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Dog lovers, show your teeth

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The City of Malibu is placing a $15 million bond measure on the ballot to purchase land, which the majority usage shall be “for the children’s” playing fields, etc. They are asking the many senior citizens, who by virtue of living long have the most expensive residences, to really foot the large portion of the bill. These same people have not and will not provide one dog park for a city which has a huge dog population.

To many people their dog is in essence “like a child,” and indeed is more faithful and more loving than any child.

Why should these seniors and others who love dogs pay for fields to support children only. Unless the City of Malibu immediately creates a dog park, which it has promised to do for years, to show good faith now to dog owners, then dog owners should fight strenuously to prevent passage of the $15 million bond measure.

Incidentally, dog attacks, which you seem to love to write about, would markedly diminish if a dog park is available.

Ron Lawrence

Homeowners meet with architect on commercial project

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The controversy recently raised over concerns about a proposed commercial project in the Point Dume area was addressed this weekend as a group of about 20 homeowners met with the architect of the development.

The homeowners met at the side of the road with architect Ed Niles to review plans to build office buildings totaling 14,950 square feet at the corner of Portshead Road and Pacific Coast Highway.

The main issues that concern some are problems that may be associated with traffic, and the apparent late disclosure of the project, leaving some city officials unaware of it.

“I just found out about it last week,” said city councilmember and former mayor, Tom Hasse. “Commercial development is a very big issue in Malibu and has been since the city was incorporated.”

Hasse said that no mention of a pending application for the project was made when hearings took place on an adjacent Malibu Bay Co. development agreement.

Niles said he had started the project in 1984 when the property had a different owner and long before the Malibu Bay Company plans were in discussion. Arnold and Emma Klein are the current owners.

“All these projects are available to the public when they are submitted,” said Niles. “I submitted it last year. The problem is the processing period is so long and after going through all the agencies, you never know how the project is going to end up.”

Niles said he already amended plans to accommodate the city trails system and for biological requirements and made other mandated modifications.

As far as traffic concerns, residents say that the intersection where the property’s main driveway exits creates a hazard.

“We need to do something to make that corner safer. The main driveway out of this building will go out into Portshead Road,” said Judy Decker, co-president of the Point Dume Homeowners Association. “There’s no other way to go out to PCH because they don’t own the land all the way to PCH. When you make a turn at PCH, you can’t see what’s coming over the rise and on a busy day, it’s practically impossible to turn left.”

Niles, who shared those concerns, said he had attempted to get Caltrans to make the intersection safer, but needed the support of the city and residents in order to persuade Caltrans to widen the intersection or take other safety measures.

According to Decker, most of the homeowners were pleased with the esthetic design of the building model that was displayed on the hood of Niles’ car.

“The idea of the building is that it is very low key,” explained Niles, who has been working in the city for 33 years and also designed the Malibu Pavilion and Zuma Terrace. “People come to Malibu for the ‘natural setting.’ This building is sunken into the ground a little bit. We’re below PCH and below Portshead. It’s not seen.”

All the future tenants, primarily Malibu-based professionals such as architects, attorneys and accountants, Niles pointed out, will have access to gardens on the property from their single story buildings.

The building project on the 2.29-acre lot and potential traffic problems will be discussed at the city’s Planning Commission meeting on Aug. 20.

Malibu’s style file

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Mont Dore, where the French go en vacance

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We take the train to Clermont-Ferrand, about four hours south from Paris into the heart of the country. We share a compartment with kids on their way to a summer language camp in Vichy–two from Mexico City (a girl about 13 and her brother), one from Venezuela (maybe 18, with her father, a professor of engineering at the university in Caracas) and a very tall teen from Austria, who speaks English and German).

Conversation is animated and in Spanish. After two weeks of French, it takes my ear and brain a few minutes to switch gears and I am amazed how much I understand. The Mexicans and the professor also speak English, which lets the Austrian girl in on the exchange. The professor dislikes journalists and very politely asks how I can do what I do. It’s a challenge to explain the failings of some reporters to get the story straight, fair and balanced. His experience has been otherwise. Sounds familiar.

