June 14, 2008
Meeting Summary
East Eaton Wash Neighborhood Association
Preparation
E-mail reminder. Non e-mail
phone list was phoned.
Acknowledgments
Susan brought cookies.
Attendees
6 members
Meeting
Agenda Items:
- Ice Rink redesign
- Altrio cables and box removed
- Viña Vieja Park problems
- former Allstate property problems
- Kinneloa/Walnut Cut-Thru now 2009
- Sierra Madre Villa at Electronic Drive potential signal
- former St. Luke property update
- Hazardous and Electronic Waste Collection Events
- June 14, Rose Bowl Parking Lot K, 9 am - 3 pm
- August 16, Arcadia and Sierra Madre
- Convenient Drop-Off Locations for Flourescent Light Bulbs and
Household Batteries
- Free Gardening Workshops
- California Friendly Landscape Workshop, Sat June 21
- Green Gardening, Sat June 28
- Eaton Canyon Trail project
- June 25 Community Workshop on single family residence zoning
regulations
- anything
else attendees wish to discuss
- CVS pharmacy attempts to get alcohol permits
- passing of Ruth Ellersieck
The meeting began at 11:20 am
- Ice Rink redesign
- On Monday June 2nd City Council heard agenda item 5B3
- Agenda
Report
- Streaming
video of meeting
- Once it starts playing you
can go directly to the ice rink item by choosing "5.B.(3) AUTHORIZATION
TO EXECUTE AN AMENDED..." from the menu underneath the picture.
- Summary of staff report:
- Asked the Council to approve another $406,000 for the
architect to redesign the proposed building to try to save money on
construction.
- Additional expenditures will be made to rebid the contract
and otherwise pay for city staff time, adding up to about a half
million.
- They are hoping to save $1.1 million or more on the
construction cost.
- The expected savings are via unspecified "structural
foundation revisions" and making the exterior of the building of mostly
"block wall construction", resulting in "reduction of expansion joint
requirements and drywall finishes". (I.e. think of the
fortress walls
of Bed Bath & Beyond, Petsmart, etc, but the entire 450 feet of the
ice rink wall would be on one
vertical plane.)
- The redesign is expected to provide about 5000 additional
square feet for spectator seating. No mention of how many seats
that equates to.
- The resulting building is expected to be less energy
efficient then the current design but otherwise the interior
functionality is expected to be equivalent. The exterior will be
less aesthetic but may cost less to maintain.
- Now expect construction to start by spring 2009 and take
about 16 months.
- Mentions expecting to resolve construction access and
"other agreement-related" issues between the city, Edison, and PCC by
the end November.
- The item was heard first by the Council's Finance
Committee at 3 pm. But this meeting was a joint meeting with the
full
Council because they were also discussing the City's Operating Budget
for 2008. The only Council members absent from the committee
meeting
were Gordo and Madison. The item took about 15 minutes.
- Public Works director Martin Pastoucha summarized.
- Said expected $800,000 or more net savings.
- Only "area of play" is structural system
- "Side benefit" is additional seating on balcony.
- Redesign is to be completed through summer.
- He offered to show the "design elements", but no one took
up the offer so no drawings were shown.
- Councilman Tyler had some questions.
- Tyler asked about financing. Pastoucha said they
are working on it.
- Tyler asked about "construction cost benchmark".
Pastoucha said not applicable because of the unique issues with the
site, but the benchmark is around 250 to 285 per square foot.
This
project is only in that ballpark if the $4.5 million footprint cost is
not included. (He did not go into any detail, but what he was
probably
referring to is the difficulty in accessing utilities, ground stability
issues that require the use of piles, possibly the extra cost for
construction access.)
- Tyler asked if the architect had done ice rinks
before. Answer was yes, example given was Valencia ice center.
- Tyler asked about the reference to reduction in energy
efficiency. Answer included a few details about
problems with air stratification and avoiding condensation.
Mentioned block walls absorb moisture so additional work is needed to
avoid sweating. There was more indirect daylight in former design
which reduced need for indoor lighting and resulting heat
generation.
Council indicated they didn't want so many details.
- Tyler asked if building would still be able to meet LEED
certification requirements. Answer was that it could be difficult
but
staff was not yet asking for an exception to the city's requirement
that all city building projects meet LEED requirements.
