Malibu to pursue parks swap

January 20, 2013 7:17 PM

Share this Article

Author:

Tags:

Second- and third-graders from Juan Cabrillo and Point Dume Marine Science Elementary Schools compete at Bluffs Park. (Photo courtesy Devon Meyers )

Second- and third-graders from Juan Cabrillo and Point Dume Marine Science Elementary Schools compete at Bluffs Park. (Photo courtesy Devon Meyers )

MALIBU — Citing the hope of bringing more athletic fields to Malibu, elected officials on Monday voted 5-0 to enter into negotiations on a deal that could give the city complete control of Bluffs Park by trading away its jurisdiction over Charmlee Wilderness Park.

The City Council’s decision came much to the chagrin of more than 60 opponents who list serious fire danger and lack of trust in the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy as prime reasons for wanting to keep Charmlee under city control. Supporters of the swap argued that the new land would aid a glaring lack of access to recreational sports fields for Malibu children.

“I think the only opportunity we have to get more fields in Malibu right now is by doing it this way,” said Mayor Lou La Monte before the unanimous vote.

Should the deal go through, the conservancy and its sister agency, the Mountains Recreation and Conservation Authority, would hand over 83 acres at Bluffs in exchange for Malibu’s 532-acre Charmlee. The city currently owns 10 acres of Bluffs Park, consisting principally of ball fields, the Michael Landon Community Center and an adjacent parking lot.

In front of approximately 100 people, the council directed City Attorney Christi Hogin to begin negotiating the multi-layered agreement, which also requires the city to settle a years-long lawsuit over uses in Ramirez Park.

In its direction, the council stipulated that it would be impossible to reach a deal with the conservancy by Jan. 28, as requested by its Executive Director Joe Edmiston. Council members want more time to digest the details of the possible swap and asked for more assurance from the conservancy that safety and fire regulations would be strictly enforced at new campsites.

Council members also asked Hogin to explore the possibility of banning campsites at Corral and Escondido canyons during her dealings with conservancy attorneys.

Additionally, the council wants confirmation from city staff that building more ball fields at Bluffs Park is a feasible idea should Malibu gain control of the park. Of the 83 acres the city would gain, approximately 73 are zoned environmentally sensitive habitat area (ESHA), and off-limits to build on by the California Coastal Commission.

City Manager Jim Thorsen and Planning Director Joyce Parker- Bozylinski said that a 10-acre section in the northwest corner of Bluffs is not ESHA and would be suitable for soccer fields, a 20,000-square-foot skate park and a parking lot. Still, the council asked for further information in upcoming meetings.

 

Lack of notice criticized 

 

Skeptics of the deal charged La Monte and Mayor Pro Tem Joan House with trying to hastily get the proposed negotiation on the agenda before the public could get a feel for what the swap entails on Malibu’s end. House and La Monte pitched the idea to Edmiston on a lunch date in December. There was also a follow-up meeting between conservancy reps, Thorsen and Hogin.

“There’s no backroom deals and I’m a little bit sorry that people keep mentioning that and look for something that doesn’t exist,” House said.

House said she saw a possible swap as a way to help local kids have more youth sports available to them, a sentiment echoed by many parents and coaches in attendance.

“The bottom line here is we don’t have enough field space,” said AYSO representative Mark Konopaske. “There’s a tremendous capacity for use of these spaces [at Bluffs] for the kids and community.”

Russ Purtell, a local softball and soccer coach, said battling over time on limited fields has become too common for sports organizations in Malibu.

However, many in the room listed fire safety at Charmlee as an overarching concern. The conservancy has already voted to pursue plans to build eight campsites at Charmlee, which spells a high chance of brush fires, according to opponents.

“It only takes one match or a cigarette … and you have a holocaust,” Lucille Keller told the council.

 

Conservancy under fire 

 

Others opposed to the swap simply don’t trust Edmiston.

Reading from an e-mail sent by Edmiston to the conservancy’s board of directors in which Edmiston appears to detail how the deal will be spun to the public, Corral Canyon resident Paul Morra identified what he and others see as a presumptive political maneuvering of a potential swap.

“This is an important political victory that the council members can claim (conversely a reason they will vote for it). It represents for me personally a bitter defeat in that a local municipality can defeat classic park uses on land acquired from all the state’s taxpayers,” Edmiston wrote. “On the other hand, Malibu’s victory is only in a technical sense because camping will be proposed just a few yards outside the city limits, and beyond their ability to veto.”

Councilman John Sibert acknowledged Edmiston’s tendency to “get what he wants” but also entrusted him to maintain Charmlee’s character should the city hand over the reins.

“The conservancy has done an awful good job of putting a lot of the mountains aside for recreational use,” he said.

Many were also angered by the conservancy board’s vote last week to approve applying for a coastal development permit for new campsites and parking at Charmlee even before the city of Malibu agreed to negotiate.

“I hope that the deal’s not already done and that this is not a dog and pony show,” resident Bruce Dunn said.

Hogin said the conservancy might have jumped the gun with that vote.

