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ADA Title Iii
AGENDA
TEMECULA CITY COUNCIL
A REGULAR MEETING
CITY COUNCIL CHAMBERS
43200 BUSINESS PARK DRIVE
APRIL 24, 2001 - 7:00 P.M.
At approximately 9:45 P.M., the City Council will determine which of the remaining agenda items
can be considered and acted upon prior to 10:00 P.M. and may continue all other items on which
additional time is required until a future meeting. All meetings are scheduled to end at 10:00 P.M.
5:00 P.M. - Closed Session of the City Council pursuant to Government Code
Sections:
1. Conference with City Attorney and legal counsel pursuant to Government
Code Section 54956.9(a) with respect to one matter of existing litigation involving the
City. The following case will be discussed: 1) S-P Murdy v. Pedersen et al.
2. Conference with City Attorney and legal counsel pursuant to Government
Code Section 54956.9(b)(1) with respect to one matter of potential litigation. With
respect to such matter, the City Attorney has determined that a point has been
reached where there is a significant exposure to litigation involving the City based on
existing facts and circumstances and the City will decide whether to initiate litigation.
Public Information concerning existing litigation between the City and various parties
may be acquired by reviewing the public documents held by the City Clerk.
CALL TO ORDER:
Prelude Music:
Invocation:
Flag Salute:
ROLL CALL:
Mayor Jeff Comerchero
Margaret Bird
Pastor Koger of Hope Lutheran
Councilman Pratt
Naggar, Pratt, Roberts, Stone, Comerchero
Next in Order:
Ordinance: No. 2001-06
Resolution: No. 2001-25
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PRESENTATIONS/PROCLAMATIONS
Relay For Life Presentation and Proclamation
2001 National Crime Victims' Rights Week Proclamation
Help Make Great Strides to Cure Cystic Fibrosis Proclamation
PUBLIC COMMENTS
A total of 30 minutes is provided so members of the public may address the Council on
items that appear within the Consent Calendar or ones that are not listed on the agenda.
Speakers are limited to two (2) minutes each. If you desire to speak to the Council on
an item which is listed on the Consent Calendar or a matter not listed on the agenda, a
pink "Request to Speak" form should be filled out and filed with the City Clerk.
When you are called to speak, please come forward and state your name for the record.
For all Public Hearing or Council Business matters on the agenda, a "Request to
Speak" form must be filed with the City Clerk prior to the Council addressing that item.
There is a five (5) minute time limit for individual speakers.
CITY COUNCIL REPORTS
Reports by the members of the City Council on matters not on the agenda will be made
at this time. A total, not to exceed, ten (10) minutes will be devoted to these reports.
CONSENT CALENDAR
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC
All matters listed under Consent Calendar are considered to be routine and all will
be enacted by one roll call vote. There will be no discussion of these items unless
Members of the City Council request specific items be removed from the Consent
Calendar for separate action.
Standard Ordinance and Resolution Adoption Procedure
RECOMMENDATION:
1.1 Motion to waive the reading of the text of all ordinances and resolutions included in the
agenda.
2
Minutes
RECOMMENDATION:
2.1 Approve the minutes of January 23, 2001.
Resolution Approving List of Demapd~
RECOMMENDATION:
3.1 Adopt a resolution entitled:
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RESOLUTION NO. 01-
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
TEMECULA ALLOWING CERTAIN CLAIMS AND DEMANDS
AS SET FORTH IN EXHIBIT A
4
Request for Le,qislative Nominations for Grant Funding for the Children's Museum and the
Community Theater
RECOMMENDATION:
4.1 Adopt a resolution entitled:
RESOLUTION NO. 01-
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
TEMECULA REQUESTING THE NOMINATION OF THE
TEMECULA CHILDREN'S MUSEUM PROJECT BY OUR STATE
LEGISLATOR FOR AN URBAN RECREATION AND
CULTURAL CENTERS GRANT THROUGH THE SAFE
NEIGHBORHOOD PARKS, CLEAN WATER, CLEAN AIR, AND
COASTAL PROTECTION BOND ACT OF 2000
4.2 Adopt a resolution entitled:
RESOLUTION NO. 01-
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
TEMECULA REQUESTING THE NOMINATION OF THE
TEMECULA COMMUNITY THEATER PROJECT BY OUR
STATE LEGISLATOR FOR AN URBAN RECREATION AND
CULTURAL CENTERS GRANT THROUGH THE SAFE
NEIGHBORHOOD PARKS, CLEAN WATER, CLEAN AIR, AND
COASTAL PROTECTION BOND ACT OF 2000
5 Approval of Funds for Plan Review Services with Van Dorpe Chou and Associates
6
RECOMMENDATION:
5.1 Approve an expenditure in an amount not to exceed $35,000 for Plan Check
Services with Van Dorpe Chou Associates.
Approval of the Plans and Specifications and authorization to solicit Construction Bids for
the Pavement Management System - Citywide - FY2000-2001 - Proiect No. PW00-30
RECOMMENDATION:
6.1
Approve the Construction Plans and Specifications and authorize the Department of
Public Works to solicit construction bids for the Pavement Management System -
Citywide - FY2000-2001 - Project No. PW00-30.
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7 Approval of the Plans and Specifications and authorization to solicit Construction Bids for
Citywide Asphalt Concrete Repairs for FY2000-2001 - Proiect No. PW01-01
RECOMMENDATION:
7.1
Approve the Construction Plans and Specifications and authorize the Department of
Public Works to solicit construction bids for Citywide asphalt concrete repairs for
FY2000-2001 - Project No. PW01-01.
8
Reimbursement ARreement between Rancho California Water District and the City of
Temecula for Mar,qarita Road Wideninq from Plo Pico Road to Dartolo - Proiect No.
PW99-01
RECOMMENDATION:
8.1
Approve the Reimbursement Agreement between Rancho California Water District
(RCWD) and the City of Temecula for the Margarita Road Widening from Plo Pico
Road to Dartolo - Project No. PW99-01.
9
10
Award of Construction Contract for the Pavement Manaqement System - Proiect No.
PW99-17 - Jefferson Avenue Pavement Rehabilitation
RECOMMENDATION:
9.1
Award a contract for the Pavement Management System - Project No. PW99-17 -
Jefferson Avenue Pavement Rehabilitation - to R.J. Noble Company for
$603,425.00 and authorize the City Manager to execute the contract;
9.2 Authorize the City Manager to approve change orders not to exceed the
contingency amount of $60,342.50 which is equal to 10% of the contract amount.
Meanderinq Sidewalk along North General Kearny Road for Christ the Vine Lutheran
Church Project (LD00-210GR) - (located south of North General Kearny Road
approximately 325 feet east of the Marqarita Road and North General Kearny
centerline intersection
RECOMMENDATION:
10.1 Accept a meandering sidewalk easement along North General Kearny Road for
public use only.
11 Consideration of sponsorship request for the Temecula Valley International Film Festival
RECOMMENDATION:
11.1 Consider the sponsorship request of $30,000 for the 2001 Temecula Valley
International Film & Music Festival.
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12
1-15/Rancho California Road nterchan.qe Improvements (Project No. PW95-12) Southern
California Gas Company (SCG} Work Authorization Agreement to Relocate an ex sting 6"
H .qh Pressure Gas Main
RECOMMENDATION:
12.1 Authorize payment to the Southern California Gas Company (SCG) for construction
fees in the amount of $27,409.40.
RECESS CITY COUNCIL MEETING TO SCHEDULED MEETINGS OF
THE TEMECULA COMMUNITY SERVICES DISTRICT,
THE CITY OF TEMECULA REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY
AND
THE TEMECULA PUBLIC FINANCING AUTHORITY
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TEMECULA COMMUNITY SERVICES DISTRICT MEETING
Next in Order:
Ordinance: No. CSD 2001-01
Resolution: No. CSD 2001-07
CALL TO ORDER: President Jeff Stone
ROLL CALL: DIRECTORS: Comerchero, Naggar, Pratt, Roberts, Stone
PUBLIC COMMENTS
A total of 15 minutes is provided so members of the public may address the Board of
Directors on items that are not listed on the agenda or on the Consent Calendar.
Speakers are limited to two (2) minutes each. If you decide to speak to the Board of
Directors on an item not on the agenda or on the Consent Calendar, a pink "Request to
Speak" form should be filled out and filed with the City Clerk.
When you are called to speak, please come forward and state your name for the record.
For all other agenda items, a "Request to Speak" form must be filed with the City Clerk
Prior to the Board of Directors addressing that item. There is a five (5) minute time limit
for individual speakers.
Anyone wishing to address the Board of Directors should present a completed pink
"Request to Speak" form to the City Clerk. When you are called to speak, please
come forward and state your name and address for the record.
CONSENT CALENDAR
1 Fourth of July Fireworks Presentation
RECOMMENDATION:
1.1 Award a contract to Pyro Spectaculars for the preparation and display of the
2001 and 2002 Fourth of July Extravaganza Fireworks Show presentations for an
amount not to exceed $25,000 annually.
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2 TCSD Proposed Rates and Char,qes for FY 2001-2002
RECOMMENDATION:
2.1 Adopt a resolution entitled:
RESOLUTION NO. CSD 0t-
A RESOLUTION OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE
TEMECULA COMMUNITY SERVICES DISTRICT
ACKNOWLEDGING THE FILING OF A, REPORT WITH
RESPECT TO THE PROPOSED RATES AND CHARGES FOR
FISCAL YEAR 2001-2002 AND SETTING A TIME AND PLACE
FOR A PUBLIC HEARING IN CONNECTION THEREWITH
DEPARTMENTAL REPORT
DIRECTOR OF COMMUNITY SERVICES REPORT
GENERAL MANAGER'S REPORT
BOARD OF DIRECTORS' REPORTS
ADJOURNMENT
Next regular meeting: Tuesday, May 8, 2001, 7:00 PM, City Council Chambers, 43200 Business
Park Drive, Temecula, California.
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TEMECULA REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY MEETING
Next in Order:
Ordinance: No. RDA 2001-01
Resolution: No. RDA 2001-02
CALL TO ORDER: Chairperson Ron Roberts
ROLL CALL AGENCY MEMBERS:
PUBLIC COMMENTS
Comerchero, Naggar, Pratt, Sione, Roberts
A total of 15 minutes is provided so members of the public may address the
Redevelopment Agency on items that are not listed on the agenda or on the Consent
Calendar. Speakers are limited to two (2) minutes each. If you decide to speak to the
Board of Directors on an item no~t on the agenda or on the Consent Calendar, a pink
"Request to Speak" form should be filled out and filed with the City Clerk.
When you are called to speak, please come forward and state your name for the record.
For all other agenda items, a "Request to Speak" form must be filed with the City Clerk
Prior to the Board of Directors addressing that item. There is a five (5) minute time limit
for individual speakers.
Anyone wishing to address the Board of Directors should present a completed pink
"Request to Speak" form to the City Clerk. When you are called to speak, please
come forward and state your name and address for the record.
Convene a Joint Meeting of the City Council and the Redevelopment Agency
AGENCY BUSINESS
Formation of Joint Exercise of Powers Authority; Approval of Deposit/Reimbursement
Agreement
RECOMMENDATION:
1.1 That the City Council adopt a resolution entitled:
RESOLUTION NO. 01-
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
TEMECULA AUTHORIZING FORMATION OF A JOINT
EXERCISE OF POWERS AUTHORITY WITH THE
REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY OF THE CITY OF TEMECULA
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1.2 That the Redevelopment Agency adopt a resolution entitled:
RESOLUTION NO, RDA 01-
A RESOLUTION OF THE REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY OF THE
CITY OF TEMECULA AUTHORIZING FORMATION OF A JOINT
EXERCISE OF POWERS AUTHORITY WITH THE CITY OF
TEMECULA
1.3 That the City Council and the Redevelopment Agency execute the joint exercise
of powers agreement creating the Temecula Public Financing Authority.