Said they are
still looking into ways to insulate the block walls.
- Staff was asked about the mentioned unresolved
problems with PCC and Edison.
- Answer was that it is the construction access.
- The existing agreement with PCC is just verbal
and hasn't been taken to Council yet. It does not allow
construction
access via the PCC parking lot. Edison has given permission to go
through the east side of the park. So that is the plan that was
included in the defunct construction bid process last winter. PCC
was
"adamant" about not allowing construction access due to too much
potential conflict with students. But city staff plans to
re-approach
them on that.
- Haderlein asked how a stronger case can be made to
PCC.
- Acting City Manager Melekian indicated they
would be coming back to Council regarding the financing. The PCC
route
would be better from a cost standpoint.
- Pastoucha was asked isn't it necessary for the route to
be decided before it is put out for bids again. Answer was yes,
it
should be.
- Haderlein asked for an update on the PCC matter in two
months. Tyler indicated it could come via a "green sheet".
(That is a
way the staff uses to distribute information to all the Council members
without it being on a public meeting agenda.)
- The finance committee approved increasing the architect's
contract to do the redesign.
- Afterwards, our association president met with Segun, the
city's planner for the project and got more info.
- City staff had looked at projections for three possible
alternate designs and the block wall construction was the most feasible.
- The proposed concrete block wall construction is much
heavier then the previous steel column design, but the weight is spread
out more. The structure will still need pilings but instead of
them
all being 40 feet deep, some inner ones will only need to be 30 feet
deep.
- The roof connections are much simpler for concrete block
design.
- Concrete is expensive, but steel prices have really been
soaring. It is the saving on the amount of steel that really
makes the
difference.
- The "extra" seating space comes from moving the east wall
back out above the locker rooms instead of having a balcony. In
other
words, returning to the original configuration before they moved the
wall in to save money on the roof and air conditioning costs.
Expected to result in a potential seating capacity of about 500 again.
- No built in bleachers/seats are planned on the
"balcony". That'll be up to the operator.
- Colors/patterns of block walls are part of what is to be
determined during redesign. Expects the exterior of the blocks to
be
rough, probably painted. Translucent blocks are still
expected in
"random" pattern in the lower east wall to allow light into the locker
rooms / offices.
- Electricity to come to site either down the center of the
park (under the lot) or around the park on the west side. PWP to
determine which is best later.
- Water and sewer are to come from/to our neighborhood,
probably via upgraded pipes on Alameda.
- Still plan to have a reservoir for ice melt which can be
used for landscape watering, including a connection that the park could
link to at some future time.
- No mention of solar arrays now; none were in plan before.
- Preliminary drawing shows some large windows which extend
off the top of
the east wall. These windows would allow light in, but not
visibility. Same drawing also still shows green screen frameworks
that
plants would supposedly grow up on from base of building. There
is
also still the shadow box sign and wierd parapet, although it looks
like different materials.
- Probably no trees on east side because of Edison
wires.
(However, if the park can have trees so near the wires, why not the
rink project?)
- Segun said landscaping is still in the budget but agreed
that might suffer as an easy target for cutting as a "do later" that
may never happen. But he agreed that staff should not cut it on
its
own; should force Council to make any such decision and promises.
- Later, at the Council meeting
- There were a number of ice rink supporters who spoke about
how much it is needed and how they need at least 500 seats to have the
events they think they should have, and how they need a commitment that
the current rink won't close before the new facility is open.
Also
mentioned that important to have it open before the 2010 winter
olympics because of the interest that will generate.
- Madison and Gordo both made very gung-ho statements about
getting it done ASAP and supporting the speaker's statements about
having enough seating and not skimping on functionality.
- No one said anything about the stated purpose/goal of the
rink not being to host large events and that isn't where the revenue is
expected to come from. And the approved
environmental
documents specified 2 to 4 large events per year.
- Next steps
- Revised design expected to go to Design Commission in
August time frame.
- City staff may hold a community meeting prior to that.
- City staff should be bringing financing revisions/options
to Council sometime during the summer.