In Clermont-Ferrand we stay with friends, Gary, a tuba player from Santa Monica who has married a French woman. They live with their two small children in a newer (about 25 years old) high-rise condo complex, one of the few modern buildings in this very pretty, old city. Neither drives. Bus service is good. One can walk almost everywhere, and other members of Gary’s band have cars to take him and his tuba to gigs, which may be as far away as Normandy or as close as Mont Dore.

An old friend, Karine, invites us to dinner at the apartment she shares with Pierre, who manages a theatre company. She is still studying to become a teacher and has already passed a portion of the rigorous examinations for certification. Teachers here enjoy job security and many benefits. The apartment, in an older building in the center of town, is beautifully restored, with two fireplaces and wood floors, above shops on a quiet street. Karine has prepared a green salad with salmon, chicken in a piquant curry sauce, served with a bowl of coconut milk to put out the fire, red wine, country bread, three local cheeses, a lemon tarte, coffee and Armagnac to finish. Magnifique.

A huge cathedral with two spires is a tourist attraction and a visible point by which to find your way. Nearby is some of the best shopping in France, although the art galleries and design shops all seemed to be closed for August. All except restaurants are closed between noon and 2 p.m. My favorite store for children’s clothes, Le Petit Bateau, is at 42 Rue Gras, and with everything but the new fall line on sale, I went a little crazy buying gifts for the grandchildren. The best lunch is at La Chaumiere (just off the corner of Rue Saint Dominique and Ave des Etats Unis. For the special quiche and salad lunch, get there before 2 p.m. After that, it’s pastries and tea, with chocolate and cookies to take away.

The musicians play a concert in the park at La Bourboule, a small village with a river running right through the middle. Tonight it is the funk band, Mojo, which attracts a large crowd with children playing and dancing on the grass. The city pays the band and dinner at a nearby cafe. The menu’s English subtitles were harder to translate than the French: fromage de chevre becomes “cheese’s goat,” sliced duck and liver pate are “duck fume and spray of liver,” and the dessert mousse is “chocolate moss.”

The following night the jazz band plays at Mont Dore, a popular vacation spot for French families and German tourists. We meet early for a huge picnic alongside the Dordogne River, its source at Puy de Sancy, the highest peak in the Auvergne. The trombone player has brought his wife and three children, and his parents have driven up from Vichy, where his mother, a noted psychoanalyst, teaches at the university. We have a long discussion about why French children are so well behaved and apparently happy. I never saw a child reprimanded or a mother who appeared angry or overwhelmed. I think it has something to do with a more relaxed attitude and less hurried life. There’s something to be said for the sanctity of the two-hour lunch.

The picnic included the best potato salad I ever had, tomato salad with olives, French and Spanish sausages, local cheeses (bleu d’Auvergne and St-Nectaire) and Gary’s “American” sandwiches (they have lettuce and tomato).

The band plays at Au Petit Paris (affectionately known as Chez Mimi, after its owner, a longtime jazz fan) beginning at 5:30. The room has a huge bar, 10 small tables, old black and white photos of jazz artists on the walls and an upright piano in the corner. The terrace seats another 20 or so, where ice cream and crepes are served all day. After two sets they break for a long dinner of trouffade (specialty of the house), ham, salad, bread, wine and dessert crepes. Mimi lives on the third floor and used to rent out two or three rooms on the second floor, but now has someone else take care of that part for her. Across the street is the Hotel de la Paix; double rooms with bath are only 220 F – 250 F (at current rate of exchange about $35).

The town hosts a huge jazz festival in February, at the height of their ski season. Bands play at most of the cafes, where there is no cover charge, but if you are at a restaurant during dinner hour, you are expected to eat. Music is from 5:30 p.m. to 11 p.m., leaving the day free to ski. Skis and bicycles can be rented at Bessac Sports for less than 130 F per day. Thermal baths (warm mineral water seeps through cracks in the lava) are said to cure everything from arthritis to plain old fatigue.

