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Ecstatic exchange

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On behalf of the Labor Exchange Board, the workers, and the many hirers we serve, I would like to share our joy and publicly thank the City Council members and staff for increasing our funding from $9,000 to $20,000. That is, an increase in funding from less than 20 percent last year to almost 50 percent for the fiscal year 1999-2000. This is an absolutely wonderful indication that the city takes seriously its partnership role in helping the poorest members of our society while at the same time advocating a practical and humanitarian approach to the unwanted presence of large groups of day workers on local street corners. At the same time, it is providing a free, safe and convenient service to hirers in need of day workers.

In the six years that I have been a volunteer with the center, I have visited and met with many other day worker organizers. The city of Malibu should know that in terms of numbers of poor workers served and numbers whose lives and families have been positively changed, in some cases, drastically changed for the good, Malibu is a project of which the community can be very proud.

There were many who really took precious time out of their schedules to help the center with this year’s critical funding request including several of the local churches, the Chamber of Commerce, the Las Flores business owners, Sharon Barovsky, Bill Carson, Mary Frampton, Michael Jordan, Georgianna Mc Burney, Rev. Larry Peacock, Dan Wallace, and those petition circulators, letter writers, faxers, and callers. This kind of community support is greatly appreciated and absolutely imperative to the viability of any community project such as the Labor Exchange.

At the risk of being redundant, thank you all once again.

Mona Loo, Volunteer Board member

president, Malibu Community Labor Exchange, Inc.

Child-care centers get Planners’ go-ahead

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In a victory for local day-care center operators and the parents and children who use the facilities, the Planning Commission Monday unanimously ruled that parking requirements for businesses do not apply to residential day-care centers.

The issue arose in two separate cases that threatened the operation of one center on Point Dume and another in Malibu Park.

The zoning code requires businesses that have six or more parking spaces to meet certain requirements, such as a vehicle turn-around area.

Both the center on Point Dume, Wonder Years Day Care, operated by Kim Ledoux, and Malibu Park’s Garden of Childhood, run by Theresa Hutcherson, do not meet those parking requirements.

Planning Director Craig Ewing, with some misgivings, strictly applied the zoning code and turned down the applications to operate the 12-child facilities.

“I’m a literalist when it comes to the zoning code,” he said.

At the outset of the discussion before a packed meeting chamber, Ewing explained he does not have the power to waive the parking requirements for the day-care centers but the commission did.

Sensing the commission might rule otherwise, parents poured into the meeting with infants and toddlers in tow to plead with the commission to reverse Ewing’s denial of the applications. They spoke of the shortage of day-care centers in the city and of their respect and admiration for Ledoux and Hutcherson.

Ledoux, whose case was heard first, presented the commission with a petition containing 1,000 signatures in support of her center. She said Malibu did not have any available commercial locations for child care. And, she said, “Residences that would meet the parking requirements are either not available or are far too expensive for a day-care operation. This is not a high-profit operation. It’s a labor of love.”

The one person who spoke in opposition to Ledoux’s center, Dick Sittig, lives directly adjacent to the center on Zumirez Drive. He complained of the noise and traffic near his home.

“Of course the parents love it,” he said. “It’s convenient, and it has zero effect on [them].”

But the commission, with no hesitation, warmly embraced the request of those assembled and ruled that the parking requirements do not apply to residential day-care facilities.

Commissioner Ken Kearsley said he was pleased Malibu is once again teeming with kids. He recalled that, in the 1980s, Malibu had so few children, the elementary school on Point Dume had to be closed.

“My wife and I used to go to a restaurant in Thousand Oaks … just to hear the sound of children,” he said.

Vice Chair Andrew Stern said only a technicality prevented the application’s approval, and he was willing to waive it.

“We’ll be rewarded when these kids grow up to be good kids,” he said.

With the ruling on the Point Dume center, the outcome for the center in Malibu Park was almost preordained. But because the facility there is located on a blind curve on Cuthbert Drive, some residents voiced concerns about the safety of pulling in and out of the driveway. Still, the commission declined to impose any conditions on Hutcherson’s center, and, as with Ledoux’s, unanimously approved her operating permit.