Recess City Council Meeting
2 Old Town Community Theater Schematic Desiqn and Master Site Plan
RECOMMENDATION:
2.1 Approve the Old Town Community Theater Schematic Design and Master Site
Plan;
2.2 Adopt the Mitigated Negative Declaration;
2.3 Provide direction to proceed with design development and construction drawings.
DEPARTMENTAL REPORT
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR'S REPORT
AGENCY MEMBERS' REPORTS
ADJOURNMENT
Next regular meeting: Tuesday, May 8, 2001, City Council Chambers, 43200 Business Park Drive,
Temecula, California.
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TEMECULA PUBLIC FINANCING AUTHORITY
Next in Order:
Ordinance: No. TPFA 2001-01
Resolution: No. TPFA 2001-01
CALL TO ORDER: President JeffComerchero
ROLL CALL
DIRECTORS:
Naggar, Pratt, Roberts, Stone, Comerchero
PUBLIC COMMENTS
A total of 15 minutes is provided so members of the public may address the
Redevelopment Agency on items that are not listed on the agenda or on the Consent
Calendar. Speakers are limited to two (2) minutes each. If you decide to speak to the
Board of Directors on an item not on the agenda or on the Consent Calendar, a pink
"Request to Speak" form should be filled out and filed with the City Clerk.
When you are called to speak, please come forward and state your name for the record.
For all other agenda items, a "Request to Speak" form must be filed with the City Clerk
Prior to the Board of Directors addressing that item. There is a five (5) minute time limit
for individual speakers.
Anyone wishing to address the Board of Directors should present a completed pink
"Request to Speak" form to the City Clerk. When you are called to speak, please
come forward and state your name and address for the record
AUTHORITY BUSINESS
Administrative Matters and Initial Actions relating to Formation of Community
Facilities District
RECOMMENDATION:
1.1 Appoint, by minute order, a Chairperson from among its Board of Directors;
1.2 Adopt resolutions entitled:
RESOLUTION NO. TPFA 01-
A RESOLUTION OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE
TEMECULA PUBLIC FINANCING AUTHORITY REGARDING
MEETINGS, ESTABLISHING A SEAL FOR THE AUTHORITY,
DIRECTING THE FILING OF A NOTICE OF FORMATION WITH
THE SECRETARY OF STATE, AND ESTABLISHING THE
RULES FOR ITS PROCEEDINGS
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RESOLUTION NO. TPFA 0t-
A RESOLUTION OF THE TEMECULA PUBLIC FINANCING
AUTHORITY ADOPTING LOCAL GOALS AND POLICIES FOR
COMMUNITY FACILITIES DISTRICTS
RESOLUTION NO. TPFA 01-
A RESOLUTION OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE
TEMECULA PUBLIC FINANCING AUTHORITY
ACKNOWLEDGING RECEIPT OF PETITIONS TO FORM A
COMMUNITY FACILITIES DISTRICT AND AUTHORIZING AND
DIRECTING ACTIONS WITH RESPECT THERETO
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR'S REPORT
BOARD OF DIRECTORS' REPORTS
ADJOURNMENT
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RECONVENE TEMECULA CITY COUNCIL
COUNCIL BUSINESS
13 Discussion of 1999 Draft Traffic Study
(Requested by Councilman Naggar)
RECOMMENDATION:
13.1 Provide direction to staff concerning the Draft 1999 Traffic Study.
14 Proposed Eastern Urban Limit Line
RECOMMENDATION:
14.1 Adopt a map titled Proposed Eastern Urban Limit Line.
15 Roripau,qh Ranch Specific Plan Processin,q Schedule,
RECOMMENDATION:
15.1 Provide direction to staff.
16 Selection of City Council representative to serve on Desiqn Team for the Wolf Creek Fire,
Station
RECOMMENDATION:
16.1 Select one member to serve on the Design Team for the Wolf Creek Fire Station.
17 Authorization to file letter of protest with the California Public Utilities Commission
regarding the issuance of a Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity for the Valley
Rainbow Interconnect Project (Application Number :A.01-03-036)
RECOMMENDATION:
17.1 Authorize the City Attorney to file a letter of protest with the California Public Utilities
Commission regarding the issuance of a Certificate of Public Convenience and
Necessity for the Valley Rainbow Interconnect Project as proposed by the San
Diego Gas and Electric Company.
DEPARTMENTAL REPORTS
CITY MANAGER'S REPORT
CITY ATTORNEY'S REPORT
ADJOURNMENT
Next regular meeting: Tuesday, May 8, 2001, at 7:00 P.M., in the City Council Chambers, 43200
Business Park Drive, Temecula, California.
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PROCLAMATIONS
AND
PRESENTATIONS
r~
ITEM 1
ITEM 2
MINUTES OF A REGULAR MEETING
OF THE TEMECULA CITY COUNCIL
JANUARY 23, 200t
The City Council convened in Closed Session at 6:30 P.M. and convened in a regular meeting
at 7:01 P.M., on Tuesday, January 23, 2001, in the City Council Chambers of Temecula City
Hall, 43200 Business Park Drive, Temecula, California.
Present:
Councilmembers: Naggar, Pratt, Roberts, Stone, Comerchero
Absent: Councilmember: None
PRELUDE MUSIC
The prelude music was provided by Aaron Breid.
INVOCATION
The invocation was given by Rabbi David Barnett of Congregation B'Nai Chaim of Murrieta.
ALLEGIANCE
The Flag Ceremony and salute to the Flag was led by Troop 148.
PRESENTATIONS/PROCLAMATIONS
Ron Packard Presentation
Having served this City and this Congressional District for the past 18 years, Mayor
Comerchero, on a personal note, relayed his pleasure of having had the opportunity to work
with Congressman Packard.
At this time, Mayor Comerchero presented Congressman Packard with a Certificate of
Appreciation and commented on Mr. Packard's last action to ensure the addition of specific
language in a Bill pertaining to funding for Murrieta Creek, saving the City approximately $20
million.
With appreciation, Congressman Packard accepted the Certificate and introduced his wife,
Jean, and thanked her for her support and assistance over the years. Mr. Packard relayed his
delight in having had the opportunity to serve with the City Council in the betterment of this
community, noting that the City has grown into a beautiful, prosperous, and wonderful place to
live.
Expressing his regret in seeing Congressman Packard retire, Mayor Pro Tern Roberts thanked
Mr. Packard for always having been there for the City.
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Press Enterprise Presentation to the Temecula Valley Balloon and Wine Festival (Inland
Empire's Readers' Choice Award of Favorite Festival)
Ms. Maria D'Avanzo, Advertising & Community Relations Manager of Southwest Riverside
County for the Press-Enterprise, informed the public that the Temecula Valley Balloon and
Wine Festival has been awarded the Readers' Choice Award for the Favorite Temecula
Community Event. Thanking the sponsors and volunteers, Ms. Carol Popejoy-Hime, General
Manager for the Temecula Valley Balloon & Wine Festival, expressed appreciation and noted
that this event would not be possible without the efforts of the sponsors and volunteers.
Proclamation to Van Avery Prep School for the receipt of the Bravo Award
Ms. Tina Naber and Angel Pena, co-principals at Van Avery and Kids World Preschool and
Elementary school, graciously accepted the proclamation and extended their appreciation for
the recognition.
Presentation of 10-year service pins to Mayor Pro Tern Ron Roberts, Plannin.q Commission
Chairman Ron Guerriero, and Former Community Services Commissioner Jeff Nimeshein
Mayor Comerchero presented each individual with a 10-year service pin. Mayor Pro Tem
Roberts advised that in January 1990 the Traffic Director Program was formed and that, at that
time, the City had half the population; had two overcrossings; had one lane traveling each way
with stop signs; and noted that the traffic was worse at that time; and that the City incorporated
in an effort to take control of the situation and has since accomplished many benefits with
regard to traffic.
PUBLIC COMMENTS
A. Inviting the public to attend, Mr. David Rosenthal commented on the upcoming
Business-to-Business Expo on Friday, January 26, 2001, at the Pechanga facility, noting the
Expo is being hosted by the Temecula Valley Chamber of Commerce.
CITY COUNCIL REPORTS
A. Thanking and relaying appreciation to the three individuals who received their 10-year
service pins, Councilman Stone commended them for their years of public service, noting that the
City would not be the wonderful place that it is without their service.
B. Councilman Naggar reported on the Multi-Species Habitat Component of the Riverside
County Integrated Project, advising that a meeting has been scheduled for next week with
representatives from the cities of Lake Elsinore and Murrieta in an effort to address their concerns
with regard to this component and noting that he would report on the outcome of this meeting.
As members of the Electrical Needs Subcommittee, Councilman Naggar advised that Mayor
Comerchero and he had met with members from the Chamber of Commerce, representatives from
Southern California, and staff and noted that a number of measures will be implemented, including
the scheduling of a Community Workshop.
C. Councilman Pratt relayed his appreciation to Congressman Packard for his last action
with regard to the funding for Murrieta Creek.
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Reading his letter into the record (copies provided to the City Council), Councilman Pratt
clarified his stance with regard to growth, noting that he would not be desirous of stopping
growth but that he would be desirous of responsible growth. Mr. Pratt requested that the City
Council agendize for its February 13, 2001, meeting discussion of a Special Election, limiting
annual residential building permits to 450 residential units and that this remain in effect for a
minimum period of two years until acceptable traffic circulation/mitigation of convenient effective
local/urban public transportation system, financed with the Development Agreement of a
public/private partnership and adequate school funding to meet the increased school demands
are in place as determined by the citizens.
City Attorney Thorson advised that, as per the Brown Act, the City Council may make a
motion to agendize the matter for the next City Council meeting but that any discussions
regarding the matter must be brief.
MOTION: Councilman Pratt moved to agendize his request to the February 13, 2001, City
Council meeting. The motion was seconded by Councilman Naggar. (This motion ultimately
failed; see below.)
Councilman Naggar advised that reviewing the viability and feasibility of limiting the number of
building permits is currently an element of the City's Growth Management Plan.
With regard to Councilman Pratt's comments, Councilman Stone stated that although Mr. Pratt
may not be calling it growth control, in his opinion, that is what Councilman Pratt is trying to
accomplish; noted that the citizens will have the ability to vote in November for three City
Councilmembers; and relayed his opposition to such a motion because of the amenities quality
projects such as this one bring to the City such as new roads, parks, library, Police Station, and
infrastructure.
At this time, voice vote on the previously made motion reflected denial of the motion with
Councilmembers Pratt and Naggar supporting the motion and Councilmembers Roberts and
Stone and Mayor Comerchero voting in opposition of the motion.
Councilman Naggar requested that the matter we agendized to a future General Plan
Subcommittee meeting.
D. Having spent last week in Washington, D.C., at the U.S. Conference of Mayors, Mayor
Comerchero advised that the adoption of a rail policy for America was set as a chief legislative
priority for the year 2001, noting that a $10 billion measure will be introduced at the Senate
level.
Advising that the Riverside Transit Authority (RTA) is working on establishing a freeway-
flyer system from the City of Temecula, Mr. Comerchero commented on resource problems to
accomplish this task, noting that other local organizations are being contacted as well as grant
funding is being explored in order to review transportation options.
For the benefit of the public, Mayor Comerchero advised ihat the Electrical Needs
Subcommittee has compiled a list of key legislators, along with fax numbers, to contact with
regard to the Energy Crisis.
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CONSENT CALENDAR
Standard Ordinance and Resolution Adoption Procedure
RECOMMENDATION:
1.1 Motion to waive the reading of the text of all ordinances and resolutions included in the
agenda.
