August 11, 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
Amelia brought and served a delicious home made pie made with her home
grown apples.
Attendees
10 members
Meeting
Agenda
Items:
- Kaiser development & parking use permit
- Goodrich power station project
- Altrio/Champion cable lines & boxes
- St. Luke hospital site
- More info on SMV home's "too tall wall"
- Green Space planning element and Eaton Wash area
- Hazardous/E-Waste collection event next Saturday
- August
18, 2007, 9 am - 3 pm
Santa
Anita Race Track, Gate 3, Huntington Drive, Arcadia
- anything
else attendees wish to discuss
- status of "Stuart" development
- local houses on market
- trash cans being left out in street, on sidewalk
- coyotes, raccoons, possums
- tree health
The formal
meeting
began at 11:30 pm (because we were getting pie)
Kaiser development & parking use permit
- Kaiser Permanente now owns the building at
3258-80 Foothill. The building on the SE corner of Foothill and
Sierra Madre Villa.
- They plan to move their medical offices there from Lake &
Villa, with a goal of moving in next spring.
- Initially they will share the building with some of the
existing tenants. As those tenants complete their leases Kaiser
will
take over additional space in the building.
- They will be substantially "renovating" the interior space.
- They have now been granted a conditional use
permit to have tandem and valet parking on site.
- Here is the city permit staff
report on the request and conditions.
- The tandem usage is already in place along the south edge of
the lot under a permit granted the previous owners in the early
80s. A
full time attendent is to be available for management of the tandem
spaces.
- The valet parking is to be free to parkers and is expected to
be made available during peak periods such as flu season. It
would use
the tandem spaces and others furthest from the building. The valet
station would be on the south side of the building, inside the parking
lot.
- Kaiser has now been granted a variance to allow them to have
less then what would have been the required number of parking
spaces.
Under the rules in force when the building was built, they would have
had almost the required number except that they are losing a few in the
lot due to building improvements. Under current rules, medical
offices
require additional parking spaces. But also under current rules,
they
would qualify as a transit-oriented development due to proximity to the
train station, and therefore would need fewer spaces. The
variance
puts them under the new rules. Initially they will have enough
spaces. When they take over more then a certain amount of the
building, they will have to demonstrate they have additional parking.
- As part of getting the permits and variance, Kaiser must submit a
traffic management plan to the city.
- It was pointed out at the permit hearing that medical use
generates more vehicle trips then regular offices, but that the usage
tends to be more spread out over the day.
- In addition to the parking lot on site, Kaiser has made
arrangements to use some space at the Space Bank next door and along
with the building bought the small parking lot next to the BMW repair
shop on the north side of Foothill.
- Kaiser has talked to the MTA about leasing an additional spaces
in the Gold Line parking
structure. MTA was reportedly eager to lease space on a month to
month
basis. We talked to them about how the parking lot is already
well
utilized during the day time and we really don't want to see them
tieing up spaces because that would discourage Gold Line usage.
They
promised to look into other off-site possibilities such as PCC, Target,
El Torito, Hastings Village, and use the Gold Line only as a last
resort.
- Kaiser representatives said that if our neighborhood notices any
employees parking on our streets that we can contact them and they will
have their security check it out.
- Another condition of the permits and variance is that Kaiser
has to dedicate a portion of their Foothill frontage to the city to
enable the city to add a dedicated right hand turn lane and also widen
the sidewalk. As part of that work, the existing street trees
will be
removed and some of the nice landscaping currently in front of the
building has to be demolished.
Goodrich power station project
- The
Goodrich power substation is the electrical facility located just west
of the PCC-CEC parking lot, south of the water well and proposed ice
rinks.
- At
last Monday's City Council meeting, the council approved a contract for
construction of a "reinforced concrete oil containment system" at the
substation.
- According
to the staff report provided to the council, the substation "has three
34kV transformer banks that hold approximately 52,000 gallons of
oil.
Federal Environmental Protection Agency regulations require that
potentially large oil spills be contained within the immediate area.
The substation was constructed prior to these federal regulations.
Specification LD-07-2 provides for the construction of a reinforced
concrete oil containment system at the T.M. Goodrich Substation, which
would prevent transformer oil from leaking onto the ground during a
spill or accident."
- Councilman Haderlein was requested by e-mail to ask the staff
about the
activity that has already been happening over there the last couple of
months, but no response was received and he didn't say anything
at the meeting. Also did not receive any response to the query
sent Rhonda Stone after last month's meeting, but have noticed that
some crushed rock has been spread on the dirt inside the gate adjacent
to Avocado
Ave. Neighbors at our meeting report that dust has recently also
been reduced by use of water trucks.
