Preservation versus profit, again The Hobo...
Preservation
versus profit, again
The Hobo & Aliso Canyons Neighborhood Assn. appreciates the
opportunity to respond to your question: “Do you think the Driftwood
developers should have to seek a variance?” (Coastline Pilot, Aug. 2)
The city of Laguna Beach has required indirect access variances when
safety provisions are proposed to be met by using an easement for
secondary emergency access for many, many years -- it is both proper
and consistent with established city policy. We appreciate the city
staff’s and Planning Commission’s consistent, unwavering
interpretation of our city’s policy. Why should out-of-town
developers and their lawyers be able to rewrite “our” city’s
established policies simply for special interest and profit?
This proposed subdivision is still all about “preservation versus
profit.” Todd Skenderian states in your most recent article that,
“Seven lots and the project is dead.” This echoes Morris Skenderian’s
last interview statement, “The project is not economically viable
with just seven lots.”
Obviously, eliminating the need for a variance would allow
Highpointe Communities more development and more profit. This would
establish a dangerous precedent for all future development and send a
signal to developers that Laguna Beach policies and codes can be
undermined.
Please allow us to reiterate the neighborhood association’s
stance, as well as that of the Sierra Club: This property should be
preserved as open space in perpetuity. It has faced decades of
illegal grading, denuding and chemical defoliation and has earned the
right to be restored to its original state and be preserved. A 15-lot
subdivision is not appropriate, and city staff’s recommendation to
reduce this to a seven-lot development should be the developer’s
first clue that it is simply too dense of a project for such
sensitive habitat and unstable terrain.
And stay tuned for more on this proposed development ...
Highpointe Communities also wants to delete a significant watercourse
from our city’s maps in an attempt to eliminate the need for yet
another variance.
Preservation versus profit. Open space versus more congestion.
What’s it going to be Laguna Beach?
PENNY ELIA
Laguna Beach
Hobo & Aliso Canyons Neighborhood Assn.,
President Save Hobo & Aliso Ridge Task Force,
Sierra Club Task Force Leader
Driftwood would cause unfair burden
Just say no!
The attorney for Barnise and the Cases, Michael J. Matlaf, wrote
to the planning staff requesting that the secondary access road for
the proposed 15 lots for Driftwood Estates be blocked from use. In
the hopefully unlikely event that the variances are granted, then the
secondary access for the additional eight homes would be necessary.
The concern of Matlaf for the stability of the slopes on either side
of the new proposed road is certainly valid.
However, the reason for the limit of seven additional homes at the
end of Driftwood for development is to limit the amount of traffic
down such a narrow street. The residents of Driftwood Drive would be
unduly burdened and stressed to take all the heavy construction
traffic and the future traffic of the development. This would be
outrageously unfair to the residents of Driftwood Drive. It should
not be considered an option any more than directing all the
additional traffic to the new road exclusively.
All these concerns only give support to the planning staff’s prior
reasoning to refuse to grant the variances to develop the 18 estate
homes. What applies to the 18 should apply to the 15 homes.
Just say no!
ALEX SHELTON
Laguna Beach
Get behind the Great Park
Every time you pick up the L.A. Times there’s an article knocking
Irvine and the Great Park idea. It’s not hard to figure out that the
Times and others are still trying to get an airport in our backyard.
Laguna Beach should get behind Irvine now.
A fund-raiser tied to art and held at the Festival grounds would
fit the bill. We could ask local artists to help out with some
paintings of the closed El Toro base and use that artwork as a
catalyst to bring locals in for an auction. Maybe we could impose
upon Irvine Mayor Larry Agran to give us his view of what Irvine and
the U.S. Navy have in mind. That, in itself, would be worth the price
of admission.
Other south county cities could follow suit and raise private, not
public, money in support of the Great Park idea. After all, this is
still to our best interest and not only an Irvine project. If we can
raise enough money to help with the Great Park, then a section of
that park should be set aside for Laguna Art, one of the “jewels” in
the Great Park that Mayor Agran has been speaking about.
How to get something like this rolling? I have no idea. Possibly
the city could start the machinery in motion and then we local
citizens could take over. Let’s support Irvine now.
JOE GIORDANO
Laguna Beach
End of waiver good for Aliso Beach
I am the former chief engineer of the Orange County Sanitation
District and personally directed the preparation and filing of the
301(h) waiver for the district in September of 1979. The Board of
Directors of the district felt at the time that this was the best
course of action because of the very aggressive capital improvement
program that was being implemented. This capital works program
included 50 mgd of secondary treatment facilities at the Fountain
Valley plant and 75 mgd of secondary treatment facilities at the
Huntington Beach plant.
Major trunk sewers were also being constructed extending from the
Huntington Beach plant northerly to serve the cities of Fountain
Valley, Stanton, Westminster, Buena Park, Garden Grove and La Palma.
The Santa Ana Regional Interceptor was also being constructed along
the Santa Ana River from the Fountain Valley plant to the Orange
County boundary near Prado Dam. This major interceptor sewer not only
served several cities in Orange County, but provided a conveyance
system for the removal of contaminants and toxins from the Upper
Basin (Riverside and San Bernardino counties).
I believe that the Board of Directors’ recent action not to
request an extension of the waiver was prudent and necessary
considering the general public demand for full secondary treatment
for all waste waters being discharged to the ocean. However, it is my
opinion that with the expenditures of several millions of dollars and
increased property taxes, the beach closures and bacteria
contamination along the shoreline will not cease.
When the Corps of Engineers paved the bottom of the Santa Ana
River with concrete from the ocean to Weir Canyon, we lost over 225
acres of wetlands in the bottom of the river. The earthen soil
bottom, along with the vegetative growth, help reduce the
contaminants from the local storm water runoff before it reached the
ocean waters. The South Orange County Wastewater Authority treats all
the wastewater to secondary treatment level and discharges the
treated waste one-mile off shore from Aliso Beach. Even with
secondary treatment, the beach at Aliso has been quarantine and
posted on several occasions.
It is my opinion that the recent influx of beach pollution
resulting in unhealthy conditions and beach closures is the result of
neglect by many sewer agencies to properly maintain their sewers
resulting in sewer overflows and cities failing to implement a strong
storm drain, environmental anti-dumping policy with adequate
enforcement. All the contaminants and toxicant from sewer overflows,
the animal feces, pesticides, construction run-off, etc. that enter
our storm drain systems will continue to pollute our waterways and
beaches unless there is enough pressure brought on the various city
councils to adopt and enforce anti-pollution programs for out storm
drains.
The much-hailed victory will not provide clean and safe beaches.
RAY E. LEWIS, P.E., DEE
Laguna Beach
A little chalk walk
Since there wasn’t anyone arrested at the anti-abortion protest
for defacing public property with their chalk slogans on the sidewalk
on Ocean Avenue, I’m thinking that I just might mosey on down there
with my five-gallon can of chalk and paint a few of my own. Like, “No
Iraqi War,” “Down with the Pope,” “No Foothill South,” “Bushwack
Bush,” “No Nukes,” “Save the Alaskan Wildlife Reserve” and “Abortion
is a Woman’s Right” for starters.
ANDY WING
Laguna Beach
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