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As another busy summer looms, Laguna Beach braces for the impacts of tourists
As another busy summer looms, Laguna Beach braces for the impacts of tourists

Los Angeles Times

time19-04-2025

  • Business
  • Los Angeles Times

As another busy summer looms, Laguna Beach braces for the impacts of tourists

Laguna Beach is gearing up early in preparation for an anticipated surge in visitors after traffic, trash and other impacts resulted in a summer of discontent for residents last year. City officials addressed the public at a town hall meeting Thursday evening, the City Council chambers filled with residents interested in hearing — and contributing to — the new plan of action. 'I think we started our messaging last year a little too late,' City Manager Dave Kiff said at the outset of the meeting. '... As a result, we were probably not as prepared as we would have liked to have been for the visitors last year.' Kiff acknowledged limitations to the city's ability to lessen the impacts. He noted that parking rates — while increased periodically — cannot 'charge what the market will bear' because of controls in place by ordinance and the Coastal Commission. Beach access is also protected by the Coastal Act and the city's local coastal program. 'We rely on visitors — hotel bed tax, parking revenue, sales taxes to serve the residents,' Kiff said. 'I wish that were different, but it is a big chunk of our money. It's not a majority, but it is a significant chunk of our revenues that we use to operate the city.' From a traffic perspective, city officials are hopeful that an earlier start for the Summer Breeze trolley route will pay dividends. Trolleys will begin busing in people from a free peripheral parking lot at 16355 Laguna Canyon Road near the 405 Freeway on May 23, Kiff said. Kiff also suggested that the messaging from Visit Laguna Beach needed to take a different approach. John Zegowitz, who is assisting the organization with a rebrand and awareness campaign, spoke to a plan to connect tourists to the local lifestyle. Zegowitz said the mission will include 'leading guests' to engage with the area in a way that is aligned with and respectful of the local community and the environment. Community input is being sought, including through a resident survey on tourism impacts currently being circulated on the city website. Zegowitz shared some of the comments fielded so far, saying, 'Obviously, residents are feeling that their world and quality of life is compromised, right, overrun by those who just don't care. Visitors tend to lack understanding or respect for the community's values, leading to trash, traffic, noise, tensions and damage to already challenged environmental resources.' The lodging establishments, who pay a self-assessment to help fund tourism-related initiatives through the tourism marketing district, recognize the environment and culture of Laguna Beach are their 'greatest amenity,' Zegowitz said. 'They want to be part of protecting it, and they want to make sure that it remains that beautiful amenity of theirs,' Zegowitz said. 'Curating and educating the right kind of visitor to raise the quality and experience for guests and the community alike by inspiring protection of what makes Laguna unique, that is something that we're really going to focus on, as well. The opportunity is to connect a different mindset by better representing Laguna as an environmentally- and creatively-driven place. If we can keep pulling those things forward, we're pulling our culture forward.' Laguna Beach police officers made 284 arrests for driving under the influence of alcohol or drugs last year, Police Chief Jeff Calvert said. In January, the police department began notifying businesses when a DUI arrest could be connected to the alcohol-serving establishment. 'Part of the DUI arrest, the officers ask, 'Where did you last drink?'' Calvert said. 'We have taken that information, and we're actually sending a notification letter to the business. The owners don't know what they don't know. Well, now they know. We're telling them the date and time of arrest, and also, the blood-alcohol level of the person that was arrested.' The 284 DUI arrests represent a 21% increase from 2023, said Calvert, who added that 238 of the arrestees were visitors. Of the notifications sent out following those arrests, 61 of the 83 letters were delivered to local businesses. Other vehicle-related figures included over 22,000 parking tickets, close to 1,700 speeding infractions, and 340 loud exhaust citations. Additional quality-of-life matters saw the department write 649 citations for drinking in public, 236 for dogs off a leash, 200 for smoking in public. Laguna Beach will have nine park rangers in the field to deal with quality-of-life issues this summer, Calvert said. The city operated with seven park rangers last year. The program began in 2022. Calvert expects to have a total of five motor officers — including a traffic sergeant — within four to six months. City messaging will strike a different chord than that of Visit Laguna Beach, Kiff said, describing it as 'more enforcement-oriented.' 'Heavier on the don't and no's,' Kiff said. 'There'll still be some stewardship messaging, but we'll continue to start publicizing numbers of folks who get ticketed. … I think people need to know it's happening, but you'll see this, especially on social media.'