Resolution Approvin,q List of Demands
RECOMMENDATION:
2.1 Adopt a resolution entitled:
RESOLUTION NO. 01-06
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF'
TEMECULA ALLOWING CERTAIN CLAIMS AND DEMANDS
AS SET FORTH IN EXHIBIT A
3
Purchase of Compaq Proliant Server
RECOMMENDATION:
3.1 Authorize the purchase of a dual Compaq Proliant Server and Disk Storage Array
System from Jaguar Computer Systems, Inc., of Riverside, California, for the total
amount of $57,618.72.
4 Maintenance Facility Modification Project - Phase III - Project No. PW00-16
RECOMMENDATION:
4.1 Reject all bids received August 29, 2000, for the Maintenance Facility Modifications
- Phase III - Project No. PW00-16;
4.2
Approve the revised Construction Plans and Specifications and authorize the
Department of Public Works to solicit construction bids for the Maintenance Facility
Modifications - Phase III - Project No. PW00-16.
5 Disadvantaged Business Enterprise (DBE) Program
RECOMMENDATION:
5.1 Adopt a resolution entitled:
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RESOLUTION NO. 01-07
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
TEMECULA APPROVING THE DISADVANTAGED BUSINESS
ENTERPRISE (DBE) PROGRAM EFFECTIVE OCTOBER '1,
2000, TO COMPLY WITH ALL THE ELEMENTS OF TITLE 49,
PART 26, OF THE CODE OF FEDERAL REGULATIONS (CFR)
ENTITLED PARTICIPATION BY DISADVANTAGED BUSINESS
ENTERPRISES IN DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS AND DESIGNATING
THE DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC WORKS/CITY ENGINEER AS THE
DBE LIAISON OFFICER AND AUTHORIZING THE DBE
LIAISON OFFICER TO CONDUCT A REVIEW OF THE ANNUAL
OVERALL GOAL PERCENTAGE AND ADJUST SUCH
PERCENTAGE EACH FEDERAL FISCAL YEAR AS
NECESSARY ACCORDING TO THE REQUIREMENTS OF THE
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION TO ENSURE
COMPLIANCE IN THE DEVELOPMENT, IMPLEMENTING AND
MONITORING OF THE DBE PROGRAM
Authorize Temporary Street Closures for Temecula Rod Run 2001 Event in Old Town (Old
Town Front Street between Moreno Road and Second Street and other related streets)
RECOMMENDATION:
6.1 Adopt a resolution entitled:
RESOLUTION NO. 01-08
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
TEMECULA, CALIFORNIA, AUTHORIZING STREET
CLOSURES FOR TEMECULA ROD RUN 2001 EVENT AND
AUTHORIZING THE CITY ENGINEER TO ISSUE A PERMIT
FOR THIS SPECIFIC SPECIAL EVENT
(Councilman Stone abstained with regard to this item.)
Amendment to Annual Aqreements - CIP Proiects approved for FY 2000-2001
RECOMMENDATION:
7.1
Approve Amendment No. 1 of the annual agreement with Kleinfelder, Inc., to
provide as needed geotechnical and materials testing services by extending the
agreement through June 30, 2001, and increase the amount of the agreement by
$25,000;
7.2
Approve Amendment No.1 of the annual agreement with Converse Consultants to
provide as needed geotechnical and materials testing by extending the agreement
through June 30, 2001, and increase the amount of the agreement by $25,000;
7.3
Approve Amendment No.1 of the annual agreement with Kevin Cozad & Associates
to provide as needed survey services by extending the agreement through June 30,
2001, and increase the amount of the agreement by $25,000;
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7.4 Approve Amendment No.1 of the annual agreement with O'Malley Engineering
Corporation to provide as needed survey services by extending the agreement
through June 30, 2001, and increase the amount of the agreement by $25,000;
7.5 Approve Amendment No.1 of the annual agreement with Robert Shea Purdue Real
Estate Appraisal to provide as needed appraisal services extending the agreement
through June 30, 2001, and increase the amount of the agreement by $25,000;
7.6 Authorize the Mayor to execute these amendments.
8 Records Destruction Approval
RECOMMENDATION:
8.1 Approve the scheduled destruction of certain City records in accordance with the
City of Temecula approved Records Retention Policy.
9 Resolution of Support
(Requested by Mayor Comerchero)
RECOMMENDATION:
9.1 Adopt a resolution entitled:
RESOLUTION NO. 0t-09
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
TEMECULA URGING STATE SUPPORT TO PRESERVE AND
EXTEND ZERO-EMISSION VEHICLE (ZEV) PROGRAMS
10 Letter of Support for Riverside County Transit A,qency (RTA) Grant Application
(Requested by Councilman Pratt)
RECOMMENDATION:
10.1 Authorize the Mayor to sign a Letter of Support for the Riverside County Transit
Agency (RTA) to include in an upcoming application to receive grant funds for transit
planning.
(Pulled for separate discussion; see page 7.)
11 The 2000 General Plan Implementation Report
RECOMMENDATION:
11.1 Adopt a resolution entitled:
RESOLUTION NO. 01-'10
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
TEMECULA ADOPTING THE 2000 GENERAL PLAN
IMPLEMENTATION REPORT
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(Pulled for separate discussion; see page 7-8.)
12 Community Service Fundin,q Pro,qram - Veterans of Forei,qn Wars
RECOMMENDATION:
12.1 Approve a reallocation of Community Services Funding to the Veterans of Foreign
Wars (VFW) in the amount of $5,000.
(Pulled for separate discussion; see page 8.)
MOTION: Councilman Naggar moved to approve Consent Calendar Item Nos. I - 9 (Item Nos. 10,
11, and 12 were pulled for separate discussion.) The motion was seconded by Mayor Pro Tem
Roberts and voice vote reflected approval with the exception of Councilman Stone who abstained
with regard to Item No. 6 (Temecula Rod Run 2001 Event).
CONSENT CALENDAR ITEMS CONSIDERED UNDER SEPARATE DISCUSSION
10 Letter of Support for Riverside County Transit A.qency (RTA) Grant Application
(Requested by Councilman Pratt)
RECOMMENDATION:
12.1 Authorize the Mayor to sign a Letter of Support for the Riverside County Transit
Agency (RTA) to include in an upcoming application to receive grant funds for
transit planning.
Assistant City Manager O'Grady reviewed the staff report (of record).
MOTION: Councilman Stone moved to approve staff recommendation. The motion was
seconded by Mayor Pro Tem Roberts and voice vote reflected unanimous approval.
11 The 2000 General Plan Implementation Report
RECOMMENDATION:
11.1 Adopt a resolution entitled:
RESOLUTION NO. 0t-10
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
TEMECULA ADOPTING THE 2000 GENERAL PLAN
IMPLEMENTATION REPORT
Advising that the General Plan Implementation Report is a statutory requirement, Deputy City
Manager Thornhill provided a brief overview of the staff report (as per agenda material).
MOTION: Mayor Pro Tern Roberts moved to approve staff recommendation and adopt
Resolution No. 01-10. The motion was seconded by Councilman Naggar and voice vote
reflected unanimous approval.
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12 Community Service Fundin,q Program -Veterans of Foreiqn Wars
RECOMMENDATION:
12.2 Approve a reallocation of Community Services Funding to the Veterans of Foreign
Wars (VFVV) in the amount of $5,000.
Briefly reviewing the request, Mayor Comerchero reiterated his request, made at the January 9,
2001, City Council meeting, to reprogram the previously approved $5,000 grant to VFVV for
improvements to the current site because the organization will be vacating the site and,
therefore, suggested that the $5,000 grant be reallocated toward relocation expenses.
Mr. Tom Stultz, 32076 Corte Soledad, apprised the City Council of discussions that he will be
having with the Temecula Town Association in an effort to preserve a meeting site, in the City of
Temecula, for the Veterans. For Councilman Naggar, Mr. Stultz advised that the organizations
rent was raised from $150 a month to $990 plus water.
Mr. Armando Lopez, representing VFVV, expressed his appreciation and thanked the City
Council for its support, not only for the monetary support, but as well for the inclusion in City
activities.
Mr. Tony Luna, 29000 Pujol Street, thanked the City Council for its support.
Appreciating the attendance of the Veterans and their families, Councilman Stone thanked the
Veterans for their years of service and requested that a $10,000 ($5,000 from Community
Service Funding and an additional $5,000 from next years Community Service Funding) be
allocated to the VFW.
MOTION: Councilman Stone moved to allocate a total of $10,000 ($5,000 from Community
Service Funding and an additional $5,000 from next years Community Service Funding) to the
VFVV. The motion was seconded by Councilman Naggar. (This motion was ultimately
superseded by an amended motion.)
Concurring with Councilman Stone's suggestion, Mayor Pro Tern Roberts recommended the
formation of a subcommittee to review the matter and offered to serve on the subcommittee.
AMENDED MOTION: Councilman Stone moved to allocate $10,000 and to form a
subcommittee, comprised of Mayor Comerchero and Mayor Pro Tem Roberts, which would
make a recommendation to the City Council with regard to the use General Fund Reserves, as
necessary, in order to accommodate the Veterans' needs. The motion was seconded by
Councilman Naggar and voice vote reflected unanimous approval.
Councilman Naggar suggested that the subcommittee explore the use of CDBG monies.
Councilman Pratt recommended the continued involvement of Mr. Stultz.
At 7:54 P.M., Mayor Comerchero convened as the Community Services District and the
Redevelopment Agency and after a brief recess, reconvened the City Council meeting at 8:11
P.M.
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PUBLIC HEARING
13 Wolf Creek Specific Plan
RECOMMENDATION:
13.1 Adopt a resolution entitled:
RESOLUTION NO. 01-11
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
TEMECULA CERTIFYING THE FINAL ENVIRONMENTAL
IMPACT REPORT PREPARED FOR THE WOLF CREEK
SPECIFIC PLAN NO. 12 (PLANNING APPLICATION NO. 98-
0482) AND RELATED ACTIONS, AND ADOPTION OF THE
ENVIRONMENTAL FINDINGS PURSUANT TO THE
CALIFORNIA ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY ACT, A
STATEMENT OF OVERRIDING CONSIDERATIONS, AND A
MITIGATION MONITORING AND REPORTING PROGRAM IN
CONNECTION THEREWITH.