Walt Keller, a former councilman who sat on the council when the city gained control of Charmlee in 1998, reprimanded the current council for wanting to give up one of Malibu’s earliest acquisitions.

“It is a giveaway no matter how you slice it. That park is a birthright of our city,” Keller said.

While the conservancy operates Bluffs Park, it is owned by the state, meaning the exchange of the properties could take a number of years. To expedite a deal, Edmiston suggested the city and conservancy enter into respective $1 per year leases on the property to immediately swap ownership while the transaction makes its way through the state bureaucracy.

Jefferson Wagner, another former councilmember, pointed out that Malibu is guaranteed 2 acres from the Crummer development site next to Bluffs Park where the construction of five luxury homes is proposed. He argued the council was rushing into things, and that Malibu would get those two Crummer acres much faster than the years it would take to hash out deed and lease exchanges between the city and the conservancy.

“That two acres is a ballpark and a parking lot,” he said.

The council briefly entertained the idea of a community task force before agreeing to the exchange, as suggested by Wagner, but made no concrete plans for one.

 

 

news@smdp.com

 

This story first appeared in the Malibu Times.

READ MORE Government News

Other News

  • Fisherman Steve Escobar shows off his catch aboard the Ocean Pearl. (Photo courtesy Community Seafood)

    Linking fishermen, foodies at Farmers’ Market

    MAIN STREET — A seafood supplier at the Sunday Farmers’ Market on Main Street is making a splash with its new business model that connects consumers directly to fishermen, cutting out waste and cost in the process. Community Seafood does for seafood what Farm Fresh to You, SavRaw or other groups serving Santa Monica do for vegetables. For a set price each week, clients can stop by the market and grab a pre-set quantity of fish caught by a small [...]

    Read more →
    Business Featured Food Life News
  • Village Trailer Park (File photo)

    Village Trailer Park decision postponed until July

    CITY HALL —  The Rent Control Board will wait until the day before its drop dead date to decide whether or not to stand in the way of a development that would replace one of the last two trailer parks in Santa Monica. Board members decided Thursday to wait until the July 11 Rent Control Board meeting to consider for a last time a removal permit for the Village Trailer Park, the site proposed for a 377-unit apartment complex already [...]

    Read more →
    Business Development Featured News
  • F

    Rent Control Board divided on landlord fees

    CITY HALL — The Rent Control Board is sure that it wants to raise registration fees on rent-controlled apartments to close its yawning budget gap, but how much and who should shoulder the burden is still up in the air. The five member board went 20 rounds on the subject Thursday night, running through a wide range of ways to divide the $2 to $3 increase in the annual $13 fee between landlords and their tenants that covers the vast [...]

    Read more →
    Business Featured News
  • Military families get in free at pier aquarium

    SM PIER Starting this Memorial Day weekend, the Santa Monica Pier Aquarium will begin offering free admission to military families from May to Sept. 2. This is the third year the aquarium has collaborated with the National Endowment for the Arts, Blue Star Families and the Department of Defense to benefit veterans in the community. The aquarium will admit all active duty servicemen and women and up to five family members, sans charge all summer long. The aquarium is closed [...]

    Read more →
    Briefs Featured News
  • 052513_Scholarship

    SMC student wins national scholarship

    SMC — Santa Monica College psychology student Scott Pine was recently awarded with the Jack Kent Cooke scholarship, the largest privately funded scholarship of its kind in the nation. The generous scholarship grants students $30,000. Pine’s recognition marks the second time in three years that a SMC student was awarded the scholarship, college officials said. The winners are chosen by a selection committee made up of 37 admissions professionals, predominantly from selective four-year institutions. Pine was one of only 73 [...]

    Read more →
    Education Featured News Santa Monica College
  • Congratulations to former SMC Quarterback Alfonso Medina for winning the 2012-13 Student Athlete of the Year award. Medina threw over 60 touchdown passes, breaking the career record at SMC and leading the Corsairs to back-to-back Conference Championships for the first time in 30 years. (Photo courtesy Fabian Lewkowicz)

    SMC names Medina student athlete of the year

    SMC — Santa Monica College quarterback Alfonso Medina — who led the Corsairs to back-to-back Conference Championships for the first time in 30 years — was named 2012-13 Student Athlete of the Year this week. Medina was named one of 17 outstanding SMC students as 2012-13 Student Athletes of the Year in their individual sports, but this is only the second year the college picked an overall winner. All the student athletes were selected for demonstrating scholastic achievement as much [...]

    Read more →
    Education Featured News Santa Monica College
  • Seasalt's fried shrimp po'boy with coleslaw. (Michael Ryan michael@smdp.com)

    Food: More fish in the sea

    So much for soft openings. Seasalt Fish Grill, a casual seafood bistro, has been in business for less than a week and is already getting slammed with lines more familiar to Bay Cities Deli, a local institution with years of saturation. Located on a heavily traveled section of Santa Monica Boulevard, it’s easy to see why. While curiosity may have killed the cat, it’s working wonders for Seasalt. Once in the restaurant you may notice huge orders rolling out for [...]