Plasticine men and giant goddess women: why Ken Kiff's brilliant, bizarre art is getting a second look
Plasticine men and giant goddess women: why Ken Kiff's brilliant, bizarre art is getting a second look

The Guardian

time03-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

Plasticine men and giant goddess women: why Ken Kiff's brilliant, bizarre art is getting a second look

Ken Kiff was a brilliant odd one out in post-second world war British painting. In works that sing with colour and texture, he crafted wibbly-wobbly fables in which eyes and noses slide around faces, animals tower over mountains and dreaming, desiring, questing men are rendered poignantly goofy. Looking to modernist greats such as Klee and Miró, Kiff made colour a defining principle, mixing abstraction with recurring symbols culled from a private mythology that included birds, salamanders, mountains, water, goddess-like women and the 'Little Man', a diminutive chap with a bendy body vulnerable as plasticine, who walks a lonely path. His was a bombast-free take on life's agony and ecstasy, as idiosyncratic as it is relatable and human. When Kiff died aged 65 in 2001, his reputation was that of a bygone artist's artist, whose heartfelt dedication to his medium and the creative process was far removed from the arch, brash conceptual output of the then-dominant YBAs. Now, though, appreciation of his prolifically produced, personal work is growing afresh. 'He speaks to a younger generation, partly in terms of his mix of abstraction and figuration,' says Ella-Rose Harrison, the director of Hales Gallery, where a new exhibition looks back to his 18 months from 1992 to 1993 as 'associate artist' in residence at London's National Gallery. 'There's also a different engagement with his themes,' she adds, 'bringing the mythical into the everyday, or psychologically charged space.' Kiff was the second artist the National Gallery invited to respond to its art historical giants and it was a prestigious gig. Paula Rego was the first and Kiff was followed by Peter Blake. Yet he had reservations. 'He wasn't pro-institutions,' says Kiff's daughter, Anna. 'He was acutely aware it was a very masculine environment. He was from a working-class background and it wasn't his comfort zone.' For an artist who gloried in colour, the National Gallery's collection was also very brown. Working on site in a basement studio with his huge collection of cassettes playing everything from baroque harpsichord to jazz, Kiff went in search of what he called 'the essence' of paintings. He didn't make many sketches there, but rather 'looked intensely at paintings over and over and over', Anna explains. What drew him to work by artists including Rubens, Van Gogh, Rembrandt, Pisanello or Giovanni di Paolo is always fresh and surprising. He had a particular thing for Rubens' trees. He paid attention to art's physicality, be it the wood something was painted on or a touch of gold pigment. A splash of colour from a muddy Renaissance landscape might inspire the dominant element in his own work. At times, his paintings adhere closely to the originals, adapting themes and figures that chimed with his own mythologies. John the Baptist, the hunter Saint Eustace or the hermit Saint Jerome might be loftier cousins of Kiff's lonely traveller. At others, his paintings seem to upend the assumptions of the past, as with Woman Watching a Murder, inspired by Bellini's brutal all-male scene The Assassination of Saint Peter Martyr. Kiff takes the blue from a scrap of sky in Bellini's otherwise washed-out woodland setting to create an azure vision, where a tiny tussling couple are watched by a giant woman, sad and resigned. Kiff later wrote that he approached the National Gallery project as he did all his work, as 'many interlocking thoughts' which were visual not verbal. 'A painting doesn't become a painting because it conforms to rules of what a painting should be,' he continued, 'but because the 'thought' or 'understanding' has happened.' Ken Kiff: The National Gallery Project is at Hales Gallery, London, to 24 May White Tree, Large Face, 1990-1996Kiff has left the hardboard he painted on visible here. Anna recalls that he found it in keeping with 'the quality of darkness, the browns you find in a lot of old master painting'. The tree was inspired by Rubens but the face – literally falling apart – belongs to the modern world. Woman Watching a Murder, 1996This meditation in blue shows how Kiff used colour as a structuring principle, with its echoing forms and aqua shades. It also underlines his interest in the bleed between representation and abstraction, with the inky midnight morass in the background suggesting a cave or intangible dark thoughts. Sign up to Inside Saturday The only way to get a look behind the scenes of the Saturday magazine. Sign up to get the inside story from our top writers as well as all the must-read articles and columns, delivered to your inbox every weekend. after newsletter promotion After Giovanni di Paolo, 1992-1993This is one of Kiff's paintings that sticks closely to its source inspiration, Giovanni di Paolo's Saint John the Baptist Retiring to the Desert. Its elements are close to those he was already exploring in his work, from the giant flowers or huge mountains dwarfing the isolated traveller to jarring shifts in scale. Master of St Giles, 1994In addition to paintings, Kiff also produced prints inspired by his time at the National Gallery, such as this woodcut teeming with earthy life that looked to works by an anonymous 16th-century artist known for depicting Saint Giles's friendship with a deer. 'This print encompasses so many things he found important,' says Anna, 'including our relationship to the environment.' Castle Rising from the Sea, 1993This etching showcases Kiff's renowned vivid palette, and speaks to the creative process, with its castle born from the waters of the sea. The sun is a recurring symbol in his work with connotations of enlightenment or inspiration. This one's no Apollo, though; it crawls along recalling one of Kiff's other favourite tropes: the salamander.

