Skate park hits skids again
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Andrew Edwards
Laguna skateboarders have waited years for their hometown to build a
skate park, but exactly where young shredders will be able to
practice and show off their moves on ramps and half-pipes remains
uncertain.
On Tuesday night, the City Council had a seemingly straightforward
decision to make -- whether the body would amend the city’s contract
with South Coast YMCA to build the skate park at Big Bend instead of
the Bark Park.
By the end of the meeting, it was possible the park could be built
at either location.
“I’m going to guess 50-50 that we’re going to be back at the Bark
Park,” Councilwoman Toni Iseman said.
In March 2003, council members decided to switch the location of
the proposed park from the dog park to Big Bend to avoid any hectic
moments that could be created by a mix of dogs and skateboarders. As
far back as September 2000, the ACT V parking lot was the favored
site for a skate park but this idea was abandoned in October 2001 to
save parking spaces.
But the plan for Big Bend hit a snag after city leaders were
alarmed by a traffic study from LSA Associates, the same firm that
conducted the parking study for the Montage Resort. The study
reported safe access to and from the park could only be achieved if
drivers made right turns in and out of the parking lot.
A right-turn-only rule would mean visitors from Laguna would have
to make a U-turn on Laguna Canyon Road, most likely at El Toro Road,
to drive back into the city. Visitors traveling south through the
canyon would have to drive Downtown and turn around to get into the
park.
“It’s just impossible,” said City Manager Ken Frank. “It will not
work. It’s not satisfactory.”
Despite the potential problems with the Big Bend site, the council
briefly approved the amended agreement by a 3 to 2 vote, until
Councilman Wayne Baglin, who initially supported the move, asked for
a new vote.
Baglin, after consulting City Atty. Philip Kohn, was able to make
the request for a reconsideration since he had first cast a “yea”
vote. Baglin then joined council members Iseman and Steve Dicterow in
defeating the motion.
He called for the reconsideration, he said, because after his
first vote he decided the motion would limit the YMCA to planning for
a site that may prove unsafe.
“I realized the motion was too restrictive,” he said.
The three then voted to pass a new motion crafted by Iseman to
release $15,000 to the YMCA to fund park planning and to direct city
employees to contact Caltrans for an opinion on the safety issues
presented by both locations. Mayor Cheryl Kinsman and Councilwoman
Elizabeth Pearson voted against the idea.
“I will never support the Bark Park,” Kinsman said.
After the meeting, Kinsman said she believed dog-park patrons
would not be pleased if they learned they would be joined by
skateboarders.
But the city and the YMCA already have a signed contract dated
Dec. 5 2002 containing an agreement to build a skate park at the Bark
Park. If building the park at Big Bend proves unfeasible, the YMCA
could go ahead and develop plans for the Bark Park, something the
organization is willing to do.
“If the city is not now going to allow a project to be built at
Big Bend, then we have a contract for the Bark Park and we will
pursue a contract there,” South Coast YMCA chairman Larry Nokes said.
Nokes said the YMCA is willing to accommodate the city in building
at Big Bend, but remains determined to install a skate park in Laguna
Beach.
“We’ve got 100s of hours in this thing and we do not plan to
fail,” he said.
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