You can take the train to Mont Dore and get about easily on foot or by taxi. If the weather is good you can rent a car in Clermont-Ferrand and drive the 45 km through the valley of extinct volcanoes (Puy de Dome is the largest). On the way you will pass Guery, a small lake with a quaint hotel at the water’s edge. Very romantic. Tourist information: 04 73 98 65 00 or www.ot-clermont-ferrand.fr. TI for Mont Dore is 04 73 65 20 21.

They speak English and are very helpful.

Gift of beauty

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On April 6, 2001, we informed the City Council and the City Manger Christi Hogin that Caltrans had agreed in a grant application with the nonprofit Malibu Beach Esplanade Corporation, as co-applicants, to fund, construct and maintain Phase 1 of the Malibu Beach Esplanade project.

This Phase 1 improvement consists of a wide promenade with benches, lighting, planters and landscaping along Pacific Coast Highway starting at the Malibu Pier and extending to Malibu Lagoon State Park at Cross Creek Road (all within Caltrans right-of-way). The design and construction drawings have been completed by the nonprofit and need only to be reconciled to Caltrans specifications.

The grant funds of $711,000 for landscaping/ scenic beautification will be administered by Caltrans. The only responsibility of the city is to meet the matching funds requirement of 11 percent, or approximately $80,000.

This is a great opportunity for Malibu, and we were very pleased to have succeeded in achieving this level of cooperation from Caltrans, but we can’t say the same for the city. Sadly, we have been virtually ignored. We were told there was no money available in the present budget and to resubmit our request again after July 1, when the council allocates money for specific projects for the coming year. We did this, and to date we have had no response whatever.

We are still waiting for the City to act, and in the meantime we will probably lose another chance to get this work done. This project has been around for some time and has been thoroughly reviewed and accepted by the community.

Ironically, during the last council meeting, Tom Hasse was commenting on the many complaints he receives on the appearance of PCH and wanted to know the status of still another project, this one to beautify the median, which has been in the planning stages for some time as well. Mayor House responded that nothing was happening because efforts to raise money had not been successful. Well what about $700,000? That’s not exactly chopped liver! And it comes with an agreement to maintain this portion of PCH in central Malibu which is highly visible, and where currently over 46,000 people pass through each day and over 1,000,000 annually visit Surfrider State Beach.

So, come on, folks. We should be able to scrounge together $80,000 to get $711,000 worth of improvements we could be proud of. Trade the trash for a promenade with flowers. We have presented the city a very important improvement, a gift, and the city would be lax in their duties to ignore it.

And to the Malibu residents who are fed up with the disgraceful conditions of our “Main Street,” PCH, continue with your complaints and join us in trying to do something about it. Fax us at 456-6937 or e-mail Ann Ryan at Design@aol.com.

Ann Ryan, president

Malibu Beach Esplanade

Trying to figure out what it was all about

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Last weekend I went to see Apocalypse Now Redux to see if the movie made any more sense than it had the first time I saw it. It did. The movie made more sense, but the war still didn’t.

My memory of the war was as a civilian–the battles not in the jungles of Vietnam but in the streets of the country, and the perplexity of some of my younger friends facing the draft. Then something would happen and the war would cross my path and it would be a personal experience.

I was one of the lucky ones. In 1962 I was just getting out of the Navy when the war started heating up. I was passing through Travis Air Force Base in Northern California, trying to get a ride back to New York to muster out, when I saw all these young lieutenants, with their green berets and their Airborne Ranger patches, waiting for transport out. I asked them where they were headed and they told me Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam, because that’s where the action was.

That was the first time in three years of service I had ever heard about it. The cold war was still hot in the early 1960s, and few of us questioned that ultimately we would be battling communists somewhere. But Southeast Asia seemed like a backwater of no particular importance.

My father-in-law had been with an airline that had a contract with the Military Air Transport Service (MATS), and he told me stories of the airport near Saigon. The bodies of Americans killed in Laos and Cambodia would arrive and be re-manifested as killed in action (KIA) in Vietnam because no one was admitting we were in Laos and Cambodia. Not that it made much difference to the guys in the body bags.