Laguna's ‘alternative sleeping location' for homeless championed by all, but officials would welcome help
Laguna's ‘alternative sleeping location' for homeless championed by all, but officials would welcome help

Los Angeles Times

time02-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Los Angeles Times

Laguna's ‘alternative sleeping location' for homeless championed by all, but officials would welcome help

Good morning. It's Wednesday, April 2. I'm Carol Cormaci, bringing you this week's TimesOC newsletter with a look at some of the latest local news and events from around the county. One of the stories filed last week that caught my eye was written by my Daily Pilot colleague Andrew Turner, whose beat includes the city of Laguna Beach. I've become accustomed to reading stories about city councils who have had their fill of complaints about homeless individuals on the streets and passing laws in hopes of clearing them out of view. But Turner's report about last week's meeting of the Laguna Beach City Council gave me the impression the small community has not only been taking a more compassionate approach, but is willing to continue on that path, at least for the time being. They'd just appreciate some help from some neighboring cities who seem to be shooing homeless people in the direction of Laguna Canyon where the city-funded and supported 'alternative sleeping location' that is referred to by its acronym, ASL, is set up. According to the article, community members crowded into Laguna Beach City Hall and waited for three hours until a discussion about whether or not to keep operating the ASL past June 30, the end of the city's fiscal year, came up on the City Council's agenda. Residents urged the City Council to continue the services offered at the site. The staff report for the discussion offered a handful of options. City Manager Dave Kiff received a round of applause from a relieved audience when he said he would not recommend the closing of the ASL. But Kiff tempered his remarks that night by acknowledging hard decisions have to be made when budgeting for each year, and it was apparent that shelter and services the city offers to the homeless (a place people can sleep at night, eat and take showers during the daytime, among those offerings) was drawing more unhoused individuals to Laguna., 'I don't think our shelter resources need to be the region's resources,' Kiff said. 'We've already stepped up well, as Laguna knows. We're home to a youth shelter, the Friendship Shelter and the ASL, which is over 70 beds, if my count is correct, and I worry that we genuinely can't afford to be anything but Laguna-focused in the long term. 'Why have this discussion now? I think part of our approach today is to be prepared for something we think is likely going to happen, and that is an increase of arrivals of unhoused residents from other areas that are heavier on enforcement [of anti-camping ordinances] than we are, and who don't have a shelter or day program services.' Punctuating Kiff's assertion, Police Chief Jeff Calvert said the city's park rangers have documented over 50 new homeless individuals in the community since October. And, he told the council, his department had learned through interviews that neighboring cities, 'rehabilitation centers, social service agencies and organizations like City Net and Telecare,' were sending homeless to Laguna Beach. 'Word of our ASL services is clearly spreading, leading to an influx of homeless individuals from surrounding surge is placing a strain on our resources.' Jeremy Frimond, an assistant to the city manager, noted that running the ASL could more than double. 'Funding is uncertain, so we were not planning on federal funding coming through in the ways that it has the past several years,' he said. As the discussion continued, it became clear that the City Council would extend the ASL past June 30. An ad hoc committee will work with staff to refine homeless services. But it was clear the council wants other communities to step up and share the burden. 'Nobody else is carrying any water on this in south [Orange] County,' Councilman Bob Whalen said. 