Rancho santa fe news 2013 11 29

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THE RANCHO SANTA FE NEWS

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VOL. 9, NO. 23

NOV. 29, 2013

‘Yoga Tree’ to take permanent root in SB By Bianca Kaplanek

SOLANA BEACH — While a neighboring school district tries to eliminate yoga from its curriculum, Solana Beach is adding a yoga-themed sculpture to its public art collection. At the Nov. 13 meeting, City Council voted 4-0, with Tom Campbell absent, to purchase Brennan Hubbell’s “Yoga Tree” for $8,000. “The money is not coming out of funds that would be used to fix pot holes,” Councilman Dave Zito, liaison to the Public Arts Advisory Commission, said. “These are funds that are dedicated for public art uses. It’s a very, very good price. It’s a very well-loved piece.” In February, the city contracted with Hubbell to display “Yoga Tree” as part of its temporary art program. The 12-foot sculpture, Beach City Council members agreed at the Nov. 13 meeting to spend $8,000 to purchase "Yoga Tree," which sits on the corner of Solana a sculpture that was initially on loan to the city for one year, as part of the permanent public art collection. The

San Diego County officials awarded an eight-year contract to American Medical Response to provide emergency medical response services to the San Dieguito Ambulance District, which includes coastal North County, Rancho Santa Fe and parts of Elfin Forest. Photo courtesy AMR

New ambulance Planning board looks for solutions to One Paseo service coming to Rancho Santa Fe TURN TO YOGA TREE ON A18

piece sits — stands, actually — at the corner of Highland Drive and Sun Valley Road. Photo by Bianca Kaplanek

By Bianca Kaplanek

CARMEL VALLEY — Members of the Torrey Pines Community Planning Board received some advice from Mike Aguirre, former city attorney and mayoral candidate, as they prepared to comment on a draft environmental impact report for a mixed-use development at the corner of Del Mar Heights Road and El Camino Real. “You’ve got to understand the nature of the game you’re in,” Aguirre told board members at a Nov. 14 meeting dedicated to discussing One Paseo, a controversial “neighborhood village” that would include retail, residential, office and open space on an approximately 24-acre lot. The planning board is attempting to find a solution to what it believes will be reduced emergency vehicle response times as a result of increased traffic on the already-impacted streets surrounding the proposed project. “You’re going down the road of how to make it work,” Aguirre said. “It’s all good stuff but you have to look at it systematically. … There’s

Mike Aguirre, far right, former city attorney and mayoral candidate, offers advice to the Torrey Pines Community Planning Board during a Nov. 14 meeting dedicated to discussing the One Paseo project in Carmel Valley. Photo by Bianca Kaplanek

no reason to change the zoning. Zoning is there for a reason. If there’s no zoning change, there’s no project.” Aguirre recommended the board use the Public Records Act to obtain all possible information and to “get litigation going early.” “It’s not that these people are bad,” he said. “It’s that they’re very smart. … You are house kitties and they are alley cats. You don’t have to be mean. You don’t have to be nasty. But building something that’s four times

THE MAN WHO FLEW LADY GAGA Gus Calderon, a Carlsbad resident and former commerical pilot, was the man holding the controls of the Volantis during Lady Gaga’s recent album release event. A7

Two Sections, 36 pages Arts & Entertainment . A12 Classifieds . . . . . . . . . . . B12 Comics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . B11 Food & Wine . . . . . . . . . B7 Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A4 Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A14

bigger than what’s allowed doesn’t even make sense.” The site is zoned for about 510,000 square feet of office space. The original proposal called for about 1.8 million gross square feet of development with retail and office buildings, a 150-room hotel and more than 600 multifamily residential units. It features public open spaces, internal roadways and parking structures. Some buildings were proposed to be 10 stories high.

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In response to concerns that the project was too large, the developer, Kilroy Realty Corporation, revised its plans. A recirculated draft EIR with three alternatives is available for public comment until Dec. 10. New options are a 1.4 million-square-foot project with no hotel and smaller dwelling units and commercial spaces, an 817,000square-foot project with no hotel, fewer dwelling units and reduced office and retail space and 80,000 square feet of development that includes a 30,000-square-foot market and 50,000 square feet for retail. Kilroy favors the largest option because it is the only one that maintains the goal of creating “a Main Street in Carmel Valley.” Although the Torrey Pines board, which represents about 7,300 people east of the Del Mar Fairgrounds to Sorrento Valley, has several concerns with the proposal, its main opposition is reduced response times for emergency vehicles due to increased traffic. “Del Mar Heights Road is the lifeline into our fire station,” Dennis Ridz, board chairman, said. “Adding 26,000 daily trips will only cripple it.” Retired fire Capt. Stacy Silverwood, who commanded the nearby Station 24, said the draft EIR “seems to address only the needs of One Paseo.” “My concern is for all first responders having to negotiate around One TURN TO PLANNING ON A18

New vehicles will accompany fire trucks By Tony Cagala

RANCHO SANTA FE — Starting the first of the year, Rancho Santa Fe, along with several other North County coastal cities will have a new 911 emergency medical services provider. In October, San Diego County officials awarded a new eight-year contract to AMR (American Medical Response) to serve the area known as the San Dieguito Ambulance District, or CSA-17. The CSA-17 district covers the communities of Rancho Santa Fe, Encinitas, Del Mar, Solana Beach and parts of Elfin Forest. R u r a l / M e t r o Corporation, the current service provider, AMR and fire agencies have begun talks on making the transition. Deputy Fire Chief Mike Gibbs of the Rancho Santa Fe Fire District said he doesn’t think there will be any challenges when it comes to the switchover, likening it to the one stepping into the footprint of the other. While the RSF Fired Department doesn’t have

any ambulances in its fleet of emergency vehicles, the CSA-17 contract provides the ambulances for the department and the others in the district. Dave Austin, director of administration at AMR and who will serve as the program manager, said they’ll be providing six new ambulances; five of those will be 24-hour service and one a 12-hour ambulance. The ambulances will be staged at Solana Beach Fire Station No. 1, Encinitas Station No. 2 and No. 5, and Rancho Santa Fe Stations 1, 2, and 4. The staging of ambulances will remain the same as it has been under Rural/Metro. “For any type of call that’s medical-related, whether that would be a vehicle accident, any type of rescue, a medical aid there will always be an ambulance attached with a Rancho Santa Fe fire engine,” Gibbs said. In addition to the six ambulances there will also be a seventh on reserve, and will also be housed at the Solana Beach station, Austin added. “The 12-hour car is at Rancho Santa Fe Station No. 2, and that’s a dual paramedic training unit for the fire department,” Austin said. “We move over for the day a firefighter TURN TO AMBULANCE ON A18


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