For the next couple of years the war grew, but slowly. In 1965 I was sitting at a small luncheon table in the UCLA Alumni Center with several other student leaders where Henry Cabot Lodge, the newly appointed ambassador to Vietnam, was holding forth on Vietnam.

Lodge was an immaculately clothed and manicured Brahmin from Boston, the descendant of both the Cabots and the Lodges, and a former vice-presidential candidate. He explained the importance of it all, something like the old domino theory, and our place in history and why he was going out to Asia to clean up the mess and finish it once and for all.

Then he did something I’ll never forget. He got something caught in his teeth, and without ever missing a beat or stopping the conversation, he took his pinky, with a long manicured fingernail, and began digging between his teeth to get the offending particle loose. I was fascinated. I had never seen a human being who was so totally sure of himself and so utterly oblivious to his impact on others. Then he was off to Vietnam, taking that wonderful self-assurance and that sense of certainty with him. You know what came next.

A few years later a buddy of mine was back from Vietnam and he related his experiences to me. He had been serving on a destroyer in Vietnam. In fact, it was the destroyer that had been sent in to relieve another destroyer, the Turner Joy, which had been stationed just off the coast of Vietnam when some Viet Cong PT boats attacked it, or at least that’s what was charged. Out of that clash came the Tonkin Gulf resolution. The war escalated and our country tore itself apart. It was practically a civil war in the streets at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago.

It had been a decade of domestic war also. John F. Kennedy was dead, Bobby Kennedy was dead, Martin Luther King was dead, and the country turned away from the war. In the beginning it had been the kids, but then just about everyone turned away.

Now you sit in a movie and watch the utter chaos that was that war–the stoned soldiers, the civilians crushed between opposing armies, the moral ambiguity of it all–and it’s hard to remember what we thought was so important and why it seemed so essential at the time.

Today, we’ve resurrected relations with Vietnam. We’re beginning to do business with them, and Vietnam is running a flourishing tourist trade, bringing back American soldiers to take nostalgia tours through old battle grounds and through underground tunnels, trying to help them figure out what it was all about.

Perhaps that’s why the movie is selling out. We’re still all trying to figure out what it was all about.

Great oak trees were once little nuts

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We are the Malibu City Council. At our council meetings we will be handling all of your dilemmas.

If you find yourself stuck in Malibu summer beach traffic, don’t despair. There are people in this world for which driving is an unheard of privilege.

Should you have a bad day, having just opened a letter containing your Malibu-Big Rock de-watering assessment levy, think of the wonderful time you will have arranging to pay the tariff. You have a magnificent vista from Big Rock nonetheless and we are not taxing for that.

Should you grieve the passing of another weekend without a site for your children to play soccer or baseball? Think of how your $15,000,000 general bond issue money is going to buy wildlife habitat–or was it open areas or is it a senior center, or was it a youth center, or is it motorcycle trails, or was it playgrounds or was it a community center, or is it social programs or was it educational programs? Whatever! It was something like that!

Anyway, we, the council, promise to buy something for everyone and not build on it, so you can enjoy the exquisiteness of Malibu. Besides, it’s Keller and Van Horn’s fault for exchanging away the Malibu Bluff’s Park.

Should your car break down on Point Dume, leaving you miles away from help, don’t call us, the Malibu City Council. Instead visit the Lily’s Caf 8 a.m. political summits, because at the get-together of the Malibu Steering Committee they can fix anything (now that’s the truth).

As the Lily’s Caf Malibu Steering Committee says, “The great oak tree groves were once a group of nuts that held their ground.”

And that is all I have to say (sure).

Tom Fakehany

Ready for release-with bow and arrow

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There is something empowering about drawing a bow and arrow, aiming, and actually hitting a target. In that single moment, when the arrow hits a paper target or a fake animal target called a 3-D, it somehow doesn’t matter that the cat is out of food, a phone call has not been returned or that the sheets never made it to the dryer. The target is hit, and that can make one feel, well, complete.

Driving up Latigo Canyon Road, about two-and-half miles from Pacific Coast Highway, to the Malibu Mountain Archery Club, the drive is part of the experience. The “city stress” begins to vacate, and, in my case, I am locked in a flashback. I was 9 the last time I had an archery lesson and it wasn’t good–perhaps because the instructors were actually equestrians who were dubbed as archery counselors and were essentially clueless.

