Driftwood Estates project approved
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Barbara Diamond
Angry opponents of the approved Driftwood Estates development in
South Laguna denounced the City Council on Tuesday.
Audience members were upset after the council voted 4 to 1 to
adopt a resolution to approve an 11-lot subdivision suitable for
homes as large as 12,000 square feet on a parcel above a neighborhood
of more modest homes.
“It’s unfortunate that this council has failed to represent and
protect people that elected them,” said Penny Elia, president of the
Hobo and Aliso Canyon Neighborhood Assn. and chair of the Save Hobo
Aliso Ridge Task Force of the Sierra Club. “Year after year, we see a
city that works harder for developers, big money speculators and
land-use rights than for the protection of the voting, tax-paying
citizens of this city.
“This city has turned a blind eye and a deaf ear toward many other
impactful projects that have made life a living hell for several
neighborhoods -- Montage Resort and Spa, Diamond Crestview [a court
decision forced the city to accept that development], Eaglerock, Zell
Street, Lower Three Arch Bay, a house in a watercourse in North
Laguna -- just to name a few.”
“I feel I have to make a comment comparing this council with the
one that sat on the dais when the residents of Treasure Island
[mobile home park] were threatened and fought for them,” Driftwood
Drive resident Jeanne Bernstein said.
“Our lives have been diminished,” he said. “We are under siege
with Montage below us and the development above us. We have the sense
that we are devalued, that we are undervalued.”
The Planning Commission approved almost a year ago a 15-lot
project with home sizes limited by the usual city standards for
sub-divisions and the “mansionization” ordinance. The ordinance does
not stipulate minimum or maximum square-footage, using instead
neighborhood compatibility as the measuring stick.
Councilman Wayne Baglin proposed a maximum 6,300-square-foot
footprint for Driftwood. A two-story home could almost double the
square footage.
“I don’t see how a 6,300-square-foot footprint is compatible with
a neighborhood of 3,000 square-foot homes,” Derek Ostensen said.
However, imposing a maximum does not imply a right to -- and
certainly doesn’t guarantee -- that maximum, Planning Commissioner
Norm Grossman said.
“It’s up to the discretion of the Design Review Board,” he said.
Subsequent to the commission’s approval, Councilman Steve Dicterow
volunteered in February to negotiate a project that developer Steve
Vliss and the existing Driftwood neighborhood could support. Roger
von Butow served as Dicterow’s water quality consultant.
Almost seven months of meetings resulted in a reduction of lots
from the 15 approved by the Planning Commission to 11, but that was not enough to gain neighborhood support. Neighborhood representatives
offered a five-lot alternative.
“I am angry at this city council,” said Clay Leeds, who is related
by marriage to a resident of the neighborhood. “Four members of this
council voted in favor of this project in spite of the fact that a
majority of neighbors don’t want it. Inexplicably, the council
decided to give the developer 11 checks [lots] for houses -- when the
city was only obligated to give one.”
To date, more than 20 public and private meetings have been held
on the Driftwood project.
The Planning Commission and city staff presented an inch-thick
report to the council at the Jan. 14 meeting, with recommendations
based on 10 public meetings. The recommendations included approval of
a 15-lot subdivision on 225 acres, with 90% of the acreage dedicated
to open space.
Developer Vliss voluntarily reduced the number of lots to 13,
which increased their size, and submitted a revised proposal at the
council’s Feb. 25 meeting. Nine meetings have been held since then,
resulting in the reduction of lots to 11 and reconfiguration of the
streets from a loop to two cul-de-sacs.
Residents of an uphill neighborhood, who relished the dedication
of adjacent open space included in the proposal, gave their support
to the project.
Project opponent Elia suggested that sometimes gift horses should
have their mouths examined.
The tentative tract map, general plan and local coastal plan
amendments and the associated environmental report were approved at
the council’s Sept. 23 meeting. Tuesday’s resolution included changes
and conditions requested by the council at the previous meeting.
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