    Read more →
    Featured Food Life Tour de Feast
  • Chef Govind Armstrong poses at the future home of his chef's garden on Abbott Kinney. (Photo courtesy John Blanchette)

    Food: Going a little south for brunch

    VENICE — I love a good brunch. It’s not necessarily the food or the bottomless mimosas (there’s usually cheap sparkling wine poured, which gives me a headache), but more the relaxed, pool-party atmosphere that keeps me in good spirits as I fight off the rapidly approaching Monday blues. Weekends seem so short these days, so any excuse to extend the feeling of freedom that comes with days off is welcomed. I have my favorite brunch spots. Brick + Mortar on [...]

    Read more →
    Featured Food Life
  • Renewable energy standards: Building blocks for nation’s future

    For the first time a United States president has announced that tackling climate change is a national priority. Yet, Congress shows no signs of passing meaningful legislation. For now, it’s up to states and localities to turn this declaration into action. But this isn’t new. When it comes to renewable energy, state policy has yielded by far the most progress. In 29 states this has come mainly through renewable portfolio/energy standards, known as RPSs. These laws require public utilities to [...]

    Read more →
    Columns Opinion Your Column Here
  • Letter: We’re people, not eyesores

    Editor: It is a debacle of human civility and liberty as an American citizen born in this country to not only have to endure the ignorant prejudices of others towards the homeless, such as myself, but also to be subjugated to harassment at the bullish hands of law enforcement or, more appropriately, Santa Monica’s henchmen. Being illegally detained without being read one’s rights for alleged “camping,” only to be held for the sole purpose of being told that the condition [...]

    Read more →
    Featured Letters Opinion
  • Letter: Lesson to be learned

    Editor: Sometimes less is more. Case in point, Santa Monica Place. Our shopping center recently won the 2013 Best-of-the-Best VIVA Global Design and Development Award from the International Council of Shopping Centers. When the center owner, Macerich, first proposed building three 21-story towers on the site, residents and the Santa Monica Coalition for a Livable City protested mightily. Macerich listened and the plan was abandoned. Instead, Macerich renovated within the footprint of the existing building. This is a shining example [...]

    Read more →
    Featured Letters Opinion
  • Santa Monica Pier (File photo)

    Report: Pier water quality hit hard by dirty birds

    SM PIER — Water quality near the Santa Monica Pier dropped in 2012, reversing much-celebrated gains from the year before, according to a report released Thursday by local environmental group Heal the Bay. Santa Monica went from all A’s during dry weather in 2011 to a B-grade in the summer and failing grades in both winter reporting periods, according to Heal the Bay’s Beach Report Card, an annual accounting of water quality on the West Coast. Other measurement areas in [...]

    Read more →
    Environment Featured News
  • A man walks his dog past a pine tree on Dewey Street on Thursday. (Photo by Daniel Archuleta)

    Task force blasts tree reports

    KEN EDWARDS CENTER — Members of the Urban Forest Task Force ripped into consultants’ reports on the health of Santa Monica’s trees Wednesday, and vowed to send their concerns on to the City Council for further review. The reports examined a small sample of Santa Monica’s 35,000 street trees and management practices surrounding the multi-million dollar contract with West Coast Arborists (WCA), the company charged with caring for the local urban forest. The reports were in response to claims raised [...]

    Read more →
    Environment Featured News
  • HERE IT COMES: Santa Monica High School starting pitcher Whitney Jones delivers a pitch against Paloma Valley during the third round of the CIF-Southern Section Division 4 playoffs on Thursday. The Samohi Vikings would go on to win, 8-1. (Photo by Paul Alvarez Jr.)

    Softball: Samohi romps way to semifinals

    MEMORIAL PARK — By the end of the first inning, it was clear who would be moving on. Santa Monica softball put a five spot on the scoreboard in the first frame punctuated by a leadoff home run by junior Sara Garcia that essentially spelled the end of Paloma Valley’s trip to the CIF-Southern Section Division 4 quarterfinals on Thursday at Memorial Park. The 8-1 win sends the Samohi Vikings to the division semifinals for the first time since the [...]

    Read more →
    Featured High School Sports
  • File photo

    Brief: Additional 405 lane to open on Friday

    This weekend, drivers on the Westside can expect a lane opening instead of a closure for a change. Metro, the I-405 Sepulveda Pass Improvements Project contractor and Caltrans announced they will officially open 1.7 miles of general purpose lane on today, Friday at 5 a.m. The opening will be northbound on Interstate 405 between Interstate 10 and Santa Monica Boulevard in West Los Angeles. This opening is touted as a significant “project milestone” that will add lane capacity to one [...]

    Read more →
    Featured News Transportation
  • Brief: SMFD hosts free CPR training

    Get some hands-on, hands-only CPR training for free, in honor of National CPR Week. The American Heart Association is collaborating with the Los Angeles County Emergency Medical Services Agency to coordinate a countywide effort to instruct hands-only CPR. Throughout the week, emergency responders and healthcare providers will be going out to demonstrate and teach how to save a life. The Santa Monica Fire Department will join the effort by hosting a CPR training session on June 4 at Santa Monica [...]

    Read more →
    Briefs News