13.2 Adopt a resolution entitled:
RESOLUTION NO. 01-t2
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
TEMECULA APPROVING PLANNING APPLICATION NO. 98-
0484 - GENERAL PLAN AMENDMENT FOR THE WOLF
CREEK SPECIFIC PLAN, ON PARCELS TOTALING 657
ACRES LOCATED ON THE EAST SIDE OF PALA ROAD,
BETVVEEN LOMA LINDA AND DEER HOLLOW ROAD
(FORMERLY FAIRVlEW AVENUE), AND KNOWN AS
ASSESSOR PARCEL NOS. 950-110-002, -005, -033 AND 950-
180-001, -005, -006 AND -010, BASED UPON THE ANALYSIS
AND FINDINGS CONTAINED IN THE STAFF REPORT
13.3 Adopt a resolution entitled:
RESOLUTION NO. 01-13
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
TEMECULA APPROVING SPECIFIC PLAN NO. t2, THE WOLF
CREEK SPECIFIC PLAN (PLANNING APPLICATION NO. 98-
0481)
13.4 Introduce and read by title only an ordinance entitled:
ORDINANCE NO. 0t-01
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
TEMECULA APPROVING ZONING STANDARDS FOR
SPECIFIC PLAN NO. 12, THE WOLF CREEK SPECIFIC PLAN
(PLANNING APPLICATION NO. 98-0481)
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13.5 Adopt a resolution entitled:
RESOLUTION NO. 01-t4
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
TEMECULA APPROVING PLANNING APPLICATION NO. 00-
0052 - TENTATIVE TRACT MAP NO. 29305, THE
SUBDIVISION OF 557 ACRES INTO 47 LOTS WHICH
CONFORM TO THE PLANNING AREAS, OPEN SPACE,
SCHOOL AND PARK SITES OF THE WOLF CREEK SPECIFIC
PLAN, LOCATED ON THE EAST SIDE OF PALA ROAD,
BETWEEN LOMALINDA AND DEER HOLLOW ROAD, AND
KNOWN AS ASSESSOR PARCEL NOS. 950-110-002, -005, -
033 AND 950-180-00t, -005, -006 AND -010
13.6 Introduce and read by title only an ordinance entitled:
ORDINANCE NO. 01-02
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
TEMECULA APPROVING THAT CERTAIN DEVELOPMENT
AGREEMENT ENTITLED "DEVELOPMENT AGREEMENT BY
AND BETWEEN THE CITY OF TEMECULA AND S-P MURDY,
LLC" (PLANNING APPLICATION NO. 00-0029)
Deputy City Manager Thornhiil reviewed the staff report (as per agenda material); commented
on City Council's direction that staff work with the applicant in an effort to formulate a condition
relating to Level of Service (LOS) D on Pala Road and the interchange and the intersection
between Pala Road and the freeway which reads as follows:
Prior to the approval of Tentative Tract Maps for Planning Area Nos. 20, 21, 22,
23, and 24, inclusive, and while recognizing State Route 79 South (SR79S) and
Interstate 15 are under the exclusive jurisdiction of the State of California as
acknowledged in the General Plan, the City may consider the health, safety, and
general welfare of the residents of the City. The City may then authorize the
Director of Public Works of the City to make a reasonable determination based
upon traffic studies then conducted or authorized by the City that the Level of
Service for traffic at the intersection of:
o Interstate 15 Freeway Southbound ramps (north/south) and Highway 79
South (eastJwest) has fallen below Level of Service D;
o Interstate 15 Freeway Northbound ramps (north/south) and Highway 79
South (eastJwest) has fallen below Level of Service D;
o Bedford Court and SR79S has fallen below Level of Service D;
o La Paz and SR79S has fallen below Level of Service D.
Such traffic studies shall be based on traffic generated only by (1) land uses of
projects that are currently existing as approved by the City or the County of
Riverside as of the date of the approval of this project and (2) traffic circulation
patterns existing as of the date of the approval of this project. The traffic studies
shall use (1) documentation of existing traffic conditions in the vicinity of the
project using the traffic analysis study area applicable to the project; and (2)
evaluate traffic conditions as applicable to the project using the current (now
existing) Temecula General Plan Traffic Model.
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This action shall be taken after the City makes a finding that such condition
exists that is detrimental to the health, safety, and general welfare of the City of
Temecula or its residents.
City Attorney Thorson as well noted that the City Council must reconcile the differences
between the Planning Commission and staff's suggested modifications to six of the
recommended conditions of approval.
With regard to the proposed condition pertaining to LOS D, City Attorney Thorson, for
Councilman Naggar, advised that the proposed condition would not empower the City anymore
than it currently is empowered; that the proposed condition would require that prior to the
developer obtaining the right to continue to build out, a traffic study would be required; that, at
this point, the City would evaluate the impact of the traffic upon the existing established
patterns; that if it were determined that the level of service has reached a level below LOS D
and findings have been made that it would be adverse to the health, safety, and general
welfare, further issuance of building permits could be prehibited until corrected for this project
along the corridor.
For Councilman Naggar, Deputy City Manager Thornhill noted that the proposed condition
differs from the condition proposed by the Planning Commission in that it requires a finding to
be made prior to the approval of the Tentative Tract Maps and that the requirement of Bedford
Court and La Paz have been included.
In response to Mayor Pre Tem Roberts, Deputy City Manager Thornhill confirmed that the
proposed LOS condition has been structured so that it would be based on existing land use
patterns in the General Plan and, therefore, the developer would not be subject to County-
induced changes.
Based on the Environmental Impact Report (EIR), Councilman Pratt relayed his opposition as it
relates to traffic circulation and noted that the LOS D condition would be a mute point since, in
his opinion, it could not be executed.
Deputy City Manager Thornhill confirmed that staff is confident that the proposed condition has
been structured in a manner to make it effective; that if there were any uncertainty with respect
to the Southwest Area, it would be within the County; that most changes that have occurred in
terms of land use, since the adoption of the City's General Plan, have been in the County and
not the City; that the County's continual approval of major land use changes have caused
changes in the cumulative traffic analysis; and that individuals are simply driving more than
they ever have.
Councilman Pratt relayed his opposition to Deputy City Manager Thornhill's comments.
Continuing with an overview of the project, Deputy City Manager Thornhill addressed the modifications
recommended by the Planning Commission, noting the following:
Augment the Mitigation Monitoring Program with the General Plan EIR mitigations
o That Condition No. 6 of the Specific Plan requires the applicant to comply with all
applicable mitigation measures contained in the adopted City of Temecula
General Plan; staff is of the opinion that there is sufficient language in the
condition of approval to assure compliance with these mitigation measures
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Specify only one option for narrower streets
o That it is important to have flexibility with respect to the street sections and that
Condition No. 15 of the Specific Plan addresses narrower streets
Require that the City hire an architect consultant to review the Planned Development
Overlay
o That the language in Condition No. 16 of the Specific Plan was changed to read
as follows: When courtyard homes are implemented, a Planned
Development Overlay (PDO) shall be submitted for review and approval by
the Planning Commission as opposed to a Planned Development Overlay;
that because design guidelines in the Specific Plan are sufficient and because
the Planning Commission and staff review the PDO, staff has concerns with
hiring an outside architect
· Delete the split garage option
o That staff would request flexibility with regard to this item
Require garages in lieu of carports in the multi-family senior housing projects
o That staff would request flexibility with regard to this item; that the project is a 10-
year build out project and that it would be difficult to determine, at this point in
time, what the market may dictate in the future
Require Product Review approval from the Planning Commission
o That the Development Code requires that product review is discussed at the
Director's hearing and that deviating from that process would require a change to
the Development Code.
Commenting on the Development Agreement (DA), Mr. Thornhill referenced Section 4.6 (Off-
site Improvement Funding) of the Agreement, noting that an exhibit would be attached to the DA
to clarify all improvements referenced in Section 4.6. Advising that he has received a letter of
concern from Pechanga with regard to the monitoring of cultural resources, Mr. Thornhill
advised that it would be staff's opinion as well as the developer's that a cultural resource
observer be on site at the time the property is graded and that a condition be imposed or that
the existing condition be enhanced.
Having as well reviewed the letter from Pechanga, City Attorney Thorson referenced the EIR,
page 35, Section 3.8 (Cultural Resources) and noted that no additional language would be
necessary, advising that those issues of concern would be addressed in the Mitigation
Monitoring Program.
Further addressing the project, Deputy City Manager Thornhill noted the following:
· That the Fire Station will be comprised of 1.5 acres; land to be immediately dedicated to
the City by way of Grant Deed
· That the developer will provide a $700,000 interest-free loan for the construction of the
Fire Station
· That, as per the DA, the developer, if the permanent facility were not completed on time,
would pay for the fire vehicle, operation, and maintenance if an interim facility
· That it would be staff's goal to have the Fire Station completed prior to the construction
of the 250th dwelling unit
· That the option for narrower streets has been reentered into the DA
· That the developer will be providing $200 per unit fee for public art/open space/and
habitat, noting that the City has not previously imposed such a condition on a developer
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That based on the developer's participation in the Assessment District and the off-site
improvements, the project will not be subject to any additional Transportation Uniform
Mitigation FEE (TUMF)because the developer will be constructing facilities which would
have been included in the TUMF.
Community Services Director Parker confirmed that the Quimby value for this project would be
$3.6 million; advised that the parks, with the exception of the Sports Park, will be developed
through the park development impact fee credits and that the Sports Park will be developed by
the City, an expenditure which has already been budgeted in the CIP.
Councilman Naggar, in his opinion, stated that the prepared EIR was based on outdated
material such as the City's General Plan EIR as it relates to the service of electricity, noting that
changes have occurred with regard to this issue. Mr. Naggar requested the imposition of an
additional condition as follows: that no building permits be issued within a specified time (2 to 6
months) of a Stage 3 Alert being called, stating that he would not be able to approve 2,000
dwelling units without being certain that electricity could be provided to those units.
In response to Councilman Naggar, Planning Director Ubnoske advised that staff had consulted
Southern California Edison and that their reply was that power could be supplied to those units
and that no concerns were expressed; that the EIR for this project was not based on the City's
General Plan EIR; and that the project EIR was based on current information.
Viewing the electricity situation as a State problem, Councilman Stone stated that the pressure
should be on the State to enact new legislation to remedy the situation, not on the industrial
users of the State of California, commenting on the potential economic downfall of such action.
Mr. Naggar as well advised that residents have expressed concern to him with regard to school
funding and questioned where the children from this project will be attending school. Although
the developer will be paying a Development Impact Fee for the construction of schools, Mr.
Naggar noted that the fee would be supplemented by the State and expressed concern if State
funding were not available which would result in children attending schools out of their
neighborhoods which, in turn, would create additional traffic.
At this time, Mayor Comerchero invited public input.
Deferring his comments until after public input, Mr. William Griffith, applicant, representing
Spring Pacific Properties, advised that he was present.
Commenting on the amenities Wolf Creek would be providing to the City such as a sports park,
schools, and needed housing to accommodate the growing population, Ms. Margaret Whiston,
43166 Camino Casillas, addressed the lack of available senior housing throughout the City and
spoke in support of the project.
Mr. Joseph Terrazas, 31160 Lahontan, representing the Wolf Valley Homeowners Association,
relayed concerns with regard to density, traffic, and noise and requested that the sound wall be
constructed to Via Eduardo from Rainbow Canyon and that six lanes be constructed to Via
Eduardo.
Although voicing no opposition to development, economic development, or projects like Wolf
Creek, Mr. Robert Wheeler, 29090 Camino Alba, noted that such development depends on
when and where it is located. Concurring with Councilman Naggar's concerns relative to
electricity, water, and traffic, Mr. Wheeler stated that the electrical impact is cumulative.
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For Councilman Stone, City Attorney Thorson advised that because the developer will be paying
a mitigation fee for schools, the City has no legal mechanism to limit the number of dwelling
units tied to the function of an elementary/middle school within the particular Specific Plan; that
a Statewide mitigation fee was imposed several years ago for school facilities and, thereby, the
State eliminated the cities authority to impose mitigation requirements for schools; therefore, it
would not be a criteria to approve or disapprove this Plan based on those issues.
Addressing the project as it relates to school facilities, Mr. Jeff Okun, representing the Temecula
Valley Unified School District, Assistant Superintendent of Business Support Services of the
District, noted the following:
· That the site for the middle school has been graded with State funds and will continue to
be graded; that the grading contract has not been cancelled; that the School Board
cancelled the construction' contracts because the District has not received State funding;
· That State funding for the construction of the elementary/middle schools has not been
guaranteed; that State allocation has been received for design and site studies;
· That the District has a Purchase Agreement; that the property is in escrow; that there are
three agreements on this particular piece of property - a Mitigation Agreement and two
Purchase Agreements (one for an elementary school and one for a middle school);
· That State funds are allocated quarterly. Mr. Okun briefly reviewed pending District
projects, as per State ratings, noting that the funding for a high school is the District's
highest priority;
· That the District has an agreement with the developer to pay $3.03 (Level 2 of State
funding) per square foot which would equate to $12 million, based on approximately
2,000 dwelling units, for this particular project prior to the sports complex;
· That the total cost, including acquisition of land, for the elementary school would be
approximately $9 million (land only approximately $2.1 million); that the total cost,
including acquisition of land, for the middle school would be approximately $20 million
(land only approximately $2.9 million);
· That the proposed project at approximately 2,000 dwelling units will generate
approximately 1,500 students; that the project will not fully fill a middle school or a high
school but would almost fill an elementary school;
· That the Trustees have entered into a Mitigation Agreement which reflects that this
project has mitigated its impacts.