More memories of Malibu nights

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Although I never met Mrs. Burnett (the owner of the Albatross) nor have I ever visited her Malibu establishment during its heyday, I do have an indirect connection to its heritage. During the 1960s and into the ’70s, initially as a high school student and subsequently as a physics major at UCLA and Caltech, I worked as a searchlight operator for her son, James Parker. Jim Parker, probably in his mid-30s to 40s at the time, managed Film Ad Corporation, a searchlight company located in West Los Angeles (remember the big, white lights?). As a teen-ager, this was one of my more memorable experiences — operating, maintaining and repairing these powerful 60-inch diameter, carbon arc intense searchlights, which were initially used during World War II for anti-aircraft detection, but now, as a means for appealing to the curiosity of the general public.

This after-school job took me from Hollywood movie and night club premiers to parade, holiday and political events; and from nighttime surf festivals along our coastline to Universal Studios, Disneyland, nighttime football games at the Coliseum, private parties and, yes, even to grand openings of Laundromats (the operators would always compete for this latter “treat!”). My social life as a teen did not take a back seat during this adventure, since I would sometimes take my “dates” to a Hollywood event, as an assistant searchlight operator (usually my first and last encounter with these patient gals!).

Jim would always talk about and praise his mother, who he told us owned and operated the Albatross Restaurant in Malibu. He was very proud of her and often described how she was able to manage and operate her establishment so efficiently by herself (I do not have any recollection of Jim’s father in our conversations). Jim would always drive to work in a recent model Cadillac — a gift which he annually received from his mother, presumably as a Parker family “tradition” (as it seemed). Being that my childhood roots stem from a lower-middle class upbringing in L.A. proper (I would ride my bike or take a bus to work), this surrealistic scene was always difficult for me to fathom; to see this proud and hardworking man drive up in a sparkling luxury automobile to his business establishment — a large greasy field, filled with dozens of 25-year-old war surplus relics (the searchlights), old engine blocks, generators, searchlight mechanisms, crates of carbon rods and old one-ton trucks (used to tow the Klieg lights to their evening’s destination.)

All this mechanical carnage, sprawled in the company’s oil-saturated dirt lot, looked more like a salvage yard than the cornerstones of a thriving business. Yet, thrive it did (at least to this teen at the time), for come New Year’s eve, as well as the annual new “car showings” every September, Film Ad would rent out most of its fleet of 100 searchlights, which would make the skies over Los Angeles look more like a scene from the nighttime Blitz over London than Sparkletown, USA.

Jim and Film Ad are, unfortunately, long gone, and much smaller spotlights are now used for the grand openings. Yet, the fond memories of my youth with this novel profession remain, and I thank Jim Parker for the wonderful opportunity to be part of this nostalgic experience. As for me, I have since “graduated” from operating searchlights to researching laser technologies. Yes, the Albatross may have flown the coop, but its history will remain an integral part of Malibu, along with its brilliantly lit heavens above.

Name withheld upon request

Pointing a finger at local polluters

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No one denies the water in Malibu Lagoon is polluted, and when water levels are high, the sand berm is breached, flushing pollutants onto Surfrider Beach.

That water has been analyzed for everything and by everyone from Heal the Bay to UCLA, and the experts readily acknowledge that swimmers and surfers are getting sick from it.

There is less agreement, however, on the source or sources of high coliform counts, bacteria, viruses and such. Storm runoff, septic seepage, creek bathers, horses, even ducks are blamed, along with the most obvious recycled water discharger, the Tapia Reclamation Facility.

The Las Virgenes Municipal Water District has operated Tapia under terms of an NPDES permit issued in 1984 authorizing the discharge of surplus recycled water, that which is not sold for irrigation. In November 1997, restrictions were added prohibiting direct discharges to Malibu Creek (with exceptions) between May 1 and October 31.

The Regional Water Quality Control Board fined the district for discharges between those dates last year. In an effort to comply with terms of the permit, the district and its joint venture partner Triunfo Sanitation District have undertaken a Creek Discharge Avoidance Study (CDAS) to identify alternative solutions, possibly avoiding discharges year round.

“We certainly support diversion and getting Tapia’s discharge out of Malibu Creek year round,” said City Engineer Rick Morgan.

The RWQCB says it intends to fine the city $5,700 for failure to submit a work plan for a technical investigation of water quality impacts from septic systems in areas adjacent to the creek and lagoon. The City Council met in closed session last week to consider the possibility of contesting that action in court; however, City Attorney Christi Hogin said no “reportable action” was taken.

City officials told the RWQCB last year they wanted to wait until the UCLA Lower Malibu Creek and Barrier Lagoon System Resource Enhancement and Management report was released before proceeding with its own work plan. The UCLA study was released in February, and the city submitted its workplan Feb. 9.

