laguna Beach: The Real Orange County” on MTV, starred
eight Laguna Beach students.
* The city couldn’t get the maintenance yard moved out of town,
and it appeared unlikely that it will be able to keep South Coast
Medical Center in town. A study presented to the City Council Sept.
21 by a hired consultant was not optimistic about the hospital
staying here.
OCTOBER
Oct. 1: The Laguna Beach Board of Education was still on the fence
about the fence around the baseball field. No vote was taken on a
compromise that pleased baseball supporters more than it did
neighbors of the high school campus.
* Haster Grove nursery went out of business.
* In less than a year, a Nyes Place family had a truck slam into
the front of their home and mud ooze into the back. The mudslide
caused by a broken water main forced Charles and Alysia Murray and
their 1-year-old son, Oliver, to evacuate.
Oct. 8: Construction of the controversial fence along the Laguna
Beach High School baseball field resumed Oct. 6. Neighbors and city
officials were still trying to figure out if there are legal means
for the city to intervene. The fence, or any construction on school
properties, did not go through design review. The City Council
instructed City Atty. Philip Kohn on Oct. 5 to research remedies.
Oct. 15: South Coast YMCA submitted an application to construct a
skateboard park on 35,000 square feet of the dog park in Laguna
Canyon.
* Flu clinics at South Coast Medical Center and the Laguna Beach
Senior Center were canceled when the county notified the hospital
officials that no vaccine was available.
* Sen. Barbara Boxer visited the Laguna Beach Democratic Club
Headquarters. About 300 Democrats crowded into the courtyard of the
defunct Pottery Shack to hear the petite Boxer urge voters to support
John Kerry.
Oct. 22: City Manager Ken Frank declined to sign off on the YMCA’s
application for a conditional-use permit to build the skateboard park
at Bark Park. He said he didn’t think he had the authority.
* Top of the World students bubbled with enthusiasm about the
recently completed improvements on the campus. Students blew bubbles
at the conclusion of a ceremony celebrating the end of the 2 1/2
-year project.
* A man who identified himself as Bong Rip passed out joints,
toked in broad daylight and thumbed his nose at marijuana laws by
orchestrating a public smoke-in Oct. 16 at Main Beach. More sedate
protests against marijuana laws were held farther south at Main
Beach.
Oct. 29: A popular nanny to Laguna Beach families died after she
was struck by an SUV while crossing South Coast Highway. Olimpia
Sastre Ordones, 27, was on her way to work when she was hit. Her
sister, 36, was injured in the accident.
* The Bluebird Park Rocket Ship was launched Oct. 27. Supporters
broke ground for the construction, funded jointly by a private/public
partnership. It cost $91,000
NOVEMBER
Nov. 5: Jane Egly was the top vote-getter in the City Council
election. Cheryl Kinsman came in second. Laura Parisi was reelected
city treasurer. Martha Anderson was elected city clerk.
* School board incumbents El Hathaway and Jan Vickers were
reelected.
* Former Laguna Beach teacher and Councilwoman Lida Lenney, a
leader in the battle to save Laguna Canyon from development, lost the
battle against leukemia. “She was our icon of the canyon,” Eleanor
Henry said. Lenney founded the Laguna Canyon Conservancy and took the
fight to the doorstep of Donald Bren, owner of the Irvine Co., which
had the rights to develop the outer canyon.
* A memorial fund was established for the family of nanny Olimpia
Sastre Ordones, who was killed in a traffic accident Oct. 27.
Nov. 12: Artists began readying booths for the 14th annual Sawdust
Festival Winter Fantasy that opened Nov. 20. More than 170 artists
and craftspeople participated.
Nov. 26: Montage Resort and Spa finally closed the deal with the
Esslinger Trust for the old Unocal Service Station site below Laguna
Terrace Mobile Home Park. The parcel will be used for employee
parking. Sierra Club representative Penny Elia said at the Nov. 16
meeting that the resort owners also had purchased buildings along the
adjoining parking strip.
DECEMBER
Dec. 3: Hospitality Night. Says it all. The tradition started in
1952. “It’s about family, community and is the epitome of the holiday
spirit,” Police Capt. Danell Adams said.
* A candlelight vigil was held Dec. 1 to commemorate World AIDS
Day. “I lost more than half of my friends before I hit 35,” said Ric
Uggen, a volunteer with AIDS Services Foundation. The Laguna Beach
Community Clinic offered free HIV testing during a day of
remembrance. Red ribbons with the names of those lost to AIDS were
fastened to trees downtown.
* Rep. Christopher Cox came through again -- this time sponsoring
a $900,000 grant to be combined with city revenue to renovate the
sewer system. This was the third grant Cox has procured for the city.
Dec. 10: Retiring City Clerk Verna Rollinger installed her
successor, Martha Anderson, at the Dec. 7 City Council meeting.
Anderson then installed winning Councilwomen Jane Egly and Cheryl
Kinsman and Treasurer Laura Parisi.
The council elected Elizabeth Pearson as mayor. Steve Dicterow was
elected mayor pro tem, presumably in line for the mayor job next
year, which was to have been his swan song. However, Dicterow said at
the meeting he has changed his mind and will run for a fourth term.
Dec. 17: El Toro Reuse Planning Authority called a special meeting
to consider threats to the will of the people who voted against a
commercial airport at the former U.S. Marine Corps Air Station. A
closed session was held to discuss possible litigation, but no action
was reported. The week before, the city of Fullerton had asked the
Department of Transportation to request a transfer of the base from
the U.S. Navy, which is scheduled to hold an auction of the property,
divided into four parcels, on Jan. 5. City Manager Ken Frank said Los
Angeles poses a bigger threat.
* The Planning Commission voted unanimously Dec. 15 to recommend
that the City Council approve proposed alterations to the Pottery
Shack, despite almost unanimous opposition by neighbors. First
scheduled to be heard Feb. 1, it is now set for the second council
meeting in February.
* BARBARA DIAMOND is a reporter for the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. She may be reached at (949) 494-4321.
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