Mr. Okun briefly reviewed alterative funding options available to the School District to ensure the
construction of schools, noting that if schools were not constructed, other schools sites would be
provided to the children of this project.
Addressing comments with regard to the project, Mr. Griffith advised that the middle school has
been graded and that escrow has been set up under the representation that the site was
approved and funding has as well been approved; that under the terms of the Purchase
Agreement (land acquisition only), the middle school site may close escrow without paying for
the site and payment would be dependent upon receipt of State funding for the site; that the
elementary school has a different timeline; that elementary school would be necessary to
service the needs of this project; and that the elementary school would be considered by way of
Community Facilities District (CFD) funding.
Mr. Okun noted that the CFD funding will assist in the funding of the construction of both
schools but that it would not cover the entire cost.
Although voicing no opposition to growth, Mr. Mark Broderick, 45501 Clubhouse, requested
more reasonable growth, noting that he would oppose the project as presented. Mr. Broderick
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stated that the proposed amenities would not outweigh the significant impacts (air quality and
traffic) to the community. With regard to traffic, he suggested that another traffic study be
completed. If the project were approved, Mr. Broderick recommended the following:
· That the lot size for Planning Area No. 6 (proposed 5,000 square foot lots) be increased
to 7,200 square foot lots in an effort to preserve and protect the property values of the
existing homes;
· That approving the highest allowable density zoned for the area in Planning Area No. 18
(Senior Housing) would be setting an undesirable precedent.
In response to Councilman Naggar who was of the opinion that the cumulative traffic impact has
not been properly addressed, Mr. Broderick noted his support of the imposition of a condition
that if LOS were to drop below D at the key intersection, no additional building permits would be
issued. Mr. Broderick as well noted that if lot coverage were addressed in a Design Review
Committee, he would be satisfied.
Having lived in the City of Temecula for the past 12 years, Ms. JoAnn Galuska, 31320 Via
Eduardo, noted that she would not concur with Mayor Pro Tern Roberts' comments that traffic
has gotten better over the years. Ms. Galuska relayed her opposition to the approval of this
project and encouraged the City Councilmembers to equally weigh both sides of the issues.
For Ms. Galuska, Councilman Stone advised that the project, as proposed, would actually be
less dense than allowable; that the property of discussion is heavily indebted to provide public
infrastructure not only for the proponent of this project but as well if the City were unsuccessful,
in the County areas, in inhibiting some of the growth, stating that the only way for individuals to
travel through this City will be by way of public improvements and noting that without
development the City will not obtain parks, streets, and .regional infrastructure. Mr. Stone noted
that the debt on the property would not permit half the density as proposed plus get all the
public improvements.
Submitting a letter of concern to the City Clerk, Ms. Pamelo Miod, 31995 Via Saltio, voiced her
opposition to this project because of key issues of concern, noting primarily the following:
Cumulative traffic impacts
· Suggested to prepare an update to the traffic study which does not consider new
cumulative impacts and recirculate for public review and comment
Air Quality
· Questioned how a sports park and bus turnout could be deemed as amenities
which are considered as overall benefits to the community and outweigh the
harm of air quality impacts.
Prior to approving this project, Ms. Miod requested that it be proven to the citizens of Temecula
that the City, as a result of this project, will not experience traffic gridlock on SR 79 South.
Since funding for the school has not yet been identified, she requested that this project not be
approved until those details have been resolved. Ms. Miod concurred with concerns expressed
relative to the electricity and power crisis and as well commented on her desire to preserve the
land between Redhawk and the proposed project, noting that this land would be key to
implementing the Trails Master Plan.
Advising that the City is attempting to prevent LOS F - a level which would create gridlock,
Mayor Comerchero noted that LOS D is an acceptable level.
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In response to Councilman Naggar's recommended condition to prohibit the issuance of building
permits if the level of service were to drop below D, Ms. Miod questioned on who would be
making such a determination and noted that some individuals would view LOS D as
unacceptable.
Applicant Rebuttal
In response to the public comments, Mr. Griffith relayed efforts that have been undertaken to
communicate with many individuals as it relates to this project and noted the following:
· That the traffic study prepared for Wolf Creek has been thoroughly reviewed by
staff and has been augmented on several occasions
· That the Circulation Plan reflects several points of access to be considered for
this area
· That no overriding consideration is being requested for traffic,' commenting the
two rigorous LOS conditions potentially being imposed
· That two overriding considerations are being requested - one is a consideration
that the City considers in every instance in approving projects and the other is
loss of agriculture land; that both overriding considerations are covered in City's
General Plan and the project EIR
· That Planning Area No. 6 (5,000 square foot lots) is separated by a 124'
drainage parkway and the right-of-way for Pala Road which requires 250' of
separation from those home which have a minimum lot size of 4,500 square feet
· That the General Plan specifically provides senior housing at a permitted density
of 22 units per acre; that no exception is being requested; but that he would
recommend 25 units per acre, advising that at that level the City would reach the
State mandate
· That the school elements of the project have been adequately addressed; that
the high school has been relocated, originally located on the property to the
Redhawk side; that the middle school was negotiated with the School District but
would not be required for a significant period of time (dependent on occupancy);
that at build out, half a middle school would be required; that the elementary
school will proceed on its own timeline (dependent on occupancy); that the
property for the elementary school has been agreed upon and escrow has been
set up
· That as landowner a contribution of $1.2 million has been made to AD 159 with
an additional $10.5 million to be made
· That viewing growth in the sense maturation, the area of discussion needs to
mature (schools, fire station, parks, shopping, etc.) in an effort to address
existing deficiencies; that not approving this project based on uncontrollable
issues (water, electricity, etc.) would as well put the addressed deficiencies at
risk
In closing, Mr. Griffith thanked staff, the citizens, the members of the Planning Commission, and
the members of the City Council for their time and interest in this project, advising that the time
and interest has helped define a better project.
In response to Councilman Naggar, Mr. Griffith stated that the appropriate time to verify the
level of service on Pala Road and Highway 79 would be at the Tentative Tract Map phase and
not at the issuance of building permits, noting that the Tentative Tract Map phase is subject to a
public hearing and a finding process under the EIR; that if the homes were built and it were
determined that the level of service were below D, individuals may have already bought homes.
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Mr. Griffith noted his concurrence with the revised condition pertaining to LOS D as suggested
by Deputy City Manager Thornhill.
Clarifying the Planning Commission condition with regard to LOS D and the condition being
proposed by staff with regard to LOS D, City Attorney Thorson advised that staff's proposed
condition limits the scope of the traffic study to the traffic circulation patterns and the land use
projects and approvals that are currently existing; that the traffic study would be limited to what
the EIR reviewed as it pertains to this project; that if traffic were to fall below LOS D, it would be
determined that there is a health, safety, and general welfare impact on the resident and the
Tentative Tract Map for this specific area would not be permitted to progress; that the condition
does not address the approval of maps or building permits for any areas other than the Wolf
Creek Specific Plan; and that with the approval of this condition, the City will have the protection
that Wolf Creek will develop and will have impacts that have already been identified.
Councilman Naggar reiterated that, in his opinion, the cumulative traffic impacts for this corridor
have not been properly addressed or studied.
Commenting on the draft form traffic study completed by Wilbur Smith, which Councilman
Naggar continues to reference, Mr. Griffith advised that this study was never circulated or
criticized; that the Wolf Creek traffic study has been developed per the approved Temecula
traffic model which is consistent with the Circulation Plan as identified within the General Plan;
and that the study has been reviewed by Public Works Director Hughes, City's traffic staff, and
has been updated on numerous occasions. Mr. Griffith reiterated his acceptance of the LOS
condition as proposed with the qualification that the same modification be applied to the LOS on
Pala Road prior to the Tentative Tract Map approval.
For Councilman Pratt, Mr. Griffith advised that, if approved, the first homes would be available
within 18 to 24 months; that at the time the Tentative Tract Map were approved, the traffic
conditions of the.project would have to be reaffirmed; that the City's General Plan reflects a goal
to attain a LOS D and does not indicate denial of a project with a LOS of D. In an effort to
address Mr. Pratt's concern, Mr. Griffith advised that he as well as another developer would be
willing to participate in a public education process with regard to public transportation.
At this time, Mayor Comerchero closed the public hearing.
Reiterating his concerns, Councilman Naggar stated that the Wolf Creek EIR relies upon the
City's General Plan EIR which was completed in 1993; that the information is outdated and
unreliable; and that the cumulative impacts have not been properly addressed, expressing
concern with the impacts on the intersections in the area of discussion.
Viewing it as inappropriate and unfair, Mayor Comerchero stated that the City should not
request this developer nor any other developer to resolve all traffic impacts within the area of
discussion and that the City should assure that the developer be responsible for those impacts
created by this project.
Councilman Naggar noted that the completed EIR for AD 159 is as well outdated; that the AD
will not cover all ultimate funding for the corridor improvements; and that the City Council has
not received the materials necessary to proceed with due diligence. Mr. Naggar reiterated his
concern with regional traffic impacts.
.MOTION: Councilman Stone moved to adjourn to 11:00 P.M. as a time certain. The motion
was seconded by Councilman Naggar and voice vote reflected unanimous approval.
Mayor Comerchero announced that the meeting would not proceed after 11:00 P.M.
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Commenting on the benefits this development will be contributing to this community,
Councilman Stone advised that the City's EIR, when completed, was based on population
densities far greater than what currently exists, noting that the City's originally approved
densities have been reduced by 8%; that this development will be paying the price to mitigate
the impacts it would impose upon the City; that the developer should not be held responsible to
mitigate more than his fair share; that it has been confirmed by Public Works Director Hughes
that if Pechanga were to create three times more traffic than projected, there would still be 25%
excess capacity along Pala Road; that the City Council should depend on staff expertise; and
that the proposed project is a quality project which adheres to the City's Growth Management
Plan and will provide public amenities the City would otherwise not be able to provide.
Concurring with Councilman Stone's comments, Mayor Pro Tern Roberts commented on the
benefits of the proposed infrastructure improvements.
For Councilman Pratt, City Attorney Thorson clarified that if the level of service at the corner of
Pala Road and Highway 79 South were to drop to LOS F at the time this development were
ready to sell homes, the City would have to determine the calculation of LOS F and if calculated
on currently existing approved projects by City/County and the traffic circulation patterns
existing as today, the developer would not be able to proceed with the Tentative Tract Maps. If
LOS F were created as a result of County projects and other analysis does not reflect it as F,
the developer may proceed.
Mr. Pratt reiterated his desire for public transportation.
For Councilman Naggar, City Attorney Thorson advised that if the LOS F were based on
existing land uses of projects currently existing and approved, the developer would not be
permitted to pull building permits.
Considering product review would not only pertain to this project but for the City overall, Mayor
Comerchero suggested that product review be agendized to a future City Council meeting and
that if changes were made, those changes would be applied to the Wolf Creek project.
At this time, a straw vote with regard to the condition for LOS D reflected unanimous approval.