The UCLA study, however, offers more of a menu than any specific recipes for improving water quality. And now the study is being studied — by the Malibu Creek Watershed Executive and Advisory Council, the Malibu Lagoon Task Force, whose mandate is to manage water levels in the lagoon, and a host of other watershed stakeholders.

“We have been actively developing our work plan through the city’s Building and Safety Department,” Morgan said. The city has already begun testing septic systems in the Cross Creek area and is studying numerous onsite wastewater treatment options.

The LVMWD has determined that an Environmental Impact Report associated with the CDAS alternatives will be required to comply with the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA).

Copies of the Notice of Preparation are available to the public at the district offices and local libraries. Written comments may be submitted by mail, e-mail or fax through May 24. A public scoping meeting is scheduled for 7 p.m. May 12 in the board of directors meeting room at the LVMWD headquarters, 4232 Las Virgenes Rd., Calabasas.

Mail responses to LVMWD c/o Sandra Bauer, Bauer Environmental Services, 15901 Red Hill Ave., Suite 210, Tustin, CA 92780. Telephone: 714.258.8055. Fax: 714.258.7755 e-mail: bauer7@earthlink.net

The right of rite

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Re: Letter to the editor, “Hanging in the balance,” April 29.

Last week’s letter from “Stevo” complained that too much “occult and Eastern Mysticism” has been “draping the front pages” of The Malibu Times. Steve also says that “the God of this nation … has been ousted by the government in 1962”.

Dear Stevo: There is no “God of this nation.” We have freedom of religion here. We can have any god we want — or no god at all. Stevo quotes from the Bible to bolster his argument, but Bible quotes are often self-destructive. When I read in II Kings 19:35 that God sent an angel to slaughter 185,000 human beings in one night, and in Isaiah 45:7, when God said “I create evil,” I realized that this was not the god for me.

Fortunately, there are over 300 organized religions in the world, so I have many gods to choose from.

George Wood

A Cook’s tour

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Mildred Frances Cook was born in Abilene, Texas, to a father she calls “a great influence” and mother she calls a rural Auntie Mame. “She would take us places. We didn’t have money, but she would load us into the car. She just thought it would open our minds. I got to see the great artists of the day — Helen Hayes, Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne.

“I saw all the lights and the feathers and the glamour. I was 6 years old and I knew that I wanted to be a part of that.” She adds, “The only stipulation my family made was that I had to get an education.” So she attended Baylor University, graduating with a degree in theater and a master’s degree in Greek drama. “But I’ve managed to overcome it.” There, she had the experience of playing range, “from ingenues to crabby, old women.”

She went to New York, performing in summer stock for only a short while. One night, someone told her Lucille Ball was on the phone for her. “I said, ‘Yeah, right.’ It was Lucy. She had formed a little group of young people and they needed a comedienne.”

She flew to California on her one day off. She had no “routine,” but she told Ball stories about her mother and grandmother. “She liked me, luckily, and asked me to come out.” She expected only two months’ work on a live show on the Desilu lot, but she took a screen test and was put under contract — at Ball’s urging signing the name “Carole Cook.”

Cook appears Saturday night in her one-woman show, “Dress Up,” at Smothers Theater. In it, she tells these tales, and many others.

“Hopefully, it’s universal,” she says. “We’re not that different. I hope I strike a remembrance chord in people. Mostly it’s humorous, but hopefully I touch on things that mean something. We get through a lot of bad times with laughter.”

The show is directed by her husband of 35 years, Tom Troupe. She calls him the best actor she knows. Before she met him, she saw him perform in a Harold Pinter play. “He didn’t seem to be doing anything,” she says. “The end result was shattering.”

She soon met him at a cast party for that play. “There was an instant attraction,” she says. They went together for 1-1/2 years, then married. He had 10 groomsmen, she had one attendant — Lucille Ball.

“I was trying to look virginal at my wedding,” Cook recounts. “I tried to look like Grace Kelly, so I wore no makeup. Tom lifted the veil and he had no idea who I was. I was pure as the driven slush.” She says she called in chits for the wedding, coaxing designer Bob Mackey into designing that veil.

Although she waitressed in her early days, she says, “My husband and I consider ourselves very lucky in show business. Since we’ve been married, we’ve managed to make a living.”

Two years ago, the couple appeared in “The Lion in Winter” at Pasadena Playhouse, reprising the first play they had appeared in together, years before. “We love working together,” she says, although she adds, “When he’s my director, he tends to take shortcuts with me. He’s not as polite as he is with the other actors. But Tom knows what I’m capable of, so he will push me to places I’ve never been. I’ve never thought about divorce. But murder, yes.”