- Altrio cables and box removed
- In
2002 a company named Altrio strung their extra thick cables all over
the place and put in big green "coffin boxes" on street parkways to
drive the signals on those cables. As their installation
proceeded it generated a lot of controversy throughout the city due to
the extra view clutter and the big ugly, and sometimes noisy, boxes.
Many of the cables were never even connected and big loops of cable
remained hanging on the poles.
- After
Altrio's finances went kaput, a small Colorado company took over their
services. Recently (last year?) Charter cable bought that
company, and became owner of all those cables and boxes. Since
Charter is already the incumbant cable company, most of that Altrio
infrastructure is excess and recently Charter agreed to remove
it. Public relations if nothing else.
- Saturday
morning, June 14, a Charter contractor was observed in our neighborhood
cutting down the Altrio wires. They also removed the green box
that was located on Sierra Madre Villa between Hermanos and Las Lunas.
- Viña Vieja Park problems
- One
of our neighbors has written Councilman Haderlein about problems at the
park.
- Public
Works is supposedly now looking into:
- Wasteful
and inefficient watering. Lots of water draining down the
pedestrian
path to Alameda in mornings. Muddy mess near gate. Muddy
paths on
east side. Pooling water on west side. Drought tolerant
plants dead
from too much water and replaced by weeds.
- Grape
vines along fence had just gotten big enough to be nice when they were
cut back to the ground during the winter (Nov or Dec?). Then they were
cut down again on May 11 or 12 when they had just started to grow again.
- Humane
Society is to be contacted about:
- Dog
owners allowing dogs to run freely on east side of park and in the weed
patch to the south. They are leaving feces all over the place and
sometimes bother people and/or dogs on leashes walking to/from the park.
- Rhonda
Stone had information that somebody had complained that the grape vines
are supposedly poisonous to dogs. She says that has not been
proved,
but the vines are staying even if they have to be moved.
Some
question as to whether the cutting back in May was done by parks
employees or was vandalism.
- Reported
at meeting that there is now a poop post next to the pedestrian path at
about the mid-point. And a sign on it noting that dogs should be
leased and poop picked up. However, there has not yet been any
change in the excess watering and dogs are still running everywhere off
leash.
- Manuel
Vargas spoke to the City Council during Public Comment on June 9 about
getting a permanent pedestrian path to the park done. It has been
over
two years since the park was opened and it still is not finished.
Acting City Manager Melekian said it is the ice rink and its potential
construction path through the park which is holding up progress.
Melekian said without any equivocation at all that the ice rink is
going to be built. Vice Mayor Haderlein noted he is strongly
urging
that a solution be worked out with PCC to send the construction traffic
south. He said that recently Edison has indicated a willingness
to
work with the city on resolving the issue of routing the path under the
wires.
- former Allstate property problems
- The former Allstate property includes the big brick building at
600 N. Sierra Madre Villa which has been vacant since about 1991.
- Recently it is really getting hit with vandalism. Lots of
graffitti and people breaking in. It appears there may be
homeless
living there too.
- As one of our neighbors did, if you see anyone coming out of or
going into windows, call the police. If you see tagging in
progress,
call the police. If you see graffitti, call the graffiti hotline
626-797-9045.
- It appears that the new owners do not care to be proactive
about protecting the property since they want to bulldoze everything
anyway.
- Contacting the authorities about every observed incident will
raise the profile and get the problem more attention. Otherwise
it
becomes a criminal magnet with potential spillover effects for our
neighborhood.
- The Councilman's office has been informed it is becoming a
problem. Rhonda Stone reports the empty theator has also been
having
lots of problems.
- There has been no word on any new development plans having been
submitted.
- A meeting attendee noted having seen what appeared to be a
security guard there in recent days.
- Kinneloa/Walnut Cut-Thru now 2009
- This
is the project that will extend Walnut Street from Sunnyslope Ave to
Kinneloa Ave and extend Kinneloa Ave under the freeway via the existing
train underpass to Titley Ave and Foothill Blvd. It would also
add a
signal at Altadena and Walnut.
- Last
year city staff documents indicated that construction would begin this
spring. They are now reportedly still working on the engineering
design and working out the agreements with Caltrans, flood control,
etc. Projections are now that construction might begin in spring
of
2009.
