Councilwoman Toni Iseman supported the idea of surveillance cameras.
An armed trio stole $600,000 worth of jewelry Aug. 25 from a Forest Avenue shop. One robber has been arrested.
‘Open studios’ approved
The council approved the Arts Commission’s request to implement a monthly “open studio” program for local artists, which was moved from the first Friday of the month to the first Saturday, based on the results of the pilot program conducted in April, May and June.
The pilot program was from 1 to 6 p.m. Fridays, but after reviewing it with participating artists, the commission recommended moving the studio openings to 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturdays to avoid heavy commute traffic.
WHAT IT MEANS
Publicity, a brochure and a map will be printed for the program, paid by $5,000 from Business Improvement District funding at the commission’s disposal.
Any expenditures must be approved by the council.
Where there’s smoke
The council voted 5 to 0 to approve a second reading of the ordinance prohibiting smoking in city’s public parks.
WHAT IT MEANS
The prohibition will take effect in 30 days from when the ordinance is passed.
Extra time for project permits
Staff proposed giving some developers extra time to get on with certain projects by extending entitlements such as design-review approvals, coastal development permits, conditional use permits and variances. The proposal was approved, 4 to 1.
Contractor and designer Gregg Abel said it is the right thing to do in these hard economic times.
“People are just trying to cope,” Pearson said.
The proposal was opposed by Village Laguna because it doesn’t require a review of conditions that may have changed since the original approval.
Rollinger voted “no.”
WHAT IT MEANS
The extension will preserve development entitlements that have or will expire between Jan. 1, 2009, and Dec. 31, 2010, and either could not be commenced or implemented due to the prevailing economic conditions in the construction and lending industries.
Loma Terrace parking restrictions