The Carmel Pine Conepineconearchive.fileburstcdn.com/130607PCfp.pdfCHS grad dies chasing Oklahoma...

1
Have the complete Carmel Pine Cone delivered every Thursday evening to your iPad, laptop, PC or phone. Free subscriptions available at www.carmelpinecone.com The Carmel Pine Cone Volume 99 No. 23 On the Internet: www.carmelpinecone.com Y OUR S OURCE F OR L OCAL N EWS , A RTS AND O PINION S INCE 1915 June 7-13, 2013 PHOTO/PAUL MILLER Clint Eastwood at his property alongside Highway 1 and the Carmel River, which he plans to donate to the Big Sur Land Trust as part of a flood-control project. See WEDDING page 27A COASTAL COMMISSION CRITICIZED FOR HANDS-OFF APPROACH TO MOGUL S WEDDING n Big fine levied, but work wasn’t halted By KELLY NIX THE FAMOUSLY strict California Coastal Commission is getting a flood of criticism after allowing Internet tycoon Sean Parker’s $10 million wedding to proceed in Big Sur last weekend. Parker, 34, married Alexandra Lenas June 1 in an elab- orate ceremony at the Ventana Inn campgrounds in Big Sur. The set for the wedding — which took three months to build — featured stone ruins, waterfalls, bridges and castle walls. But Parker and Ventana Inn never obtained permits for the construction. And while coastal commission staff members were aware of the wedding and its elaborate preparations a month before it happened, they didn’t red tag it. And two days after the ceremony, the commission issued a glossy press release announcing it reached a “settlement” with Parker for $2.5 Photos released by the California Coastal Commission show part of the Ventana campground before (above right) and after (right) elaborate construction work took place over a period of several months for the wedding of Sean Parker and Alexandra Lenas. An artificial pond and rustic stone bridge (above) were among the features built — all without permits. By PAUL MILLER THE DANGER of flooding to homes and business- es along the north side of the Carmel River, and of an economic disaster for the entire Monterey Peninsula from the looming state-imposed water cutback, will be alleviated by a project spearheaded by the Big Sur Land Trust which hinges on a major donation from former Carmel Mayor Clint Eastwood. Eastwood said this week he’ll give more than 80 acres of the old Odello artichoke fields on the east side of Highway 1 to the Big Sur Land Trust so they can be used to channel flood waters safely to the Pacific Ocean. And a big portion of the potable water that’s been historically used on the property for agriculture will be made available to Cal Am and private property owners in Carmel and Carmel Valley, Eastwood said. “I’ve lived here full-time since the 1960s, and I always enjoyed looking at the fields and the open space on this property, and I just want to keep it the same,” Eastwood told The Pine Cone during a tour of the prop- erty Tuesday. At one time approved for more than 80 houses, the highly scenic land lies between Palo Corona Ranch and the Carmel River. In 1995, Eastwood and his former wife, Maggie, bought it from the Odello family, which had farmed the land for years and obtained develop- ment approvals from Monterey County in the 1960s. Two years later, the Eastwoods donated about 50 acres where the subdivision had been approved to the land trust. And now, Eastwood wants to give it the rest. “I bought it to keep the houses from being built,” Eastwood said. “And now the goal is to give the rest to the Big Sur Land Trust, and they’ll keep it out of devel- opment.” More than 190 acre-feet of water has been used every year on the land for grazing and row crops, he added. Of that, 60 will stay on the property so the BSLT can keep some of the land either in farming or grazing. Another 45 acre-feet will be no longer be pumped, so it Eastwood donation, BSLT plan promise flood and water shortage relief See BUTTERFLY page 23A See DONATE page 15A See TORNADOES page 14A See DOGS page 11A Venture capitalist buys Butterfly House for $16.5M By CHRIS COUNTS ONE OF Carmel’s most recognizable homes — named the “Butterfly House” for its distinctive curved roof — sold last week to venture capitalist Kevin Comolli for $16.5 mil- lion. Located at 26320 Scenic Road, the three-bedroom, four- bath residence was designed and built in the early 1950s by architect Frank Wynkoop. Perched on a rocky outcropping overlooking Point Lobos and Carmel Bay, the 3,041-square-foot home had been listed for $19.2 million by Carmel Realty, which described it as “one of only five true oceanfront properties in Carmel.” The construction of the house, which was completed in 1952, caused quite a stir. Some believed it would fall into the ocean. Acquiring the steel columns and beams it needed dur- ing the Korean War also proved to be a challenge. Wynkoop eventually received a letter from President Dwight D. Eisenhower permitting him to use the steel. But he only owned his dream home for a brief time before money woes forced him to sell it. Steven Kahn and his family owned it for more than half a century before Joe Walter bought the house in 2008. Before Walter purchased it for $9.3 million, then Vice President Dick Cheney was rumored to be its buyer. Walter hired Wynkoop’s sons, Thor and Jay, to renovate Neighbors sound off on Carmel Valley dog park, LUAC chair wants EIR By CHRIS COUNTS IF THE sentiment expressed at a June 3 hearing at St. Philip’s Church was any indication, the path to opening an ambitious dog-training business in Carmel Valley will be a difficult one for its owners. More than 150 people packed the church. Not only were many residents vocal in their opposition to the proposed Carmel Canine Sports Center, but Carmel Valley Land Use Advisory Committee chair Jan Brennan suggested an envi- ronmental impact report be done to examine its impacts. The pricey study has doomed or indefinitely delayed many ven- tures. The LUAC opted not to vote on whether to recommend approval or denial of the project. Instead, it continued the hearing to a later date. Great idea, wrong neighborhood? Monterey County planning commissioner Martha Diehl and two partners — her husband, Ken Ecklund, and Ernie Mill — are seeking permission to open the business on 45 acres at 8100 Valley Greens Drive. Located just across the street from Quail Lodge, the center would offer training and agility facilities, a “safe and stress-free” place to let dogs CHS grad dies chasing Oklahoma tornadoes By MARY SCHLEY ‘IF YOU had told me that I was going to risk my life chasing tornadoes, I never would have believed you!” Carl Young, 1986 Carmel High School graduate, told his friend and former classmate, Pacific Grove Police Sgt. Jeff Fenton, during a conversation on Facebook several months ago. “In true honesty, it is about the science, some degree of public service, the challenge, and a flurry of excitement when we intercept one of these forces of nature! Witnessing a tornado is downright AWESOME!” Young, along with colleagues Tim and Paul Samaras, died while pursuing tornadoes during the May 31 outbreak in Oklahoma that killed more than a dozen people and injured more than 100. Young and Tim Samaras — who created TWISTEX, the Tactical Weather Instrumented Sampling of Tornadoes Experiment, and invented the cutting-edge tech- nology that allowed him to gather unprecedented data about