I pass the archery club’s gate and begin to smell the earth. I thought of Artemis, goddess of the hunt, always at the ready with her bow and arrow. The story is told that when Artemis was a child her father, Zeus, asked what she wanted as a gift. “I want to run forever,” she replied, “wild and free in the woods with my hounds and never, ever marry!”

It could happen.

I decided that however I fared with the day’s archery lesson, I would keep Artemis in mind.

Founded in 1938, the Malibu Mountain Archery Club is said to be the oldest, continuously operated field range in the United States. It includes a 28-target field course and target distances that vary from 10 to 80 yards. According to the club, “The targets are shot in sequence, similar to a round of golf.” The expansive range includes 50, 3-D animal targets and a 90-meter FITA (Federation Internationale de Tir a L’Arc) target used for Olympic- style archery.

The club, open year round, has a compelling history. During World War II, the club was an “open house” for military men who required lodging, and was frequented, and reportedly honored by Hollywood figures, including archer extraordinaire Howard Hill, child star Shirley Temple and swashbuckling actor Errol Flynn.

While touring the range, I noticed many 3-D animal targets consisting of (fake) deer, pigs, rabbits and others, before meeting one of the club’s fiercely dedicated vice presidents, Ralph Hydle.

Hydle remarks that since my last name is Fletcher (meaning arrow maker), perhaps it’s an omen that I am here. He goes on to say that archery is “a release,” adding, “90 percent of shooting is mental,” and quickly assuring me that “women are better at archery than men” due to their ability to “take instructions well.” I agreed.

Before I began my lesson with club member Debra Ervin, an archery veteran as well as a gold- and bronze-winning medalist in national archery competitions, I was fitted with an arm guard, proper bow for my height, as well as arrows. Ervin was succinct and patient. After showing me the proper form and safe shooting methods, I was good to go. Drawing the bow for the first time, I felt back muscles I didn’t know I had, perhaps because they haven’t been used in a while, but quickly I got used to the feeling. When an arrow is launched and hits a gold ring, it spurs me on.

As the sun lowers on this sultry summer day, I am told I can proceed to the 3-D targets with Hydle and two other club members, Scott Kalter and Ronald Blum–whose enthusiasm for the sport is infectious.

Hydle tells me that some say it’s politically incorrect to even remotely espouse animal target shooting. “I am against it too,” I say. “But I know they’re fake.”

The sizable 3-D targets are deeply nestled in the woods throughout the archery range and part of the fun is finding them. After a trial run and coaching from my now three fans, I hit the first animal target in the neck and feel a huge grin wash over my face. I am told it didn’t leave until long after I had left the range. I hit many targets that day and realized afterward that my archery experience was nothing short of therapeutic.

Little had mattered during those hours except focusing, aiming and going for the bull’s-eye. I am a believer and will return. Who knows, Artemis might have been lurking after all.

The Malibu Mountain Archery Club shoots are scheduled for the fourth Sunday of every month, coupled with a “pot-luck” breakfast or lunch. Lessons are free. The club is located at 5656 Latigo Canyon Road.

EIRs for Civic Center area development behind schedule

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City Planning Director Barry Hogan told the City Council last week that essential Environmental Impact Reports (EIRs) to support development agreements for the Civic Center and other Malibu properties are running six to eight weeks behind schedule. Approval of the EIRs by the city planning office is necessary before the City Council can vote to accept the agreements proposed by the Malibu Bay Co. and the Roy Crummer Estate.

The Malibu Bay proposal includes development of Civic Center area property and the Crummer deal would give the city six acres of land adjacent to Bluffs Park on Pacific Coast Highway in exchange for the right to develop 25 acres in an eight-lot, single-family subdivision at the same location. If approved by the City Council, both developments must go to a vote by the electorate.

The council had hoped to have the issue on the April 2002 ballot. But the delay will push the vote back to at least June, if not November.

