Pancake breakfast, ceremony set
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The annual pancake breakfast put on by the Laguna Century Exchange
Club will be held from 7 to 11 a.m. on Memorial Day in Heisler Park
at Cliff Drive and Myrtle Street. The event costs $3.50, and all
proceeds will go to child abuse prevention programs.
At the end of the breakfast, the American Legion and Veterans of
Foreign Wars will hold their annual Memorial Day ceremony.
The ceremony will take place at 11 a.m. at Monument Point in
Heisler Park.
Music provided by Wade Hendricks and the Laguna Beach High School
Band will begin at 10:30 a.m. The keynote speaker will be retired
Marine and former Assemblyman Mickey Conroy.
Also in the program will be floral presentations laid at the
monument by the veterans’ organizations and other organizations in
Laguna Beach. The Marine Firing Detail from Camp Pendleton will
provide a 21-gun salute.
At noon the same day, the Laguna Beach Community Band will play
for an hour at Main Beach.
For more information, please contact Dave Connell at (949)
494-2065 or Richard Moore at (949) 376-6340.
Sculptures set to get a public try-out
Two sculptures will get a trial run before the council approves
the permanent installation at a busy Downtown intersection.
“It seems to me we are recreating the golf tees in front of the
fire station,” said Councilman Wayne Baglin, who opposed the
installation recommended by the Arts Commission. “I love to see art
as a surprise, but I don’t want to think that every corner has a
piece of art.”
The council requested a mock-up of the two sculptures be set in
place in planter beds on either side of Forest Avenue at South Coast
Highway, where the commission wants to install “The Wave” by local
sculptor Larry Gill.
The two granite mosaic and stainless steel monoliths with curved
tops proposed by Gill were selected in a competition titled Essence
of Laguna. They weigh two tons. One will stand up to 8 feet tall, the
other slightly shorter.
“Look at it as two tons of fun, Wayne,” Commissioner Pat Kollenda
said. “We had many wonderful entries, but this piece stood out.”
Kollenda submitted a petition signed by 17 merchants supporting
the installation.
Four other members of the arts commission spoke on behalf of the
sculpture.
“Forest Avenue is very busy, and we felt something simple with a
fair amount of mass would be appropriate,” Commissioner Nancy
Beverage said.
Beverage said the sculptures would be about the same width as her
shoulders, 18 to 20 inches wide. The Arts Commission recommended
appropriating $41,500 from the Business Improvement District Fund for
the purchase, installation and dedication of “The Wave.”
Councilman Steven Dicterow and Councilwoman Elizabeth Pearson
supported the Arts Commission recommendation.
“As usual, the commission has done a marvelous job,” Pearson said.
“This [Forest Avenue] is a cluttered area, and this calms it down.”
Dr. Gene Atherton suggested cardboard mock-ups of the sculptures
to give the council and the public an opportunity to assess the
effect of the sculptures on the intersection.
“I am looking for softening, not more hard edges” Baglin said. “We
should try to retain the vegetation created by God and nature. We
don’t need monuments on each side of the road.”
-- Barbara Diamond
El Morro sewage spill quickly sealed
County officials closed a large stretch of El Morro Beach access
at around 7 p.m. Saturday when about 800 gallons of sewage spilled
from a pipe serving the El Morro Beach mobile home park.
The sewer pipes at the park run above a 10- to 15-foot-deep creek
that runs through the community and into the ocean, said Monica
Mazur, spokeswoman for the Orange County Health Care Agency. She said
the pipes are checked twice a day and the spill was discovered at the
day’s second check.
“At this point, it looks like vandalism,” Mazur said. “Apparently,
someone was either hanging on the line or throwing rocks at it, and
it burst.”
Mazur said the broken pipe was repaired immediately, and officials
closed beach access 500 feet up and down the coast from El Moro Creek
until Tuesday. She said bacteria levels were in compliance with state
and county codes when tested Sunday and Monday, but the beach stayed
closed to be safe.
-- Mike Swanson
It pays even more to park legally
City parking fines will rise for the first time since 1994 since
the City Council approved a $35 citation for most parking
infractions, a hike expected to raise $110,000 per year for the city.
City Manager Ken Frank said the raise puts Laguna Beach’s fines
closer to other Orange County cities, especially among beach
communities. Newport Beach’s parking fines are $36 and $48.
Staff recommended that the council approve an increase in parking
fines to $30 and $35 depending on whether the violation was
intentional or unintentional, but Councilman Steve Dicterow suggested
they go with one rate. The fine used to be $27 and $30.
-- Mike Swanson
Business improvement district extended
The Laguna Beach Visitors Bureau heads a list of six organizations
receiving a 67% increase in city funds next fiscal year after the
City Council voted to continue a 2% bed tax on city hotel and motel
fees.
The business improvement district assessments raised more than
$700,000 this fiscal year, and the total is expected to rise to $1.23
million with the addition of the Montage Resort and Spa.
The Laguna Beach Visitors Bureau will receive $615,000, while the
Laguna College of Art and Design, Laguna Playhouse, Laguna Beach
Museum of Art, Arts Commission programs and various community arts
programs will receive $123,000 each.
The advisory committee put together the proposal specifies that
the account, called the Business Improvement Area Fund, allocate 50%
of the bed tax to the visitors bureau for promotion of tourism in
Laguna Beach, 30% to art/cultural organizations meeting a list of
standards, 10% to the Arts Commission and 10% to community arts
organizations.
The motion to continue the assessment, which was levied July 1,
2001, passed 4 to 1.
-- Mike Swanson
Estate planning workshop to be held
Attorney Renee Raithel and Laura Tarbox, a certified financial
planner, will discuss estate planning case studies from 10 to 11:30
a.m. on Tuesday in an “It’s Your Estate” workshop.
The workshop is the conclusion of a free eight-week financial
seminar at the Wells Fargo Building, 260 Ocean Ave.
Raithel and Tarbox will hand out a net worth statement for
attendees to complete using fictitious names and make recommendations
by reviewing and incorporating previously-discussed topics.
This workshop is sponsored by the SchoolPower’s Endowment and
Capital Fund, Laguna Canyon Foundation and the American Red Cross
Orange County Chapter. For more information or to reserve space, call
Guine at (949) 497-8324.
Interim minister named to Congregational Church
Neighborhood Congregational Church has hired an interim minister.
The Rev. Ken Barnes will arrive in Laguna Beach during Memorial Day
weekend and will begin leading worship on June 1.
Barnes was born in Kelseyville, Calif., about 110 miles north of
San Francisco. He is a graduate of UC Berkeley and San Francisco
Theological Seminary. He did graduate work at New College in
Edinburgh, Scotland and has served churches in Scotland and
California.
Barnes resigned from a 22-year pastorate as senior minister of the
Arlington Community Church in Kensington, a suburb of Berkeley.
Neighbors invited to meet Mayor Toni Iseman
The Top of the World Neighborhood Association will hold a Meet the
Mayor event from 5 to 6 p.m. Sunday, June 1.
The event, where neighbors will be able to meet and provide input
to Laguna Beach Mayor Toni Iseman, will be held at the home of Chris
and Dinah Brazelton, at 2891 Chateau Way. Light refreshments will be
served.
The TOWNA board encourages everyone to be careful driving in the
neighborhood, particularly when children are starting or leaving
school.
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