Straw votes with regard to modifications recommended by the Planning Commission -
reference pages 'Il and 12
Augment the Mitigation Monitoring Program with the General Plan EIR mitigations
· Straw vote reflected unanimous approval with staffs recommendation
Specify only one option for narrower streets
· Straw vote reflected approval with staff's recommendation
Require that the City hire an architect consultant to review the Planned Development Overlay
· Straw vote reflected approval with staff's recommendation
Delete the split garage option
· Straw vote reflected unanimous approval with staffs recommendation
R:\Minutes\012301
18
Require .qara~es in lieu of carports in the multi-family senior housing proiects
· Straw vote reflected unanimous approval with the Planning Commission
Require Product Review approval from the Plannin,q Commission
· Straw vote reflected unanimous approval with staff's recommendation
With regard to Condition No. 74 (Infrastructure Phase B), Mr. Griffith requested that A.
Circulation, Section iii, be amended as follows: Prior to the 1557th building permit, deleting the
words to the opening of the City Sports Park. City Council and staff voiced no opposition to
this request. With regard to Condition No. 75, Mr. Griffith requested that consideration of LOS D
be reviewed at the Tentative Tract Map Stage at the Planning Commission, amending the last
paragraph to read as follows: Regardless ifa financing mechanism were established, no
Tentative Tract Maps will be approved that will result... City Council and staff voiced no
opposition to this request.
With regard to the Metropolitan Water District (MWD) condition, Mr. Griffith requested that
because MWD is not an approval agency, verbiage be amended to reflect coordination with
the District versus approval from the District. City Council and staff voiced no opposition.
City Attorney Thorson requested that each recommendation be separately considered.
MOTION: Councilman Stone moved to approve recommendation 13.1 and to adopt Resolution
No. 01-11. The motion was seconded by Mayor Pro Tern Roberts and voice vote reflected
approval with the exception of Councilmembers Naggar and Pratt who voted in opposition.
Mr. Griffith confirmed, for Councilman Naggar, that the proposed schoo! sites will not be
developed as homes sites unless the School District were to choose to not acquire the property,
reiterating the previously noted agreements with the School District.
Councilman Naggar requested that a condition be imposed prohibiting the issuance of building
permits within six months of a Stage 3 Alert being called.
Because the electricity issue is not within the City's control and because such a condition has
not been imposed on other projects, Mayor Pro Tern Roberts relayed his opposition to such a
condition.
MOTION: Councilman Stone moved to approve recommendation 13.2 and to adopt Resolution
No. 01-12. The motion was seconded by Mayor Pro Tern Roberts and voice vote reflected
approval with the exception of Councilmembers Naggar and Pratt who voted in opposition.
MOTION: Councilman Stone moved to approve recommendation 13.3 and to adopt Resolution
No. 01-13. The motion was seconded by Mayor Pro Tern Roberts and voice vote reflected
approval with the exception of Councilmembers Naggar and Pratt who voted in opposition.
City Attorney Thorson introduced Ordinance No.01-01 and read it by title only.
MOTION: Councilman Stone moved to approve recommendation 13.4 and to introduce
Ordinance No. 01-01. The motion was seconded by Mayor Pro Tem Roberts and voice vote
reflected approval with the exception of Councilmembers Naggar and Pratt who voted in
opposition.
R:~linutes\012301
19
MOTION: Councilman Stone moved to approve recommendation 13.5 and to adopt Resolution
No. 01-14. The motion was seconded by Mayor Comerchero and voice vote reflected approval
with the exception of Councilmembers Naggar and Pratt who voted in opposition.
City Attorney Thorson introduced Ordinance No. 01-02 and read it by title only.
MOTION: Councilman Stone moved to approve recommendation 13.6 and to introduce
Ordinance No. 01-02. The motion was seconded by Mayor Pro Tem Roberts and voice vote
reflected approval with the exception of Councilmembers Naggar and Pratt who voted in
opposition.
COUNCIL BUSINESS
14 Selection of City Council Committee Assignments
RECOMMENDATION:
14.1 Appoint a member of the City Council to serve as liaison to each of the City
Commissions and Committees and to the Pechanga Tribal Council:
· Community Services Commission
· Old Town Local Review Board
· Old Town Redevelopment Advisory Committee
· Planning Commission
· Public/Traffic Safety Commission
· Pechanga Tribal Council Liaison
14.2 Appoint member(s) of the City Council to serve on each of the following external
committees:
· City of Murrieta Liaison (2 Members)
· County General Plan Update Committee- RCIP
· French Valley Airport Committee (2 Members)
· League of California Congress - Voting Delegates (Member and Alternate)
· Multi-Species Habitat Conservation Plan Committee
· Murrieta Creek Advisory Board (Member and Alternate)
· National League of Cities Annual Congress - 2001 Voting Delegate (Member and
Alternate)
· Riverside County Habitat Conservation Agency
· Riverside County Transportation Commission (Member and Alternate)
· Riverside Transit Agency Representative (Member and Alternate)
· Temecula Sister City Corporation Board of Directors
· Temecula/Murrieta Transportation/Traffic Committee (2 Members)
· Trails Master Plan Development Committee
· WRCOG Representative
· Senior Center Expansion Design Committee (Member and Alternate)
14.3 Appoint two members of the City Council to serve on each of the following Advisory
Committees:
· City's General Plan Update Committee
· Community Service Funding Ad Hoc Committee
R:\Minutes\012301
20
· Economic DevelopmentJOId Town Steering Committee
· Finance Committee
· Joint City Council/Temecula Valley Unified School District Committee
· Library Task Force
· Old Town Temecula Community Theater Ad Hoc Committee/Theater Advisory
Committee
· PublicWorks/Facilities Committee
14.4 Appoint two members of the City Council to serve on each of the following Council
Subcommittees:
· Children's Museum Ad Hoc Subcommittee
· Development Overlay Subcommittee
· Electrical NeedsAd Hoc Subcommittee
· Hotel Conference Center Ad Hoc Council Subcommittee
· Lennar Project Subcommittee
· Roripaugh Ranch Annexation Ad Hoc Subcommittee
· SAF-T-NET Subcommittee (one Councilmember and one Public/Traffic Safety
Commissioner)
· Sports ParkAd Hoc Subcommittee
· Via Cordoba Subcommittee
· Wall of Honor Ad Hoc Subcommittee
· Water Park Subcommittee
· Wolf Creek Development Agreement Council Ad Hoc Committee
MOTION: Councilman Stone moved to continue this item to the February 13, 2001, City
Council meeting. The motion was seconded by Councilman Naggar and voice vote reflected
unanimous approval.
15 State Ballot Initiative
(Requested by Councilman Stone)
RECOMMENDATION:
15.1 Provide direction to the City Attorney and staff regarding drafting of a State Ballot
Initiative which would provide funding for public transportation projects.
MOTION: Councilman Stone moved to continue this item to the February 27, 2001, City
Council meeting. The motion was seconded by Councilman Naggar and voice vote reflected
unanimous approval.
16 City Council Meetin,q Adiournment Time
(Requested by Councilman Stone)
RECOMMENDATION:
16.1 Provide direction to staff whether to amend Ordinance No. 2.04.020 regarding the
time of adjournment for City Council meetings.
MOTION: Councilman Stone moved to continue this item to the February 13, 2001, City
Cduncil meeting. The motion was seconded by Councilman Naggar and voice vote reflected
unanimous approval.
R:\Minutes\012301
21
CITY MANAGER'S REPORT
No comments.
CITY ATTORNEY'S REPORT
No comments.
ADJOURNMENT
At 11:03 P.M., the City Council meeting was formally adjourned to Tuesday, February 13, 2001,
at 7:00 P.M., in the City Council Chambers, 43200 Business Park Drive, Temecula, California.
Jeff Comerchero, Mayor
ATTEST:
Susan W. Jones, CMC
City Clerk
[SEAL]
R:~linutes\012301
22
ITEM 3
RESOLUTION NO. 01-
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
TEMECULA ALLOWING CERTAIN CLAIMS AND DEMANDS AS
SET FORTH IN EXHIBIT A
THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF TEMECULA DOES RESOLVE, DETERMINE AND
ORDER AS FOLLOWS:
Section 1. That the following claims and demands as set forth in Exhibit A, on file in the
Office of the City Clerk, have been audited by the City Manager, and that the same are hereby
allowed in the amount of $962,249.68.
Section 2. The City Clerk shall certify the adoption of this resolution.
PASSED, APPROVED AND ADOPTED, this 24th day of April, 2001.
ATTEST:
Jeff Comerchero, Mayor
Susan W. Jones, CMC
City Clerk
[SEAL]
R:/Resos2001/Resos 01-
]
STATE OF CALIFORNIA )
COUNTY OF RIVERSIDE) ss
CITY OF TEMECULA )
I, Susan W. Jones, CMC, City Clerk of the City of Temecula, hereby do certify that the
foregoing Resolution No. 01- was duly adopted at a regular meeting of the City Council of the City
of Temecula on the 24th day of April, 2001 by the following roll call vote:
AYES:
NOES:
ABSENT:
COUNCILMEMBERS:
COUNCILMEMBERS:
COUNCILMEMBERS:
Susan W. Jones, CMC
City Clerk
R:/Resos2001/Resos 01-
CITY OF TEMECULA
LIST OF DEMANDS
04/05/01 TOTAL CHECK RUN:
04/12/01 TOTAL CHECK RUN:
04/24/01 TOTAL CHECK RUN:
04/12/01 TOTAL PAYROLL RUN:
TOTAL LIST OF DEMANDS FOR 04/24/91 COUNCIL MEETING:
DISBURSEMENTS BY FUND:
CHECKS:
001
165
190
192
193
~94
210
261
28O
30O
320
33O
34O
380
471
GENERAL FUND
RDA-LOW/MOD INCOME HOUSING
COMMUNI~( SERVICES DISTRICT
TCSD SERVICE LEVEL B
TCSD SERVICE LEVEL C
TCSD SERVICE LEVEL D
CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT PROJ. FUND
CFD 88-12ADMIN EXPENSE FUND
RDA-REDEVELOPMENT
INSURANCE
INFORMATION SYSTEMS
SUPPORT SERVICES
FACILITIES
RDA - DEBT SERVICE
CFD 98-1 ADMIN EXPENSE FUND
$ 320,942.04
67,591.41
130,616.09
45.76
27,881.15
1,132.94
105,111.21
8,037.00
14,698.87
4,295.69
19,006.78
12,622.51
1,250.00
2,750.00
$ 175,508.53
340,558.32
220,497.94
225,684.89
$ 962,249.6~8
$ 736,564.79
001
165
190
192
193
194
280
300
32O
330
34O
GENERAL FUND
RDA-LOW/MOD INCOME HOUSING
COMMUNITY SERVICES DISTRICT
TCSD SERVICE LEVEL B
TCSD SERVICE LEVEL C
TCSD SERVICE LEVEL D
RDA-REDEVELOPMENT
INSURANCE
INFORMATION SYSTEMS
SUPPORT SERVICES
FACILITIES
TOTAL BY FUND:
PREPARED BY RETA WESTON, ACCOUNTING SPECIALIST
SHAWN NELSON, CITY MANAGER
165,256.24
3,829.50
37,615.67
59.34
2,905.46
361
1 ,~63.93
764.58
6,629.80
1,866.31
4,432.37
225,684.89
, HEREBY CERTIFY THAT THE FOLLOWING IS TRUE AND CORRECT.
, HEREBY CERTIFY THAT THE FOLLOWING IS TRUE AND CORRECT.