In the meantime, two councilmembers–Sharon Barovsky and Tom Hasse–face re-election in April. “Putting it off makes it an election issue once again,” said Hasse, who is on record as favoring the development agreements. Changing the council makeup could jeopardize approval of the agreements.

David Resnick of the Malibu Bay Co. said in a later interview that he would not characterize his company’s EIR as late, but that “it’s a big EIR with many studies,” adding that the Malibu Bay Co. “would cooperate with whatever process the city comes up with. We want to make sure it’s an open and complete process.”

Other Quarterly Review items:

  • The Public Works Department said it expects to begin a series of public meetings in the next couple of months on the redesign of Cross Creek Road, expected to cost $800,000.
  • The city is expecting money from the state and county for repair of Corral Canyon Road, now reduced one lane where it was impaired by a landslide.
  • Also underway is a study on the realignment of Zumirez Road.
  • TIER, the city’s new traffic information and emergency radio system is due to go on air at the end of August.
  • The Environmental and Building Safety office reported that in 98 percent of cases, it had met its goal of providing construction inspections within 24 hours. But it cost “considerable overtime expenses.”
  • Environmental and Building Safety also said that in 90 percent of all new projects, it had provided initial plan checks plus geology and environmental health reviews within 10 working days, using some outside contractors.
  • Between April and June there were 337 active open code violation cases on the books, 40 of them new. They include animal noise, building code violations, building without a permit, discharge/drainage, dumping and encroachment. The cases are in various stages of enforcement.
  • The city treasurer reported that a human resources consultant has recommended that the council extend cost of living allowances (COLAs) to all employees equally. As it is now, employees who receive merit pay based on performance assessments receive higher COLAs than employees who do not receive extra merit pay. Consultant Anne Browning McIntosh said many city employees, including some managers, had criticized the present system.

“The COLA, by definition, is not a performance- or merit-based concept, but rather relates to external economic factors,” she said. “Therefore, the application of the COLA at the time of the employee performance evaluation is both unorthodox and effectively not a cost of living adjustment at all.” McIntosh’s report said that “most Malibu employees are being paid somewhere in the middle of the salary ranges” and that they “generally enjoy being in Malibu during their work day. The casual atmosphere at City Hall is appreciated.”

  • City Parks and Recreation Director Paul Adams said his department was looking for a small, temporary site to locate a senior community center built of modules “that could serve for 5 or 10 years in anticipation of a larger, 15,000-foot facility down the road.” Such a facility could depend on approval by voters next November of a $15 million bond issue to buy land and build recreational facilities, or on approval of a Malibu Bay Co. proposal to donate land and money for recreational development at Point Dume, in exchange for development at the Civic Center and other locations.
  • Parks and Recreation also reported that it had conducted 171 community-interest and recreational classes in the fiscal year ending June 30, and had led 33 school or scout group hikes through Charmlee Wilderness Park during the year. It conducted tennis and basketball day camps, science adventure camps, whale watching school trips and lifeguard training classes.

Farmers’ Market–fresh way to go

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As a recent Malibu Farmers’ Market raffle winner, I won a free bag full of nutritious goodies from the market. After I drove home and was unpacking my fresh vegetables and fruits, I started thinking about the benefits of a farmers’ market. As the name already implies the products are fresh and some organic.

With a quick trip to the Civic Center, where the market is located, you can take home a fresh basket of strawberries, or a delicious pack of sweet cherries. It is not hard to do, for they are cheap and better than what you may get at a supermarket.

I use the word “fresh” a lot because there is a difference between a farmers’ market and a supermarket. A farmers’ market stand is put up at 11 a.m. with fruits just brought from local farms and gardens. The fruits are different from each other just like a fingerprint, unlike a supermarket’s display of flawless fruits and vegetables coated with wax and polished to shine, with a picture-perfect appearance and looking as if they came out of a factory.

The Farmers’ Market is your source of fresh juicy products where you can find organic products too. The Farmers’ Market is a place that needs to be supported by our local people of Malibu. While you stroll along the Malibu Farmers’ Market with your child eating sun dried fruits, you have a sense of community as you know your presence is valued.

Stephanie Marinello-Silva

8th Grade Student