- There
is also a tie-in with the ice rink project adding to the
confusion. If
the ice rink is done, then there is to be a signal at the PCC driveway
on Foothill. It would likely be included as part of a strange
long intersection of Foothill with Titley.
If the ice
rinks don't happen, a signal would still be needed for Titley, but not
for PCC. So the design and budgetting of this intersection is
problematic until the ice rink is resolved.
- Sierra Madre Villa at Electronic Drive
potential signal
- There
was reportedly a discusson recently about improving Foothill's
streetscape from Sierra Madre Villa Ave. east to Rosemead.
Including
making it more pedestrian friendly.
- As
part of this discussion, the problem of pedestrians getting across
Sierra Madre Villa to/from our neighborhood was raised.
What about
the previously requested signal at Electronic Drive?
- Response
was that city staff is waiting for the development of the former
Allstate property to tackle this; anticipating it can be required to
provide a signal as a mitigation measure or to fund it from fees.
- former St. Luke property update
- On
Thursday May 22, the Victory Rose Neighborhood Association hosted a
meeting at Pasadena High School to discuss the development status and
community issues about the former St Luke's hospital property on
Washington Blvd.
- Victory
Rose Neighborhood Association represents the single family neighborhood
just south of St Luke site. Their President, Carl Vail, led the
meeting.
- Meeting
was not heavily attended.
- Two
city staffers were present to answer questions. Patrice Martin is
from
the Planning Dept. She will be the city's project manager when
the
developer submits a project plan. John Poindexter, manager of of
Planning & Development?, was also there.
- Point
was made that the developer has not yet submitted any plans to the
City. So far everything is preliminary discussion. The
formal process
has not begun. Developers
ask staff questions about code and process requirements all the time as
they develop their plans. Staff
frequently tells developers they won't be allowed to do things.
Also
frequently tell them that they need to meet with
the community.
- There
have been a couple meetings with the developer by community
members.
- General
plan designation for the site is institutional. That
severely limits
what can be put there. Council isn't likely to approve a zoning
change.
- Density
is set through a master development plan process with input from the
community. It has to go to the Planning Commission and then to
the
City Council. There is a master plan for the site that was
approved in
1980 and revised in March 1987. The developer could bring in a
hospital
operator and follow the plan exactly without any new
approvals. Other
then that highly unlikely possibility, the developer has to get a new
master plan approved.
- There
had been talk about getting the developer to include a
public park and the developer had included that in one
preliminary scheme. Victory Rose Neighborhood Association
objected.
They do not favor a park there because there is already a huge park
(Victory)
just to the south of the neighborhood, and also Pasadena High
School.
They are concerned that the existing problem with high school students
coming and going to the fast food place on Washington would be much
worse with a park in between for them to hang out in.
- There
was also contention about the fate of single family houses on Woodlyn
that are actually part of the St Luke's property owned by the
developer. Reportedly the last discussion included agreement by
the developer that
those parcels would remain as single family residences.
- Part
of the preliminary plan floated by the developer to the community
included a substantial size assisted living facility. One of the
attendees at this meeting claimed that no more such facilities are
needed, that there are already too many.
- If
an Environmental Impact Report is needed, the City Council policy is
that the developer has to pay for it but the city hires and controls
the contractor that does the report. This is because the Council
must
certify the report's accuracy.
- There
was a discussion about the Del Mar site (formerly Girl's Club) that the
city owns and is working on plans to make into an urgent care
facility. There is a rumor circulating that it is the location of
a
former Army dump and has contaminated soil. Rhonda Stone said
that no
contamination has been found there yet and it appears from historic
research the dump may actually have been on the Ability First property.
- There
was a discussion of what potential issues there would be with any
development.
- A
strategy point was made that community should not give the developer an
agreed upon list of what it wants. This would give the developer
the
upper hand to put something objectionable together and then say "see,
we did everything on your list so you have to accept it". Needs
to be
negotiation.
- Hazardous and Electronic Waste
Collection Events
- June 14, Rose Bowl Parking Lot K,
9 am - 3 pm
- August 16 will be collections in
both Arcadia and Sierra Madre
- Toxic
waste items include: medicines, flourescent light bulbs,
household and
car batteries, motor oil and filters, other auto fluides, paint and
thinners, cleaners, pesticides, weed killers, pool chemicals.