'They haven't for years, for decades it's been all us, but the fact that it's all us and the fact that others aren't doing their fair share shouldn't change the outcome on what we should continue to do.' For readers who'd like more information, Turner's full report on the meeting can be found here. The city staff report for the agenda item is available at the city's website. • In case you hadn't heard, someone bought the winning Powerball ticket in Saturday's drawing at the 7-Eleven at 763 N. Euclid St. in Anaheim. The prize is estimated at approximately $515 million. • In recognition of the fact Anaheim is home to more than 20,000 people who identify as Middle Eastern or North African, the City Council approved a resolution at its March 25 meeting endorsing a bill working its way through the state Legislature, the the MENA Inclusion Act. Also known as Assembly Bill 91, it would require state and local agencies, beginning in 2027, to include separate categories for major Middle Eastern and North African groups currently categorized as 'white' in data reports. • A show called Symphony of Flowers that's expected to soon bathe a portion of Huntington Beach Central Park East with more than 500,000 low-emitting LED lights and 100,000 luminous flowers to be viewed by ticket-holding guests, has raised the ire of community members and conservationists. Concerned citizens banded together as Protect Huntingon Beach last week sued the city, saying it violated the California Environmental Quality Act when the City Council approved a license for Flowers of the Sky, LLC to produce the show on Thursdays through Sundays for about six months. • A ribbon-cutting ceremony was held March 20 for the $32.9-million Pelican Harbor senior apartments complex in Huntington Beach for low-income and formerly homeless seniors who are at least 62 years old. It's a joint venture of Irvine-based Jamboree Housing Corporation and USA Properties Fund, in partnership with the city of Huntington Beach and County of Orange. • Several municipalities have been grappling in recent years on how to best to regulate group and sober-living homes in residential neighborhoods seen by community members as public nuisances. Last week, the Mission Viejo City Council gave its approval to a new ordinance to significantly help city officials regulate the homes. • FEMA and state grant funding to the tune of $334,000 has been secured by the city of Laguna Beach that will be used to mitigate wildfire hazards in Hobo and Diamond canyons, where combustible vegetation abounds. • Twice in less than a week, Huntington Beach city-owned vehicles were involved in crashes. In the first case, a police officer behind the wheel of a marked patrol car was struck by a black Kia sedan while driving near Beach Boulevard and Yorktown Avenue March 23 at around 10:15 p.m. In the other incident, a city employee was hospitalized with minor injuries last Wednesday after a public works truck was struck by a vehicle that reportedly ran a red light at Goldenwest Street and Slater Avenue. • Tragedy struck in Irvine last Thursday afternoon when a middle-schooler died at the home of an acquaintance of a self-inflicted gunshot. By Friday, Irvine resident Christian Douglas Yeager, 56, had been booked on suspicion of criminal storage of a firearm and child endangerment in connection with the 13-year-old's death. A police spokesperson said the gun used in the shooting belonged to Yeager, who had not properly secured it. He was not home at the time of the incident, but an adult female family member was there. • After discovering his home surveillance camera had stills someone stealing his keys from his house, a man whose wallet and cellphone had been taken from his car while he surfed in Newport Beach one day last August recently helped police bust a ring of criminals who had been preying on surfers up and down the coast, knowing they would be out in the water. • A Fullerton-based contractor who handled taxpayer-funded construction projects in Newport Beach, Anaheim, San Clemente and other cities in multiple counties is facing wage theft allegations. The owner of the company has also been charged with 14 additional felony counts, including intent to evade taxes and falsifying official documents. • A look at some of the local public safety briefs reported by City News Service over the past few days: — The trial of Jeffrey Olsen, a Newport Beach doctor charged with prescribing and distributing large amounts of unnecessary drugs, is underway. This has been a long saga; in 2020, during the pandemic, U.S. District Judge Cormac Carney dismissed Olsen 's 34-count indictment, a ruling that was overturned in April 2021 by the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals. — Police this week asked for the public's help tracking down a gunman