The following is a recap of the...
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The following is a recap of the April 5 meeting of the Laguna Beach
City Council:
THE PUBLIC SPEAKS
Bruce Hopping lifted his pants leg to show the City Council a
nasty wound. Hopping said a dog bit him on the beach.
“The dog owner denied it was his dog, but it was the only dog on
the beach,” Hopping said.
He called for more enforcement on the beaches and for telephones
on the access stairways.
Animal Services has no record of a report of the bite, which
Hopping said was about the tenth time he had been bitten.
State health code requires reports by the dog owner and the
victim, according to Senior Animal Services Officer Joy Falk. She
said the city is looking making the requirement part of the municipal
code.
“Even if an animal control officer was not available, a call to
the police department would have brought out a patrol officer who
could take the pertinent information so animal control could follow
up on the rabies status of the dog,” Falk said.
Hopping also urged the council to consider the smaller, mobile
skateboard facilities like the one that Costa Mesa has, rather than
the project proposed by YMCA for a portion of the Bark Park.
*Edward Barbieri told the council the assessment to underground
utilities near his home increased from the original $64,735 estimate
to $69,126.
“It is not an insignificant amount,” Barbieri said.
Barbieri, who supported the undergrounding district, also said he
had found numerous uncorrected or unaddressed inaccuracies in a
previous report, and he objected to Edison charging more because the
original date of the quote expired and to additional charges for a
revised engineer’s report. He asked the city to stand by its original
quote.
The calculations were made based on a formula never before used by
the city, devised as an attempt to redistribute some of the costs in
a more equitable fashion, according to the city manager.
Frank said the Laguna Beach County Water District would be paying
an additional $7,000 to correct an inaccuracy and the city would try
to correct any other mistakes
Protests may be submitted at the public hearing Tuesday on the
district, at the end of which ballots will be turned in.
CONSENT CALENDAR
Consent calendar items are approved in one motion unless a member
of the council, staff or public “pull” the item from the consent
calendar, which then requires opening it to public comment and a
separate vote.
* The council approved checks written between March 7 and 25 in
the amount of $2,755,232.35 for general warrants and payroll.
* City Treasurer Laura Parisi reported the city had cash and
investments totaling $43,334,589.23 in its February portfolio.
* The city will spend $13,736 on a new Honda motorcycle, paid out
of the Vehicle Replacement Fund; $19,946 for a voice logging recorder
from low bidder, Stancil Corp., $10,000 of it to be paid from the
Police Department Furniture and Equipment Fund, the rests from salary
savings; and $449,788 for three MST II coaches from Creative Bus
Sales for the Mainline Transit System, with delivery estimated to be
in 10 months..
* City staff will submit an application for a grant for Nyes Place
traffic safety improvements to Caltrans’ Hazard Elimination Safety
Program. The council also authorized the city manager to apply to the
Orange County Transportation Authority for Local Transportation Funds
of $1,033,350.
* Frank was directed to execute an easement to Southern California
Edison for overhead utilities through Nita Carmen Park.
POST-DIASTER PLANS 5-0
The City Council voted unanimously in favor of a new ordinance
recommended by staff to establish enforceable instructions and
requirements for occupancy of buildings following a natural or
man-made disaster.
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