Transcript of The Carmel Pine Conepineconearchive.fileburstcdn.com/130607PCfp.pdfCHS grad dies chasing Oklahoma...

Page 1: The Carmel Pine Conepineconearchive.fileburstcdn.com/130607PCfp.pdfCHS grad dies chasing Oklahoma tornadoes By MARY SCHLEY ‘I F YOU had told me that I was going to risk my life chasing

Have the complete Carmel Pine Cone delivered every Thursday evening to your iPad, laptop, PC or phone. Free subscriptions available at www.carmelpinecone.com

The Carmel Pine ConeVolume 99 No. 23 On the Internet: www.carmelpinecone.com

Y O U R S O U R C E F O R L O C A L N E W S , A R T S A N D O P I N I O N S I N C E 1 9 1 5

June 7-13, 2013

PHOTO/PAUL MILLER

Clint Eastwood at his property alongside Highway 1 and the Carmel River, whichhe plans to donate to the Big Sur Land Trust as part of a flood-control project.

See WEDDING page 27A

COASTAL COMMISSION CRITICIZED FOR

HANDS-OFF APPROACH TO MOGUL’S WEDDING

n Big fine levied, but work wasn’t halted

By KELLY NIX

THE FAMOUSLY strict California Coastal Commissionis getting a flood of criticism after allowing Internet tycoonSean Parker’s $10 million wedding to proceed in Big Surlast weekend.

Parker, 34, married Alexandra Lenas June 1 in an elab-orate ceremony at the Ventana Inn campgrounds in BigSur. The set for the wedding — which took three monthsto build — featured stone ruins, waterfalls, bridges andcastle walls. But Parker and Ventana Inn never obtainedpermits for the construction.

And while coastal commission staff members were

aware of the wedding and its elaborate preparations a monthbefore it happened, they didn’t red tag it. And two days afterthe ceremony, the commission issued a glossy press releaseannouncing it reached a “settlement” with Parker for $2.5

Photos released by the California Coastal Commission show partof the Ventana campground before (above right) and after (right)elaborate construction work took place over a period of severalmonths for the wedding of Sean Parker and Alexandra Lenas. Anartificial pond and rustic stone bridge (above) were among thefeatures built — all without permits.

By PAUL MILLER

THE DANGER of flooding to homes and business-es along the north side of the Carmel River, and of aneconomic disaster for the entire Monterey Peninsulafrom the looming state-imposed water cutback, will bealleviated by a project spearheaded by the Big Sur LandTrust which hinges on a major donation from formerCarmel Mayor Clint Eastwood.