VOUCHRE2 CITY OF TENECULA PAGE
04/05/01 08:52 VOUCHER/CHECK REGISTER
FOR ALL PERIOOS
FUND TITLE
001 GENERAL FUND
165 RDA DEV- LO~/MO0 SET ASIDE
190 COMMUNITY SERVICES DISTRICT
193 TCSO SERVICE LEVEL C
210 CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT PROJ FUND
261 CFD 88-12 ADMIN EXPENSE FUND
280 REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY -
INFORMATION SYSTEMS
330 SUPPORT SERVICES
340 FACILITIES
380 RDA - DEBT SERVICE
471 CFD 98-1ADM]N EXPENSE FUND
TOTAL
AHOUNT
30,281.72
15,098.05
16,652.58
111.59
81,251.55
8,000.00
7,571.25
4,561.78
252.38
7,127.63
1,250.00
2,750.00
1~5,508.53
VOUCHRE2
04/05/01 08:52
CITY OF TEMECULA
VOUCHER/CHECK REGISTER
FOR ALL PERIODS
PAGE 1
VOUCNER/
CHECK CHECK VENDOR VENDOR ITEM ACCOUNT ITEM CHECK
NUMBER DATE NUMBER NAME DESCRIPTION NUMBER AMOUNT AMOUNT
68385 04/05/01 004148 A T & T LONG DISTANCE CHRGS:POLICE DPT 001-170-999-5208 60.20 60.20
68386 04/o5/01 000434 ACCELA.COM SGL DATA BASE LICENSE FEE 320-199-999-5250 3,232.50 3,232.50
68387 04/05/01 004487 AD-A-SIGN FAC IMPR PRGM:M&H ART & CUSTOM 165-199-813-5804 1,562.80 1,562.80
68388 04/05/01 003304 ADAMS ADVERTISING INC OLO TWN BILLBOARD AB:RANCHO CA 280-199-999-5362 1,751.00 1,751.00
68389 04/05/01 001916 ALBERT A WEBB ASSOCIATE CFD 98-1 CONSULTING SERVICES 471-199-999-5248 5,500.00
68389 04/05/01 001916 ALBERT A WEBB ASSOCIATE CEO 88-12 CONSULTING SERVICES 261-199-999-5248 6,000.00
68389 04/05/01 001916 ALBERT A WEBB ASSOCIATE CREDIT:3RD & 4TH GTR BILLING 471-199-999-5248 2,750.00-
68389 04/05/01 001916 ALBERT A WEBB ASSOCIATE CREDIT:3RD & 4TH QTR BILLING 261-199-999-5248 3,000.00- 5,750.00
68390 04/05/01 AMERICAN ASSN OF CODE MEMBERSHIP:MARIANNE L. SALAZAR 001-161-999-5226 45.00 45.00
68391 04/05/01 000747 AMERICAN PLANNING ASSOC ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP:D.UBNOSKE 001-161-999-5226 246.00 246.00
