Get together and preserve Downtown
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Ken Delino
Great downtowns, like ours in Laguna, need to be nurtured and
cared for, or they die. Everywhere you go these days you see
revitalized downtowns. Some cost millions of dollars. Other cities
unite government, residents and business to promote and manage their
downtowns to maintain character and prosperity. In Laguna, we need
only protect what we have.
Laguna’s Downtown is the envy of our neighboring cities, and its
unique diversity and vitality draws people from throughout the
region. Most importantly, residents like it! We may not shop there
enough, but we generally like our Downtown. The danger we face is
that the Downtown loses the resident compatible merchants and becomes
a vacuous entertainment district and gallery row where residents
rarely venture. The City Council and many community groups have
voiced their concern and support, and the Chamber of Commerce is
willing to take the lead to initiate programs common in other cities.
Some programs we might consider include:
A shop local program. Residents need to be informed and encouraged
to patronize their local businesses and services. Businesses need to
reach out to residents. Look for much more on this subject from the
chamber.
A parking management program. Laguna needs to balance the needs
for municipal revenue, beachgoers and shoppers. Our current metering
system requires vast amounts of quarters and allows little
flexibility for different seasons, time of day, commercial patterns,
long term shopping, etc. The chamber, at the urging of the City
Council, is investigating new parking machines, interviewing
merchants and shoppers and drawing up recommendations for more
flexible and user-friendly parking systems.
Traffic circulation plan. The current maze pits vehicles against
pedestrians and creates two major choke points at Coast Highway,
Broadway and Forest Avenue and Third Street. Residents in particular
avoid the mess. It is not rocket science to fix this.
Landlord outreach. No kidding. Downtown businesses, particularly
the resident-serving ones, are screaming about escalating rents. The
landlords need to be urged to be reasonable lest they kill their
gold-laying geese, and Laguna becomes a city of T-shirt and trinket
shops.
National brands. Yes, I know, no one wants chains, but guess where
people shop? Every good downtown needs a few anchor tenants to draw
the crowds that then patronize the smaller stores. The empty former
Sprouse-Reitz on Broadway is an embarrassment that no other
downtown-respecting city would tolerate.
An economic development office in City Hall. The visioning process
recommended it and nearly every other city has one to advocate for
business and recruit desirable businesses by offering incentives.
We should do likewise if we want resident-serving businesses.
Permit streamlining. This does not mean compromising standards. It
just means getting to where we’re going faster. Most other cities
fast track permits for desirable businesses.
Downtown Laguna Beach is our gem. We’re all going to have to pitch
in to preserve it. Look for your Chamber of Commerce to lead the way.
* Ken Delino is the president of the Laguna Beach Chamber of
Commerce
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