who on Sunday night killed a 30-year-old transient on the 14000 block of Goldenwest Street, Westminster. Anyone with information was asked to call police at (714) 548-3767. — A 23-year-old pedestrian was struck by two vehicles and killed at around 2 a.m. Monday on southbound side of the Santa Ana (5) Freeway in Anaheim, just north of Lincoln Avenue. A witness reported that a white truck hit the pedestrian in middle lanes, the CHP said. It was learned later that a black Honda Civic also hit the pedestrian. — Two teenage boys on an electric scooter were critically injured yesterday afternoon when they were struck by a car on Hewes Street in Orange. They were reportedly riding southbound in the northbound lanes when they collided with a northbound Tesla. The boys are in critical condition at a hospital but expected to survive. • Paul Anderson, a reporter with City News Service, reported Monday the retirement of Scott Sanders, the attorney with the O.C. public defender's office who brought to light the O.C. Sheriff's Department's illegal use of jailhouse informants in criminal cases. • Opening Day did not go well for the Angels last Thursday, when they fell 1-8 to the White Sox. It was their 11th season-opening loss in 12 years. But by the weekend things started looking up for the Halos, as they beat the White Sox on Saturday and Sunday. Then, on Monday night they enjoyed a 5-4 win over the St. Louis Cardinals. Last night (after this newsletter's deadline) former Chicago Cub Kyle Hendricks, a graduate of Capistrano Valley High, was scheduled to make his Angels debut. • Following a longtime tradition, the sports reporters at the Daily Pilot voted last week on their post-season Girls' Water Polo Dream Team. Gabby Alexson, who played center for Newport Harbor High, took top honors as Player of the Year while Katie Teets was named Coach of the Year for her work with the Laguna Beach High team. Their stories, plus a list of every other member of the Dream Team can be found here. • Ben McCullough's family worried they would soon lose him because one of the 75-year-old's heart valves didn't close tightly enough and he had been in failing health for months. But, two doctors who constructed a new-to-the-market EVOQUE replacement heart valve devised by Edwards Lifesciences Corp. in Irvine saved his life in December. The Huntington Beach resident was invited to take a tour of the corporation's building last week, where he was thrilled to be surprised by a visit from the two heart surgeons who operated on him, Brian Kolski and Jeffrey Taylor. The complete story on the reunion can be found here. • The Mesa Water Education Center opened in January, offering more than 20 hands-on stops and stations specially tailored for fifth-graders learning about the earth's climate, weather systems and the water cycle. Mesa Water Board President Marice H. DePasquale told the Daily Pilot for this interesting feature story that more needs to be done to recruit young people by conveying the breadth of water industry jobs. •. The Yorba Linda Street Legacy program is giving local residents the chance to own a piece of the city's heritage, or their own personal history in town, by purchasing a decommissioned street name sign for $30. To apply for one, visit Yorba Linda's website. • Knott's Berry Farm's Boysenberry Festival is marking its 10th year celebrating the fruit that launched Knott's in 1920. It opened Friday and will run daily through April 27. Visitors will find food, merchandise entertainment an arts and crafts show and more, reports TimesOC in this feature about the event. • Those who appreciate the works of California Impressionist artists may want to schedule a trip this spring to the art gallery at San Clemente's Casa Romantica, where masterworks from the James Irvine Swinden Family Collection are on display. On the exhibit's first day, Swinden noted the collection is a testimony to the taste of his mother, Joan Irvine Smith, who began collecting California Impressionist art in the early 1990s. 'Gems of California Impressionism' is on view through June 15. Hours are from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday and from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Friday through Sunday. General admission is $8; free on the first Sunday of every month. Until next week,Carol I appreciate your help in making this the best newsletter it can be. Please send news tips, your memory of life in O.C. (photos welcome!) or comments to

