March
10, 2007 Meeting Summary
Preparation
E-mail
reminder was
sent to each member who has provided a contact e-mail address.
Susan Chu and
Laura Ellersieck phoned
other members on the
phone contact list.
Acknowledgments
Susan Chu brought baked goodies.
Attendees
16
members
Agenda
Items:
- Election of our officers
- Municipal election results
- Ice Rink
- Design Commission ("final" review of ice rink plans on Monday
March 12)
- Access route news
- Park pedestrian entrance, phone numbers
- speed humps and Las Lunas - how ballot came to be, requirements,
results
- Edison proposed addition of 220 kV transmission line
- anything
else attendees wish to discuss
The meeting
began at 11:15 am
- Election of our officers
- Since
there were no challengers, the results really weren't in doubt, but it
sure was nice to have a relatively good turnout (same number as last
year). For the record, the vote counts were:
- President,
Laura Ellersieck, 16 votes
- Vice-President,
Susan Chu, 16 votes
- Secretary,
(no nominated candidate) 1 write-in for Kathy Vacio
- Treasurer,
Kathy Vacio, 16 votes
- Municipal election results
- At
the end of the preliminary vote count, not including a count of some
1400 absentee ballots citywide plus some provisional ballots, Steve
Haderlein was leading 1512 to 1366. So unless the absentee vote
mix is
extremely different then those counted already, he will be
re-elected.
There should be updated results Monday March 12. You can view the
latest results on the city's election web page:
http://www.cityofpasadena.net/cityclerk/election
The election results are to be made official on March 19. There
will
be a run-off election in April for the two open council seats and two
of the school board seats.
- Ice Rink
- Design Commission
- Meeting on Monday March 12 at 6 pm at Pasadena Conference
Center room 212
- "final
review" of the design they rejected in January
- After
that it goes to City Council with the commission's input
- Access route news
- Councilman
Haderlein has been told that the city now has an
agreement with PCC for the access route. Separately heard that it
is an agreement in principle and it will be
several months before all contract details are worked out (including
such
things as construction coordination with PCC's schedule).
- Park pedestrian entrance, phone numbers
- Receiving
reports that the pedestrian path gates are not being opened
reliably. Also heard about the big hole in the fence on
Avocado, marked by a hanging auto tire.
- Last
week contacted
Tom Hunter about the issues. His position is something like park
maintenance supervisor. The gates are supposed to be opened and
closed each day by a city contracted private security firm, not park
maintenance. But, Tom Hunter knows who to call when there are
problems.
- If
the pedestrian gates are not open when they are supposed to be, call
Tom Hunter during business hours on weekdays: 626 744-4321. On
weekends, call Laura Ellersieck at 626 792-2927 and she will call his
cell phone.
- speed humps and Las Lunas - how ballot
came to be, requirements,
results
- The
balloting for speed humps on Las Lunas resulted from a request to the
city's transportation department by a resident of the block. It
had
nothing to do with the park or any other project.
- A
traffic study was not done. Las Lunas met a set of initial review
criteria:
- not
a collector street
- not
a first priority street for Pasadena Fire Dept.
- 1200
feet in length without any stop signs
- grade
not more than 5%
- At
least 2/3 of the ballots needed to be returned with Yes votes.
Out of
35 "abutting residences" on Las Lunas street, 19 voted yes, 13 voted
no, and 3 were not returned. Thus it failed to get the 24 yes
votes
needed and the proposal is dead.
- Noted
that the ballot provided no indication of how many or where the humps
would be. Maybe they would spend the resources to figure that out
only
after approval, but having that information could be important to some
people in making their decision, trading off benefit vs. nuisance.
- The
transportation department had no record of a request ever having been
made for Avocado Ave. (One was made for Avocado Lane some time
ago, but it is too short.)
- But
a resident of Avocado Ave. has now requested humps and came to our
meeting to tell us about it. Avocado Ave. (between Alameda and
Las Lunas) met the initial criteria, and ballots have been mailed out
to all the residences. (Note that whoever is living in a house
gets to vote, even if they are a renter.)
- There
was some discussion of the speeding problems.
- Edison proposed addition of 220 kV
transmission line
- Received
a letter from Edison indicating they will be taking public
input over the next few months regarding their proposal to add a second
220 kV transmission line on the towers to our west. This is part
of a
much larger project of upgrading lines running from Tehachapi through
LA county and into San Bernadino. Our segment of the project
appears
to be the last one, with anticipated completion in 2013.
- They
say will be taking input of neighborhood questions and concerns and
also how they can be "most effective" in communicating with us, and
working to minimize disruption from construction. They have
invited
your president to schedule a one on one interview. They will also
"outreach" with a series of "open houses" in the second quarter of
2007. They say invitations will be sent to all property owners
within
300 feet and they will also have newspaper advertisements inviting
anyone interested.
- If
you have questions/concerns, please speak up.
- Edison's
web page about the project:
http://www.sce.com/tehachapi
- Anything
else attendees wish to discuss
- homeless cats
- Discussion of the stray cats that have been at the west end
of Del Vina, where did they come from, and what to do about them.
- The friendly one has been caught, neutered, and vaccinated
through the Pasadena Humane Society's low cost spay/neuter
program. He needs and is ready for a real home.
- One or another of us will catch and fix his less
human-friendly brother too, perhaps through the Pasadena Humane
Society's TNR (trap, neuter, and release) program. Under that
program for loose cats that are getting fed but would not likely be
adopted, you get an appointed week during which you bring the cat in
the morning after you manage to catch it. It will be neutered,
vaccinated, and ear tipped for free. You then take the cat back
where you got it and it lives its life out without producing any more
cats. Perhaps it even settles down enough to get a home.
- graffiti
- Why is there so much graffiti and Gwinn and Sunnyslope parks,
and why isn't it getting cleaned up? Don't the park
maintenance people (who must visit frequently) report it? How
many graffiti cleaning crews are there?
- Experience of others who have reported graffiti is that they
do come and clean it up within a couple days. But they only clean
up what was specifically reported, even very obvious graffiti nearby
won't be taken care of.
- If you see graffiti, call the city's Graffiti Hot Line at
(626) 797-9045. We can't assume anybody else will do
it. If you carry a cell phone, put the number in your
list so you can call before you forget.
- If you are reporting graffiti, and it isn't getting cleaned
up, then we should escalate up the chain of command. If you don't
think they are doing their job, keep a record of when you called, what
you reported, and the status on subsequent days. If you have a
convenient digital camera, take pictures. It is a lot harder to
ignore complaints with specifics.
Next meeting is April 14,
same
time, same place.
Adjourned about
12:15 pm