Our Laguna -- Barbara Diamond
The City Council affirmed its confidence in its appointed commissions
Tuesday night by reappointing four incumbents to the Arts Commission and
three to the Planning Commission.
Jan Sattler, Mike Taulber and Les Thomas will serve two-year terms on
the Arts Commission. All three got five council votes. Dora Wexall was
appointed to a one-year term as alternate. She got four votes.
Anne Johnson and Robert Zur Schmiede were reappointed to the Planning
Commission with five council votes each. Bob Chapman garnered three
votes.
Applicants are required to be residents of the city and were asked
specifically to give their residential addresses during the oral
interview by the council. Wexall had used a mailing service address on
her application and stated it at the interview.
Mayor Wayne Baglin pointed out her error.
He said he had been advised that she had been fined by the Fair
Political Practices Commission for the badly prepared paperwork. City
Clerk Verna Rollinger had notified Wexall by telephone and letter that
her paperwork needed revision.
Wexall stated on her application that she has lived in Laguna Beach
for 18 years. She exhibits at the Sawdust Festival and has served three
years on its board of directors, including two years as president. She
has been a board member of the Laguna Beach Craft Guild for nine years.
Sattler sat on the Arts Commission for five years prior to the latest
appointment. She was involved from the beginning with the public art
project for the Laguna Colony Hotel.
“I strongly believe that I should continue to serve until Treasure
Island Park is compete and open,” she said. “Continuity is important.”
Sattler initiated the artist-designed bench program. Five benches have
been installed, with a sixth soon to be completed. She also serves on the
commission’s public art subcommittee for Brown’s Park, which will be
dedicated at noon July 23.
The mayor also said that attendance records were a high priority with
the council in its appointments.
Chapman defended his absences from Planning Commission meetings due to
business or family.
“I am asking to be reappointed for a fourth term and I know what time
and commitment is involved,” he said.
He also said he might recuse himself from voting on the contentious
Driftwood project because he missed some hearings. Chapman has been a
resident of Laguna 18 years. He is general manager of a residential real
estate brokerage and serves on the boards of the Orange Coast Assn. of
Realtors and the California Assn. of Realtors. He is a past director of
the Laguna board.
Johnson has lived in Laguna Beach part-time for 33 years and full-time
for 16 years. She came originally from New England and one can still
detect Boston in her speech.
Although retired from teaching college, Johnson works part-time for
the Laguna Beach Unified School District and is active on the Vision
Laguna Committee and Laguna Beach Woman’s Club board. She is a member of
Laguna Greenbelt Inc. and the Patriots Day Parade Committee and
previously served on the city’s Recreation Committee.
“I believe my work as a volunteer with a variety of groups and
individuals has enabled me to better understand Laguna Beach, this
interesting and challenging city,” she said.
Zur Schmiede served on the Design Review Board before he was appointed
to the Planning Commission in April 2001. He is a professional in
community development, employed by the city of Long Beach. He also worked
for the cities of Anaheim, Fullerton and Flora, Ind.
Zur Schmiede has lived in Laguna Beach for six-plus years. He is a
past trustee of the Fullerton Museum Center.
A LITTLE SIGN LANGUAGE
Anyone who knows Eleanor Henry or Jeannie Bernstein knows where to
find them on Saturday mornings.
They are two of the standard bearers flashing antiwar signs for two
hours at the Cobblestone area of Main Beach. Bernstein and her late
friend, Peter Carr, founded the Laguna Beach Peace Vigil in 1979 under
the auspices of the Alliance for Survival.
“We kept the vigil going all during the Cold War,” Bernstein said. “We
were out there every Saturday for 11 years from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
“And we are still there. We would welcome anyone who wants to hold up
a sign for 10 minutes or for two hours. Mostly people are very receptive
and we really appreciate the cooperation from our police department.”
Cooperation goes both ways. The vigil got tremendous response to its
“Honk 4 Peace” signs but stopped carrying them at the request of police.
Vigil participation waxes and wanes with world conditions. Right now
there are four regulars: Bernstein, Henry, Irene Bland and Elizabeth
Erger.
“Cartoonist Phil Interlandi’s LOLITS -- Little Old Ladies in Tennis
Shoes -- are back,” Henry said.
However, some of these LOLITS need track shoes to keep up their busy
schedules.
Henry designs clothing, which she has exhibited and sold for 18 years
at the Sawdust Festival. Tuesday she painted her booth in the afternoon
and then appeared at the City Council meeting that night to protest the
way the sewer increase will be levied.
She moved to Laguna Beach on June 21, 1961 and raised her four
children here.
“I joined the Alliance for Survival in 1987 at the urging of my
youngest son, Kevin, who had signed a petition,” Henry said. “He was 15.”
Henry takes her grandchildren on trips to the Nevada test site for
educational purposes and possible arrest for civil disobedience.
“Hey, this is what Grandma does,” she said. “Once we had three
generations running across the desert.”
She wears a T-shirt that reads “Well-mannered women rarely become
famous.”
Bernstein is a member of the Sierra Club and the ACLU. She is a past
president of the Alliance for Survival, and currently serves on the board
of the Laguna Canyon Conservancy and is a founding member of the Aliso &
Hobo Canyon Neighborhood Assn.
She has participated in Earth First actions to stop the toll road
through Laguna Canyon and supports the Great Park and any open space.
“The First Amendment is muscle; if you don’t use it, it atrophies,”
she said.
TESTING: ONE, TWO, THREE
Laguna Beach High School graduate Margaux Thomas has a summer project.
Last year she began testing the ocean on a weekly basis at 10
different sites and started the first Surfrider Club on campus. Now that
school is out, Margaux is looking for volunteers to continue the testing.
“Anyone who would like to take part can contact me at
MargauxSurfrider@hotmail.com,” she announced Tuesday at the City Council
meeting.
Village Laguna President Ginger Osborne introduced Margaux, the
group’s scholarship winner, recognized for her environmental activities.
Margaux said the tests take only about 5 minutes. She expects
participation from all age groups. Testing, she said, can make a
difference, particularly to beach users.
She also urged people to attend monthly Surfrider meetings to speak
their minds about water quality.
* OUR LAGUNA is a regular feature of the Laguna Beach Coastline Pilot.
Contributions are welcomed. Write to Barbara Diamond, P.O. Box 248,
Laguna Beach, 92652; hand-deliver to 384 Forest Ave., Suite 22; call
494-4321; or fax 494-8979.
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