- Neighbors report seeing that there were some large transformers
sitting on the property recently (we were told several months ago they
would be using it temporarily for transformer storage) but all the
recent construction activity does not seem to be related to that and is
too soon for for the oil containment system.
Altrio/Champion cable lines & boxes
- Altrio was the company that around the year 2000 the city
granted a video franchise to compete with Charter. They put the
big
green "coffin" boxes in the parkways and strung thick cables on the
utility poles. Many of the cables are not even connected to
anything.
Altrio ran out of money with the system only partially complete and
under a lot of controversy due to their unsightly facilities.
Eventually they sold their system to a company called Champion which
seems to have been running it "as is". Now Champion has sold it
to
Charter.
- The Pasadena Neighborhood Coalition is proposing to send a
letter to Charter requesting that Charter remove the Altrio/Champion
boxes and cables once those customers are switched to Charter's
system. The letter expresses a belief that the Altrio/Champion
infrastructure is redundant to Charter's and should not be needed by
Charter.
St. Luke hospital site
- Sale
by Caltech is still ongoing. According to a Star News article it
is
taking longer then expected but they still hope to have an announcement
this summer.
- Caltech is not considering what uses
the buyer may intend for the property. Caltech has a fiduciary
duty to get the best price.
- The land is zoned "PS", public space,
so putting residential or commercial on it would require changing the
zoning.
- Councilman
Haderlein has publicly stated he is against redevelopment as high
density residential. He would look favorably on re-use for urgent
care.
- City is going forward with
negotiations to open an urgent care center in a building the city owns
on Del Mar at Kinneloa.
- Because
Councilman Haderlein's wife works for Huntington Hospital, he has not
had and cannot have any involvement or inside knowledge of the city's
negotiations for an urgent care operator for the Del Mar site.
More info on SMV home's "too tall wall"
- According
to Councilman Haderlein, the wall was actually legal at 14 feet and
that getting it lowered to 10 feet required the developer to be given
permission to make a second connection to the sewer line in Sierra
Madre Villa so that the houses within the development could still be
the required height above the sewer line.
Green Space planning element and Eaton Wash
area
- The
city council has agreed to funding the staff to work on a "Green Space"
element to the city's master plan. Until now, only recreation and
parks have been considered important, just leaving space open has not
been.
- In
a draft of the green space element are map drawings from a 1932 and a
1967 "Eaton Canyon Development Plan". The 1967 plan is the one
that
showed an ice rink among many other uses. The reproduction isn't good
enough to see exactly where it was proposed to go.
- There
was a demonstration planned today at 10 am at Kinneloa and Colorado to
protest the eviction of Present Perfect nursery at the end of this
month and the expected plans to still build self-storage facilities in
some of the Edison right-of-way. Have not heard that a new
application
has actually been filed with the city yet.
Hazardous/E-Waste
collection event next Saturday
- August
18, 2007, 9 am - 3 pm
Santa
Anita Race Track, Gate 3, Huntington Drive, Arcadia
anything
else attendees wish to discuss
- status of "Stuart" development
- Question was raised as to what is going on with "The Stuart"
development of 188? apartments just north of the Gold Line parking
structure. Progress seems to be stopped again. They appear
to still not be finished, there is at least one broken window, and
there is some strange plastic partition on at least one balcony facing
the parking structure.
- What are the sizes of the units and what are the asking prices?
- Is the proposed 212 unit development for the corner going to be
as ugly as The Stuart?
- local houses on market
- trash cans being left out in street/sidewalk all week
- coyotes, raccoons, possums
- Lots of them this year. Cats being eaten. Raccoons
and possums causing disturbances on roofs.
- tree health
- Neighbors report their fruit and other trees are doing poorly
and dying this summer. Remember nature provided very little
moisture in the past year and a half and no deep soaking rains last
winter. Trees need deep watering, not the frequent shallow
watering typical for lawns. Let the water trickle overnight in
the tree's root zone - soaker hoses are particularly good for the
purpose. Not getting enough water causes trees stress and
prevents them
from making enough sap to push out invaders and seal their
wounds. Trees growing fruit are likely to need more water then
non-fruit trees. Of course, no one wants to use too much water
either. Adult trees with deep roots only need to be watered
deeply once or twice a month, even in the middle of the summer.
Next meeting is
September 8.
Adjourned at 12:30 pm