Laguna Beach community shows support for existing homeless shelter in canyon
Laguna Beach community shows support for existing homeless shelter in canyon

Los Angeles Times

time28-03-2025

  • General
  • Los Angeles Times

Laguna Beach community shows support for existing homeless shelter in canyon

Laguna Beach is taking a long look at the future of its homeless services, and at least for now, the alternative sleeping location in the canyon owned and funded by the city will continue to run as it has. A large crowd inside City Council chambers waited nearly three hours for the topic to come up on the agenda, one that at first blush left the door open for the closure of the shelter. City Manager Dave Kiff got out in front of the discussion, saying he would not be recommending closing the alternative sleeping location (ASL) — located at 20652 Laguna Canyon Road — resulting in a round of applause just before the council went to break. When the panel returned, though, Kiff opened the item by saying it was one of several tough discussions the community could expect to have as the city sorts out its priorities ahead of the next fiscal year. 'I don't think our shelter resources need to be the region's resources,' Kiff said. 'We've already stepped up well, as Laguna knows. We're home to a youth shelter, the Friendship Shelter and the ASL, which is over 70 beds, if my count is correct, and I worry that we genuinely can't afford to be anything but Laguna-focused in the long term. 'Why have this discussion now? I think part of our approach today is to be prepared for something we think is likely going to happen, and that is an increase of arrivals of unhoused residents from other areas that are heavier on enforcement [of anti-camping ordinances] than we are, and who don't have a shelter or day program services.' Kiff recommended sunsetting the daytime program at the ASL, which operates between noon and 3 p.m. daily. During that time, individuals not enrolled in the overnight program can have immediate needs met, including food, laundry and a shower. They can also receive case management services. Jeremy Frimond, an assistant to the city manager, said the program serves an average of about 13 people a day. The daytime program was introduced in February 2019, discontinued because of the coronavirus pandemic, and then brought back in 2023. Approximately 30 new participants that were not enrolled in the overnight program used the daytime services during the last quarter of 2024 and the first quarter of 2025, among the lowest of any quarter since the program's inception. Frimond anticipated that expenses would increase. 'Funding is uncertain, so we were not planning on federal funding coming through in the ways that it has the past several years,' he said, suggesting the cost of the daytime program could go from $100,000 to more than $250,000. Data shown in a presentation noted the city saw an increase in unsheltered individuals in the most recent Point-In-Time counts, from 28 in 2022 to 46 in 2024. 'It's staff's opinion that that's an overstated number for this community,' Frimond said. 'When we spoke to the county about it, they said they did a lot of estimating, and there is a margin of error across the entire county on that.' The City Council voted unanimously to continue operating the ASL in its current capacity beyond June 30. It also authorized staff to extend the contract with Friendship Shelter, which operates the facility, for up to six months. The ASL has been operating with 30 beds and five emergency beds for those enrolled in the overnight program. Additionally, the council directed staff to complete a homeless needs assessment within 60 days, to bring back criteria for placing people in the ASL, and to request information regarding the operation of the shelter. Mayor Alex Rounaghi and Councilwoman Sue Kempf will also be part of an ad hoc committee to work with staff on issues related to homeless services. There was ample frustration from the council that more is not being done by neighboring cities in the southern part of Orange County to address homelessness. 'So far, we're pulling it off, but we have more needs now,' said Kempf, tackling the issue from a financial standpoint. 'If you expect every city to do something about this, it's not going to happen, and that's what we've seen happen. It doesn't happen, except for here. It frustrates me to no end that the county is not helping us more with this because they can have wraparound services, and they can provide much more robust support than we can in our little town.' Kempf noted that keeping the community safe means keeping it safe on multiple fronts. Kiff brought up a couple of costs that need to be accounted for: fuel modification and utility undergrounding for fire safety. Police Chief Jeff Calvert said the city's park rangers have documented over 50 new homeless individuals in the community since October. 'Through interviews, we've learned that many of these individuals were directed to our ASL by neighboring cities, rehabilitation centers, social service agencies and organizations like City Net and Telecare,' Calvert said. 'Word of our ASL services is clearly spreading, leading to an influx of homeless individuals from surrounding areas. Furthermore, since the Grants Pass [v. Johnson] ruling, both proactive and reactive enforcement calls have increased by 54% at the ASL, and over 30% in the surrounding area. This surge is placing a strain on our resources.' Mia Ferreira, director of services for Friendship Shelter, pointed to data presented by city staff to state that the discussion was being built around a hypothetical scenario. 'If people are coming because of Grants Pass, or coming in general because people are telling them to come here, we would see an increase in numbers,' Ferreira said. 'We're not seeing an increase in numbers. I just want to dispel that myth here.' Dawn Price, executive director of Friendship Shelter, focused on the impact of the ASL in helping to transition people into housing. 'I want you to remember we've housed hundreds of people during the life of the ASL,' Price said. 'Since 2019 alone, it's been almost 300, but we housed people before that, too. …Last year, we achieved an unbelievable statistic in that 100% of the people that we had in our housing stayed in our housing that whole year. We are wrapping services around so tightly that we are losing very few people.' Councilwoman Hallie Jones said the city shouldn't have to make a choice between compassion and community safety. 'I think we're developing a little bit of a false and binary choice between being safe and really treating our most vulnerable community members with dignity and respect and giving them the resources that they need,' Jones said. 'I don't think that's a choice we have to make. I think we get to do both.' Laguna Beach also contracts for homeless services with Be Well OC. That contract is set to expire in September, though city staff expect to be in front of the council concerning the feasibility of an extension in May. Councilman Bob Whalen said that while the city will have to make decisions about what to fund, he had a 'gut' feeling that homeless services needed to remain on the list. 'Nobody else is carrying any water on this in south [Orange] County,' Whalen said. 'They haven't for years, for decades it's been all us, but the fact that it's all us and the fact that others aren't doing their fair share shouldn't change the outcome on what we should continue to do.' Mayor Alex Rounaghi hoped to bring leadership in surrounding communities to the table. 'We need to solve homelessness. We could put our whole general fund into this issue, and we would not make a dent,' Rounaghi said. 'What we really need is regional collaboration. I think it's time to bring all the south [Orange] County mayors and city managers here — in this room, in Laguna Beach — and let's just have a conversation about how they can play a role in helping to collaborate.'

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