New plans for Crystal Cove made
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Mary A. Castillo
Two competing plans that affect the future of El Morro Village,
its mobile home residents and possible improvements to Crystal Cove
State Park emerged this week.
One by the state calls for modest changes to its vision for the
park, and one backed by high-profile Laguna Beach leaders would hike
the rents at the village and extend leases to homeowners in exchange
for millions of dollars of improvements to Crystal Cove and the
creation of affordable housing.
The California Department of Parks and Recreation cited public
input as the reason for making its changes to the conversion project.
The state is subtly changing components of the current proposal to
address concerns about beach access and the proximity of a campground
to El Morro Elementary School.
The other plan, pitched by the El Morro Village Community Assn.,
is a massive departure from the stated goal of state parks officials
to remove the group of residents and their mobile homes from the
beach enclave that straddles the border of Laguna Beach and Newport
Coast. State officials said their changes are the result of responses
received from the public after the state filed the final
environmental impact report in August 2002. The El Morro conversion
project is part of the larger Crystal Cove State Park plan.
“Those comments have given us valuable suggestions for how to
improve the plan, and we felt it was time to present an update to let
people know we are listening and making improvements,” Orange Coast
District Supt. Mike Tope said in statement released Wednesday.
The state’s changes to the existing plan at El Morro are: shift
the campsites farther from El Morro Elementary School; increase the
height of the concrete boundary to improve the separation between
park and school activities; remove the pedestrian crossing and
intersection signal lights at Pacific Coast Highway near El Moro
Creek; improve beach access through the El Moro Creek tunnel under
Pacific Coast Highway by improving ramps and walking surfaces to and
from El Morro beach; and develop an El Morro Campground Operations
Plan that will include guidelines for restricting campfires during
normal school hours.
In response to the state’s announcement, members of the El Morro
Village Community Assn. took the opportunity to release a plan of its
own. “The 1982 [state] plan is outdated. The changes outlined
yesterday fail to address many outstanding questions,” Jeanette
Miller, chair of the El Morro Village Community Assn., said in a
written statement. “For example, are there still plans for a sea wall
at El Morro Beach? Is there a plan to restore the [Crystal Cove]
cottages before they completely fall apart?”
The association’s proposal would eliminate the RV camp next to El
Morro Elementary School and replace it with a vacation hostel, retain
222 mobile homes and build 50 low-cost apartments for Laguna Beach.
This plan, like the state’s, also calls for the removal of the
beach-side homes.
The plan hinges on the state’s acceptance of a 30-year lease
extension for inland El Morro residents to pay higher rents to
provide $10 million to be used for Crystal Cove State Park
improvements, including refurbishing the historic cottages on the
beach. The plan will also provide $1 million each year to be divided
equally between the California State Parks Foundation and the Laguna
Greenbelt Inc., said Denny Freidenrich, spokesman for the
association.
In a written statement, the state maintained that the budget
crisis has no bearing on the conversion because funding was allocated
under Proposition 12, the State Parks Bond Act. The state is spending
$2.1 million on preliminary planning, and a large part of that is
earmarked for the annexation to the local sewer district and sewer
connection costs. If the project is halted, though, state parks
spokesman Roy Stearns said, the state will lose large portions of the
funds.
The association’s plan was met with outrage from the California
State Parks Foundation.
“We are completely opposed to what they are doing,” President
Susan Smartt said. “They are trying to steal a public park.”
The California State Parks Foundation is an independent, nonprofit
membership organization that provides financial aid to improvement
projects at California’s 273 state parks.
“Every time we turn around, the people in the trailer park have
another proposal,” Smartt said.
Freidenrich maintained that the foundation and Laguna Greenbelt
Inc. were not consulted in the development of the plan.
The association distributed the proposal to Laguna Beach City
Council members on Thursday afternoon.
“Our hope is that we will go before the City Council in the next
30 to 60 days,” Freidenrich said.
The association also plans to take its proposal to the California
Coastal Commission and the state.
* MARY A. CASTILLO is a news assistant for Times Community News.
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