- Electronic waste includes:
t.v.s, microwaves, computers, monitors, printers, cables, video games,
phones, radios, stereos, VCRs, electronic toys.
- Not accepted: Big
appliances, radioactive or biological materials, explosives.
- Convenient Drop-Off Locations for
Flourescent Light Bulbs and Household Batteries
- City
of Pasadena has arranged to have collection stations at 12 locations
throughout the city.
- Green
pouches labeled "MDS" for putting compact flourescent bulbs.
- White
pouches labeled "MDS" for putting all household batteries including
rechargeable batteries and unwanted cell phones.
- Only
some of the locations also accept flourescent tubes
- Local
locations include:
- Hastings
Branch Library (look for large cardboard box just inside the north
doorway)
- OSH
(accepts tubes)
- Victory
Park Center
- Free Gardening Workshops
- California Friendly Landscape
Workshop, Sat June 21
- Eaton Canyon Nature Center, 8 am to noon
- Sponsored by Pasadena Water & Power for PWP residential
water customers
- Covering the topics:
- Garden design for homeowners
- California friendly plants
- Sprinkler system basics & irrigation
- Soils, watering, and fertilizers
- Reservations required. Call 626 744-3715 or e-mail
Gloria
Acevedo at gacevedo@cityofpasadena.net with your name, address, and
contact info.
- Green Gardening, Sat June 28
- Eaton Canyon Nature Center, 9:30 am to 11:30 am
- Go Green grow green Smart Gardening workshop
- Sponsored by LA County Dept of Public Works in conjunction
with City of Pasadena
- Topics:
- Backyard composting
- Worm composting
- Grass recycling
- Water-wise gardening
- Fire-wise gardening
- For more information call 626 744-7168
- Eaton Canyon Trail project
- On
June 2nd the City Council approved consent calendar item 3.A.4.
to
submit an application for a grant of $44, 468 for planning of "the
Eaton Wash Trail project". The grant would be funded by "The
Rivers
and Mountains Conservancy", which is the authority for distributing
about $63 million in state bond funds authorized in 2002 and 2006.
- According
to the staff report, the proposed project "extends approximately three
miles north to south connecting a number of parks within the City of
Pasadena limits as well as connecting City residents to the numerous
trails in the Angeles National Forest. The multi-use trail begins
in
Eaton Canyon at the Eaton Canyon Nature Center and continues south to
the City limit near Eaton Blanche Park. When complete, the Eaton
Wash
Trail has the potential to connect with existing and planned regional
trails such as the Emerald Necklace trail system. In order to
facilitate use by multiple user groups, the Eaton Wash Trail is
proposed for both sides of the wash wherever feasible."
- June 25 Community Workshop on
single family residence zoning regulations
- Wednesday June 25, 6:15 pm, Council Chambers, City Hall
- Workshop with the Planning Commission to "discuss possible
changes to the Zoning Code's development standards that regulate the
'bulk and mass' of single-family residences." In other words, to
discuss 'mansionization'.
- This is city staff's response to a direction from City Council
to study whether there should be modifications to ensure that the
"scale of new construction is appropriate with existing development."
- However, for some reason, the announcement also says
"discussion is expected to focus on large non-hillside
properties".
Non-hillside makes sense because there are special fairly new
regulations that apply just to hillside properties. But why limit
to
large properties, thus eliminating all normal neighborhood concerns?
- anything
else attendees wish to discuss
- CVS pharmacy attempts to get alcohol permits
- CVS pharmacy at Foothill and Michillinda continues to attempt
to get a permit to sell alcohol. A few months ago it tried to get
both
24-hour again and alcohol but dropped the 24 hour request. City
staff
recommended against the alcohol permit because it would be inconsistent
with rules limiting the number of sellers of alcohol for off-site
consumption within a certain distance of each other. Do not know
what
the result of the hearing was.
- passing of Ruth Ellersieck
- Ruth Ellersieck was President of a former incarnation of this
association in the mid-1990s. She was also known to some as one
of the
polling place workers until a few years ago. She was a community
activist involved with many different issues during the 57 years she
lived in our neighborhood. She died on May 18.
Next meeting is July 12, 2008.
Adjourned about 12:30 pm