Eastwood said this week he’ll give more than 80acres of the old Odello artichoke fields on the east sideof Highway 1 to the Big Sur Land Trust so they can beused to channel flood waters safely to the PacificOcean. And a big portion of the potable water that’sbeen historically used on the property for agriculturewill be made available to Cal Am and private propertyowners in Carmel and Carmel Valley, Eastwood said.

“I’ve lived here full-time since the 1960s, and Ialways enjoyed looking at the fields and the open spaceon this property, and I just want to keep it the same,”Eastwood told The Pine Cone during a tour of the prop-

erty Tuesday. At one time approved for more than 80 houses, the

highly scenic land lies between Palo Corona Ranch andthe Carmel River. In 1995, Eastwood and his formerwife, Maggie, bought it from the Odello family, whichhad farmed the land for years and obtained develop-ment approvals from Monterey County in the 1960s.Two years later, the Eastwoods donated about 50 acreswhere the subdivision had been approved to the landtrust. And now, Eastwood wants to give it the rest.

“I bought it to keep the houses from being built,”Eastwood said. “And now the goal is to give the rest tothe Big Sur Land Trust, and they’ll keep it out of devel-opment.”

More than 190 acre-feet of water has been usedevery year on the land for grazing and row crops, headded. Of that, 60 will stay on the property so the BSLTcan keep some of the land either in farming or grazing.Another 45 acre-feet will be no longer be pumped, so it

Eastwood donation, BSLT plan promise flood and water shortage relief

See BUTTERFLY page 23A

See DONATE page 15A

See TORNADOES page 14A

See DOGS page 11A

Venture capitalist buys Butterfly House for $16.5MBy CHRIS COUNTS

ONE OF Carmel’s most recognizable homes — namedthe “Butterfly House” for its distinctive curved roof — soldlast week to venture capitalist Kevin Comolli for $16.5 mil-lion.

Located at 26320 Scenic Road, the three-bedroom, four-bath residence was designed and built in the early 1950s byarchitect Frank Wynkoop.

Perched on a rocky outcropping overlooking Point Lobosand Carmel Bay, the 3,041-square-foot home had been listedfor $19.2 million by Carmel Realty, which described it as“one of only five true oceanfront properties in Carmel.”

The construction of the house, which was completed in

1952, caused quite a stir. Some believed it would fall into theocean. Acquiring the steel columns and beams it needed dur-ing the Korean War also proved to be a challenge. Wynkoopeventually received a letter from President Dwight D.Eisenhower permitting him to use the steel. But he onlyowned his dream home for a brief time before money woesforced him to sell it.

Steven Kahn and his family owned it for more than half acentury before Joe Walter bought the house in 2008. BeforeWalter purchased it for $9.3 million, then Vice PresidentDick Cheney was rumored to be its buyer.

Walter hired Wynkoop’s sons, Thor and Jay, to renovate

Neighbors sound off onCarmel Valley dog park,LUAC chair wants EIR

By CHRIS COUNTS

IF THE sentiment expressed at a June 3 hearing at St.Philip’s Church was any indication, the path to opening anambitious dog-training business in Carmel Valley will be adifficult one for its owners.

More than 150 people packed the church. Not only weremany residents vocal in their opposition to the proposedCarmel Canine Sports Center, but Carmel Valley Land UseAdvisory Committee chair Jan Brennan suggested an envi-ronmental impact report be done to examine its impacts. Thepricey study has doomed or indefinitely delayed many ven-tures.

The LUAC opted not to vote on whether to recommendapproval or denial of the project. Instead, it continued thehearing to a later date.

Great idea, wrong neighborhood?Monterey County planning commissioner Martha Diehl

and two partners — her husband, Ken Ecklund, and ErnieMill — are seeking permission to open the business on 45acres at 8100 Valley Greens Drive. Located just across thestreet from Quail Lodge, the center would offer training andagility facilities, a “safe and stress-free” place to let dogs

CHS grad dies chasingOklahoma tornadoes

By MARY SCHLEY

‘IF YOU had told me that I was going to risk my lifechasing tornadoes, I never would have believed you!” CarlYoung, 1986 Carmel High School graduate, told his friendand former classmate, Pacific Grove Police Sgt. Jeff Fenton,during a conversation on Facebook several months ago. “Intrue honesty, it is about the science, some degree of publicservice, the challenge, and a flurry of excitement when weintercept one of these forces of nature! Witnessing a tornadois downright AWESOME!”

Young, along with colleagues Tim and Paul Samaras, diedwhile pursuing tornadoes during the May 31 outbreak inOklahoma that killed more than a dozen people and injuredmore than 100. Young and Tim Samaras — who createdTWISTEX, the Tactical Weather Instrumented Sampling ofTornadoes Experiment, and invented the cutting-edge tech-nology that allowed him to gather unprecedented data about