She says she’s been lucky, having played roles from Medea to Auntie Mame. She created the role of Maggie Jones in “42nd Street” and has been invited to recreate that role for the millennium revival of the show.

After Desilu, Cook worked under contract to Warner Bros. Her first film for them, “The Incredible Mr. Limpet,” in which she played Don Knotts’ wife, is being remade, which thrills her.

She asked out of the contract to star in the Australian company of “Hello, Dolly!” — the first person to perform the role after Carol Channing.

Good audiences helped keep her two years of “Dolly” fresh, she says. She would also get to the theater two hours before showtime, dress in her costume including corset and wig, and have tea. She also learned from the legendary acting teacher Uta Hagen to refresh her lines before going on stage, starting with Act II. “Then, you go onstage with Act I in mind.”

Also on a long run, she says, “Start doing less. Think of 10 things you do in a scene. An artist will do five, a genius three, and the genius will pick the right three.”

Since her “Dolly” days, she has starred in, among many others, “Auntie Mame” and in “Mame,” toured in the national company of “Steel Magnolias” and been featured in films (“Sixteen Candles,” “American Gigolo”) and recurring television roles (on “Dynasty” and “Cagney and Lacey”).

By way of advice to new actors, she offers the following: “If I can talk them out of it, I think I’ve done them a big favor. If they’re determined, nothing I can say will stop them.” She also says, “Really get down and study and learn to act. We’re born with talent, but we should study to become an artist.”

As a young girl, Cook felt like a misfit. “I wasn’t the May queen,” she says. “I was a sight laugh. That’s why I developed humor.” Her mother made their clothes, but didn’t make them well. She would warn her daughters, “Be careful when you sit down.”

When other girls were wearing pink angora and pearls, Cook begged her mother to make a black crepe dress with a long train — and a turban. “I wanted to be Lynn Fontanne.” She discovered she could be different, an individual, when she began studying theater at Baylor.

In 1995, Baylor University awarded her its Distinguished Alumni Award. She summarizes: “I left under a dark cloud, but with age I became an eccentric.”

Carole Cook appears in her one-woman show, “Dress Up,” at Pepperdine University’s Smothers Theater Saturday at 8 p.m. Telephone 310.456.4522.

Keeping men at work

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Next week the City Council will evaluate all the worthy projects in Malibu to decide which ones will be funded and at what level. It is sad that, because of budget constraints, good projects that do really good things must compete for a relatively small amount of money. And no one likes to beg, especially when they are begging for the opportunity to keep volunteering their time for a program that benefits the entire community. In the case of the Labor Exchange, the funding has diminished from $35,000 to the present level of $9,000 — a slow death spiral for the project.

The city of Malibu initiated the Labor Exchange program in order to alleviate the problems created when men stand on street corners waiting for work. However, I feel it is inherently wrong for a volunteer group to be expected not only to administer but also to fund a program that the city itself originated. The city of Carlsbad spends $86,000 of its general funds to support its Day Worker Center and the city of Brea, $30,000.

Because our funds have been cut so drastically, the Malibu Labor Exchange has cut back from two employees to one, with facilities deteriorating, volunteers exhausted and its donors overtaxed. Each year our volunteers give fund-raising events to keep the project afloat. However, without a consistent level of funding from the city of at least $15,000 per year, there is no possibility that the Labor Exchange will be able to continue its services to both those who seek workers and those seeking work.

Most people think of the MCLE as an organized place where they can hire day workers. However, few in Malibu realize that the Labor Exchange is the city’s only social service for the poor, offering a safe, secure, sanitary site for day workers as well as volunteer tutoring, counseling, and emergency medical care. And fewer still know that the exchange does jobs no one else will do such as working with Wild Life Rescue to dispose of dead sea animals. As volunteer projects, the Labor Exchange workers planted and now care for the beautiful City Hall Rose Garden and have helped clean City drains. Recently, the city sought the exchange’s aid when an indigent man was found dead from exposure. The exchange not only made funeral arrangements but raised private funds to send the decedent’s remains home to his native land.

If you believe that this project merits consistent financial support from the city, please let your feelings known by contacting members of the City Council either by fax, 310.456.3356, or phone city hall to leave a message 310.456.2489 for Harry Barovsky ext. 334, Tom Hasse, ext. 332, Joan House, ext. 333, Walt Keller, ext. 331, Carolyn Van Horn, ext. 330 — or better yet, speak at the May 10 City Council meeting at 6:30 p.m. at Hughes Research.

Mona Loo, president

Malibu Community Labor Exchange, Inc.

California Nonprofit Corporation, 501c3 charity

Steelhead supporters hammer Rindge Dam

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With the aim of restoring the habitat of the southern steelhead trout, officials from the state parks department and local environmentalists are stepping up their efforts to dismantle Rindge Dam, the cause, they say, for the dwindling population of the trout in Malibu Creek.

But as they have all along, proponents of taking the dam down are meeting with the resistance of Ron Rindge, for whose grandmother, May, the dam is named and who is adamantly opposed to its removal. Residents of Serra Retreat are also skeptical about the proposal, and they question whether the dam’s demolition could even aid in the recovery of the trout, listed as an endangered species in 1997.

A number of government agencies and environmental groups, including those participating in a meeting convened by the Sierra Club last week, say the 100-foot-tall dam threatens the restoration of the southern steelhead because, they contend, it blocks the trout’s migration to spawning and rearing areas upstream.

Each winter, the steelhead, a close relative of the Pacific salmon, return to the creek to spawn. The adults lay their eggs on the creek bottom, and the hatched trout mature in the creek and lagoon before entering the ocean.

At last week’s meeting, Suzanne Goode of the state parks department and Sean Manion of the Malibu Steelhead Task Force, along with leaders of the local Sierra Club chapter, sought to build public support for the removal of the dam. Goode also announced plans for a state parks department-sponsored feasibility study for removing the dam.

“Taking it down is an idea whose time has come,” she said.

Goode said the study will cost approximately $1.5 million and will also explore options other than the dam’s dismantling for improving the trout’s migration.

The dam, decertified in the 1960s, does not hold back any water, according to environmentalists. If it were removed, no additional water would flow through the creek. The dam is filled with approximately 1 million cubic yards of sediment that Goode says should have flowed naturally to the ocean. Holding it back may have contributed to the erosion at Las Tunas Beach, she said.

If, as a result of the study, the parks department determines the dam should be removed, the silt would probably first be hauled out by truck. Alternatively, the dam could be notched five feet each year, allowing the sediment to slowly seep out and flow to the ocean.

Those leading the discussion said the dam’s dismantling would not be all that unusual because communities across the nation are working to remove dams from local waterways.

“The whole issue of dam decommissioning has taken off like a virus,” said Owen Landers, head of the Berkeley-based Natural Rivers Network. Landers said people living downstream from the dam face conditions that are more dangerous than would exist if it were removed. He said the dam, the structural integrity of which has not been inspected since the 1960s, could be toppled by an earthquake, and the sediment it is holding back could flood the creek.

But Landers and the others found themselves facing a skeptical audience that had come to learn about the efforts to take the dam down.

Bernie Resnick, longtime resident of Serra Retreat, questioned whether the dam actually caused the reduction in the trout’s population. He said the fish used to wash up on his front yard during heavy winter storms. But on the four occasions when the creek overflowed since 1968, no trout have washed up out of the creek. He guessed that a growing population inland and their use of herbicides are to be blamed for the steelhead’s decline.

“Every time it rains, the herbicide washes into the creek,” he said.

Other residents pointed out that the steelhead are declining up and down the state of California, not just in Malibu. And effluent from the Tapia Sewage Treatment plant was also identified as a potential cause for the habitat’s fragility.

Manion said, “It’s hard to put a degree on what the cause [for the dwindling population] is, but there’s no question that the dam is a major cause.”

Ron Rindge did not attend the meeting, but he prepared a memo that a friend distributed to those in attendance.

In the memo, Rindge asserted, as he has in the past, that no evidence exists that the steelhead migrated much farther from the site of the dam because of a 10-foot waterfall just north of there. He also said the trout thrived in the creek downstream for more than 35 years after the dam was built.

Rindge also suggested in the memo, as he had previously, the dam’s reservoir be emptied of sediment and the dam be reactivated for flood control purposes.

But Goode said heavy rains and flooding are natural, and the mud and nutrients washed down during heavy rainstorms should flow into the ocean.

“It might not be good if you live in a flood zone, but it’s good for the ecosystem,” she said.

Rindge also appealed to history as a reason to keep the dam. Goode had a response for that argument, as well.

“The importance of the steelhead that have been around for millions of years … is a little more important than maintaining an historic structure that is 70 years old.”

The parks department is actively seeking the funding to perform the feasibility study and, with the help of Sierra Club and other environmental groups, is hoping to raise some of the money privately.

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