68392 04/05/01 000101 APPLE ONE, INC. TEMP HELP W/E 03/17 BRUNER 001-162-999-5118 177.24
68392 04/05/01 000101 APPLE ONE, INC. TEMP HELP W/E 03/17 SIMPKINS 001-161-999-5118 465.08 642.32
68393 04/05/01 001323 ARROWHEAD WATER INC BOTTLED WTR SVCS:MNTC FAC 340-199-702-5250 179.24
68393 04/05/01 001323 ARROWHEAD WATER INC BOTTLED WTR SVES: CRC 190-182-999-5250 59.88
68393 04/05/01 001323 ARROWHEAD WATER INC BOTTLEO WTR SVCS: CiTY HALL 340-199-701-5250 467.37 706.49
68394 04/05/01 000427 ARTESIA IMPLEMENT INC REPAIR & MAINT OF TCSD TRACTOR 190-180-999-5214 175.91 175.91
68395 04/05/01 003203 ARTISTIC EMBROIDERY TEAM PACE RESALE MERCHANDISE 001-1665 105.00
68395 04/05/0t 003203 ARTISTIC EMBROIDERY TEAM PACE RESALE MERCHANDISE 001-1665 105.00
68395 04/05/01 003203 ARTISTIC EMBROIDERY TEAM PACE RESALE MERCNANDiSE 001-1~5 118.00 328.00
68396 04/05/01 ASEBEDO, DEBB! REFUND: SECURITY DEPPSIT 190-2900 100.00 100.00
68397 04/05/01 000622 BANTA ELECTRIC-REFRIGER INSTALL CLOCK/REDUCE LGHT:OLD 001-164-603-5212 1,400.00
68397 04/05/01 000622 BANTA ELECTRIC-REFRIGER INSTALL 41LGHT CTRL SENSORS 340-199-701-5212 1,230.00 2,630.00
68398 04/05/01 BARRELS UNLIMITED, INC. 10 USED OAK BARRELS:OLD TWN 001-164-603-5218 732.34 732.34
68399 04/05/01 004176 BROADWING LONG DISTANCE & INTERNET SVCS 320-199-999-5208 1,195.00 1,195.00
68400 04/05/01 000924 C A P P O, INC. MEMBERSHIP:MARY VOLLMUTH 001-140-999-5226 90.00 90.00
68401 04/05/01 000901 C P R S DISTRICT XI CPR AWRD CEREMONY:STAFF/RECIPI 190-180-999-5260 210.00 210.00
68402 04/05/01 CAL PLANNING & DEVELOPM ONE YEAR SUBSCRIPTION:CP&DR 001-161-999-5228 239.00 239.00
68403 04/05/01 000832 CALIF PUBLIC PARKING AS ANNUAL MEMBERSHIP:JIM DOMENOE 001-170-999-5226 100.00 100.00
68404 04/05/01 COOKE, TELEClA REFUND: TINY TOTS-CREATIVE BEG 190-183-4982 30.00 30.00
68405 04/05/01 CRUZ-HAZEL~ GRISELA REFUND: BABY BOPPERS MOM & ME 190-183-4982 25.00 25.00
VOUCHRE2 CITY OF TEMECULA PAGE 2
04/05/01 08:52 VOUCHER/CHECK REGI~FER
FOR ALL PERIODS
VOUCHER/
CHECK CHECK VENDOR VENDOR
NUMBER DATE NUMBER NAME
68406 04/05/01 001393 DATA TICKET INC
68407 04/05/01 004294 DIVERSIFIED LANDSCAPE C
68407 04/05/01 004294 DIVERSIFIED LANDSCAPE C
68408 04/05/01 004192 DOWNS COMMERCIAL FUELIN
68409 04/05/01 001380 E S I EMPLOYMENT SERVIC
68409 04/05/01 001380 E B I EMPLOYMENT BERVIC
68409 04/05/01 001580 E S I EHPLOYMENT SERVIC
68410 04/05/01 004130 ELSINORE ELECTRICAL SUP
68410 04/05/01 004130 ELSINORE ELECTRICAL SUP
68411 04/05/01 002060 EUROPEAN DELI & CATERIN
68411 04/05/01 002060 EUROPEAN DELI & CATERIN
68412 04/05/01 000478 FAST SIGNS
68412 04/05/01 000478 FAST SIGNS
68412 04/05/01 000478 FAST SIGNS
68413 04/05/01 003270 FAUST PRINTING INC
68413 04/05/01 003270 FAUST PRINTING INC
68/,14 04/05/01 003347 FIRST BANKCARD CENTER
68614 04/05/01 003347 FIRST BANKCARD CENTER
68414 04/05/01 003347 FIRST BANKCARD CENTER
68414 04/05/01 003347 FIRST BANKCARD CENTER
68414 04/05/01 003347 FIRST DANKCARD CENTER
68414 04/05/01 003347 FIRST BANKCARD CENTER
68414 04/05/01 003347 FIRST 8ANKCARD CENTER
68414 04/05/01 003347 FIRST BANKCARD CENTER
68414 04/05/01 003347 FIRST BANKCARD CENTER
68414 04/05/01 003347 FIRST BANKCARD CENTER
68414 04/05/01 003347 FIRST BANKCARD CENTER
68414 04/05/01 003347 FIRST BANKCARD CENTER
68614 04/05/01 003347 FIRST BANKCARD CENTER
68414 04/05/01 003347 FIRST BANKCARD CENTER
68414 04/05/01 003347 FIRST BANKCARD CENTER
68414 04/05/01 003347 FIRST BANKCARD CENTER
68415 04/05/01 004455 GATEWAY COMPUTERS
68415 04/05/01 004455 GATEWAY COMPUTERS
68415 04/05/01 004455 GATEWAY COMPUTERS
68416 04/05/01 000186 HANKS HARDWARE
68416 04/05/01 000186 HANKS HARDWARE 1NC
68416 04/05/01 000186 HANKS HARDWARE
68416 04/05/01 000186 HANKS HARDWARE
68416 04/05/01 000186 HANKS HARDWARE
68416 04/05/01 000186 HANKS HARDWARE INC
ITEM ACCOUNT
DESCRIPTION NUMBER
FEB PARKING CITATION PROCESSIN 001-170-999-5250
JAN PRGS:PALA BRDG LDS P~97-15 210-165-631-5804
RETENTiON:JAN LDB PALA P~97-15 210-2035
EOC GENERATOR CARB DIESEL #2 340-199-701-5215
TEMP HELP W/E 03/09 HANSEN
TEMP HELP W/E 03/09 HANSEN
TEMP HELP W/E 03/09 HANSEN
001-120-999-5118
001-161-999-5118
190-180-999-5118
CRC LIGHT FIXTURE LENSES
SALES TAX
190-182-999-5212
190-182-999-5212
REFSHMNTS:COUNCIL MEETING 3/27 001-100-999-5250
REFRSHMNT:STATE TOURISM OFFICI 001-111-999-5270
FAC IMPR PROM:HEALTH INS AGENC
BANNER:WELCOME TO OLD TO~N
SALES TAX
280-199-813-5804
001-111-999-5270
001-111-999-5270
TEMECULA PRESENTATION FOLOER
SALES TAX
001-111-999-5270
001-111-999-5270
XX-7824 COMERCHERO:LEAGUE:WSHG
XX-9798 STONE:LEAGUE CF WSHGTN
XX-9277 R.ROBERTS:LEAGUE:WSHGT
XX-2292 G.ROBERTS:CSMFO CF/RTL
XX-6165 YATES:PROF MTGS
XX-6165 YATES:PROF MTGB
XX-1405 UBNOSKE:APA/BW AIR COM
XX-1405 UBNOSKE:APA/BW AIR COM
XX-1405 UBNOSKE:APA/SW AIR COM
XX-1405 UBNOSKE:APA/SW AiR COM
XX-0515 THORNHILL:LEAGUE-COMM
XX-0515 THORNHILL:LEAGUE-DU
XX-0432 ELMO:BW AIR PZ-ER:HTL
XX-0432 ELMO:SW AIR PZ-ER:HTL
XXo0432 ELMO:SW AIR PZ-ER:HTL
001-100-999-5258
001-100-999-5258
001-100-999-5258
001-140-999-5258
001-150-999-5261
001-150-999-5260
001-161-999-5228
001-161-999-5260
001-161-999-5258
001-161-999-5272
001-161-999-5272
001-161-999-5258
001-162-999-5261
001-162-999-5260
001-162-999-5258
xx-1143 PARKER:CPRS CF/HTL-CAR 190-1990
2 COMPUTERS:POLICE:V935 COMP.
FREIGHT
SALES TAX
001-170-999-5604
001-170-999-5604
001-170-999-5604
HARDWARE SUPPLIES-SPEC EVENTS
HARDWARE SUPPLIES-TRAFFIC DIV
HAROWARE SUPPLIES-PW MNTC
HARDWARE SUPPLIES - CITY HALL
HARDWARE SUPPLIES - PARKS
HARDWARE SUPPLIES-CRC
190-183-999-5370
001-164-602-5242
001-164-601-5218
340-199-701-5212
190-180-999-5242
190-182-999-5212
ITEM
AMOUNT
476.75
69,653.10
6,965.31-
957.57
325.44
1,352.61
193.23
121.50
9.11
187.46
403.13
1,606.50
105.63
7.92
3,735.00
280.13
1,016.94
1,134.32
2,545.45
767.81
2.50
115.50
69.00
51.86
105.50
384.50
1,400.00
365.67
558.00
50.44
552.26
1,053.41
2,614.00
176.00
191.42
39.19
141.47
127.97
108.71
42.99
114.77
CHECK
AMOUNT
476.75
62,687.79
957.57
1,871.28
130.61
590.59
1,720.05
4,015.13
10,17'3.16
2,981.42
VOUCHRE2 CITY OF TEMECULA PAGE 3
04/05/01 08:52 VCXJCHER/CHECK REGISTER
FOR ALL PERIODS
VOUCHER/
CHECK CHECK VENDOR VENDOR
NUMBER DATE NUMBER NAME
68416 04/05/01 000186 HANKS BARDWARE INC
68416 04/05/01 000186 HANKS HARDWARE INC
68416 04/05/01 000186 HANKS HARDWARE
68416 04/05/01 000186 HANKS HARDWARE IHC
68416 04/05/01 000186 HANKS HARDWARE
68416 04/05/01 000186 HANKS HARDWARE IHC
68416 04/05/01 000186 HANKS HARDWARE INC
68416 04/05/01 0001~ HANKS HARDWARE INC
68417 04/05/01 004471 HWY 52
68418 04/05/01 003319 INLAND ENTERTAINMEHT RO
68419 04/05/01 003046 K F R 0 G 95.1 FM RADIO
68419 04/05/01 003046 K F R 0 G 95.1 FM RADIO
68420 04/05/01 001667 KELLY TEMPORARY SERVICE
68421 04/05/01 004413 KLA~L~TH 8AY
68421 04/05/01 004413 KLAMATH SAY
68422 04/05/01 000209 L & M FERTILIZER IBC
68423 04/05/01 004107 MASSA-LAVITT, SANDRA
68424 04/05/01 003448 MELODYS AD WORKS
68425 04/05/01 001384 MINUTEMAN PRESS
68425 04/05/01 001384 MINUTEMAN PRESS
68425 04/05/01 001384 MINUTEMAN PRESS
68425 04/05/01. 001384 MINUTEMAN PRESS
68425 04/05/01 001384 MINUTEMAN PRESS
68425 04/05/01 001384 MINUTEMAN PRESS
68425 04/05/01 001384 MINUTEMAN PRESS
68425 04/05/01 001384 MINUTEMAN PRESS
68425 04/05/01 001384 MINUTEMAN PRESS
68426 04/05/01 000230 MUNIFINANCIAL
68427 04/05/01 002139 NORTH COUNTY TIMES- ATT
68428 04/05/01 003964 OFFICE DEPOT SUSINESS S
68429 04/05/01 002105 OLD TO~N TIRE & SERVICE
68429 04/05/01 002105 OLD TOWN TIRE & SERVICE
68429 04/05/01 002105 OLD TOWN TIRE & SERVICE
68430 04/05/01 002668 C~4EGA LAKE SERVICES
ITEM ACCOUNT ITEM
DESCRIPTION NUMBER AMOUNT
HARDWARE SUPPLIES-RECREATION 190-187-999-5301
HARDWARE SUPPLIES-BUILD&SAFETY 001-162-999-5242
HARDWARE SUPPLIES - CITY HALL
HARDWARE SUPPLIES - PARKS
NAROWARE SUPPLIES - SR CTR
HARDWARE SUPPLIES - ~CC
HARDWARE SUPPLIES - MUSEUM
HARDWARE SUPPLIES - MUSEUM
340-199-701-5212
190-180-999-5212
190-181-999-5212
190-184-999-5212
190-185-999-5212
190-185-999-5301
BLUE GRASS PERFORMERS 3/24-25 280-199-999-5362
AD:OLD TWB BLUEGRASS FESTIVAL 280-199-999-5362
BROADCASTING:BLUE GRASS FESTIV 280-199-999-5362
BROADCASTING:BLUE GRASS FESTIV 280-199-999-5362
TEMP HELP W/E 03/18 HALL 001-140-999-5118
MAGNET CITY BUSINESS CARDS
SALES TAX
001-170-999-5292
001-170-999-5292
MNTC SUPPLIES:TCSD ~ORK CREW 190-180-999-5212
03/20-28/01 CONSULTING SVCS 001-161-999-5248
CONSULTING SVCS:WESTERN DAYS 280-199-999-5250
QTY 1000 ENVELOPES - FINANCE
SALES TAX
GTY 2000 ENVELOPES-CH OFFICE
SALES TAX
QTY 2000 ENVELOPES - HR DEPT
SALES TAX
QTY 7000 ENVELOPES - FINANCE
SALES TAX
QTY 1000 ENVELOPES - B&S DEPT
001-140-999-5222
001-140-999-5222
001-110-999-5222
001-110-999-5222
001-150-999-5222
001-150-999-5222
001-140-999'5222
001-140-999-5222
001-162-999-5222
ARBITRAGE REBATE SERVICES 380-199-999-5248
VARIOIJS RECRUITMENT ADS FOR HR 001-150-999-5254
OFFICE SUPPLIES - PO MAIN STN 001-170-999-5220
CITY VEHICLE REPAIRS & MAINT
CITY VEHICLE REPAIRS & MAINT
CITY VEBICLE REPAIRS & MAINT
001-164-601-5214
001-164-601-5214
001-164-601-5214
APR DUCK POND WATER MAINT SVCS 190-180-999-5250
210.38
12.89
32.64
980.50
66.96
11.14
43.96
17.63
1,000.00
213.75
200,00
800.00
106.40
255.52
18.26
23.00
1,027.80
2,000.00
89.44
6.71
168.79
12.66
168.79
12.66
344.58
25.84
96.15
1,250.00
135.00
7'7.53
59.95
140.95
66.45
800.00
CHECK
AMOUNT
1,951.20
1,000.00
213.75
1,000.00
106.40
273.78
23.00
1,027.80
2,000.00
925.62
1,250,00
135.00
77.53
267.35
800.00
68431 04/05/01 004475 P A S SYSTEMS INTERNATI PASSIVE ALCOHOL SENSOR:PAS III 001-170-502-5610 1,230.00
68431 04/05/01 004475 P A S SYSTEMS INTERNATI FREIGHT 001-170-502-5610 9.58 1,239.58
VOUCHRE2
04/05/01 08:52
CITY OF TEMECULA
VOUCHER/CHECK REGISTER
FOR ALL PERIODS
VOUCHER/
CHECK CHECK VENDOR VENDOR ITEM ACCOUNT ITEM
NUMBER DATE NUMBER NAME DESCRIPTION NUMBER AMOUNT
68432 04/05/01 004319 PACIFIC ROOFING & DESIG PRGS PHT#2:DESILT POND:PWO0-01 210-190-171-5804 13,317.96
68~32 04/05/01 004319 PACIFIC ROOFING & DESIG PRGS PMT#2:DESILT POND:PWO0-01 210-190-171-5804 3,550.00
68432 04/05/01 004319 PACIFIC ROOFING & DESI6 RET N/H PMT#2:DESZLT POND:O001 210-2035 1,686.80-
68~33 04/05/01 003955 PANE CONSULTING SERVICE VOLUNTEER RECOGNITION GIFTS 190-183-999-5370 820.00
68/,33 04/05/01 003955 PANE CONSULTING SERVICE SALES TAX 190-183-999-5370 60.21
68433 04/05/01 003955 PANE CONSULTING SERVICE CREDIT:SALES TAX CHRG OM SETUP 190-183-999-5370 3.96-
68434 04/05/01 000359 PARKER, HERMAN
68435 04/05/01 PARTOMO, FELIX
REIMB:CPRS CONF:3/13-17/01
190-180-999-5258 60.72
REFUND:WEED ABATEMEHT:~/DO00002 001-1215
270.30
68436 04/05/01 004074 PARTY CITY OF TEMECULA TCC RECREATION SUPPLIES 190-184-999-5301 70.42
68436 04/05/01 004074 PARTY CITY OF TEMECULA EMP RECOGNITION SUPPLIES 001-150-999-5265 40.82
68437 04/05/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 001-100-999-5260 42.46
68437 04/05/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 190-181-999-5301 5.99
68437 04/05/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 190-18~-999-5371 13.02
68437 04/05/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 190-18/*-999-5301 8.61
68437 04/05/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 190-183-999-5320 16.13
68437 04/05/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 190-183-999-5320 1.61
68437 04/05/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 190-183-999-5320 21.48
68437 04/05/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASN REIMBURSEMENT 190-183-999-5320 15.00
68437 04/05/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASN REIMBURSEMENT 190-18~-999-5320 11.60
68437 04/05/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 190-183-999-5320 6.34
68437 04/05/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 001-111-999-5270 42.89
68437 04/05/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 001-100-999-5220 5.36
68437 04/05/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 001-110-999-5261 18.46
68437 04/05/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASN REIMBURSEMENT 190-183-999-5320 18.24
68437 04/05/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMRURSEMENT 001-162-999-5260 24.00
68437 04/05/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 001-150-999-5260 7.23
68437 04/05/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 190-181-999-5301 16,94
68437 04/05/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 190-184-999-5301 1.66
68437 04/05/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 190-180-999-5230 11.75
68437 04/05/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMRURSEMENT 001-164-601-5260 30.00
68437 04/05/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 001-111-999-5220 11.80
68437 04/05/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 001-161-999-5260 31.68
68437 04/05/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 001-140-999-5220 50.00
68437 04/05/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 190-183-9<29-5350 25.00
68437 04/05/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 001-100-999-5260 42.19
68437 04/05/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 001-140-999-5260 9.99
68437 04/05/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSE[iENT 001-140-999-5260 57.10
68437 04/05/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 001-161-999-5260 22.43
68439 04/05/01 000253 POSTMASTER EXPRESS MAIL & POSTAL SERVS 001-120-999-5230 34.85
68439 04/05/01 000253 POSTMASTER EXPRESS MAIL & POSTAL SERVS 001-161-999-5230 50.85
68439 04/05/01 000253 POSTMASTER EXPRESS MAIL & POSTAL SERVS 001-150-999-5230 13.75
68440 04/05/01 001364 R C P BLOCK & BRICK INC 30.48
REPAIR/MAINT-WINCHESTER CRK PK 190-180-999-5212
68441 04/05/01 002612 RADIO SHACK IRC MISC COMPUTER SUPPLIES 320-199-999-5221 58.37
PAGE 4
CHECK
AMOUNT
15,181.16
876.25
60.72
270.30
111.24
568.96
99.45
30.48
58.37
VOUCHRE2 CITY OF TEMECULA
04/05/01 08:52 VOUCHER/CHECK REGISTER
FOR ALL PERIOOS
PAGE 5
VOUCHER/
CHECK CHECK VENDOR VENDOR ITEM ACCOUNT ITEM CHECK
NUMBER DATE NUMBER NAME OESCRIPTIOM NUMBER AMOUNT AMOUNT
68442 04/05/01 004468 RANCH MUFFLER RE-ROUTE EXHAUST PIPE/PW TRUCK 001-16~-601-5214 115.00
68442 04/05/01 004468 RANCH MUFFLER SALES TAX 001-164-601-5214 4.13 119.13
68443 04/05/01 000262 RANCHO CALIF WATER DIST MAR 01-99-02003-0 FLOATING MTR 001-16~-601-5250 342.06
68443 04/05/01 000262 RANCHO CALIF WATER DIST MAR 02-79-10100-1NW SPRTS PRK 190-180-999-5240 65.25 407.31
68444 04/05/01 000266 RIGHTWAY PORTABLE TOILETS/OEMO ON PUJOL 165-199-999-5250 145.75
68444 04/05/01 000266 RIGHTWAY APR EQUIP RENTAL - RIVERTON PK 190-180-999-5238 62.88 208.63
68445 04/05/01 000411 RIVERSIDE CO FLOOD CONT PLAN CK FEES FOR PALA RD IMPRV 210-165-603-5802 123.30 123.30
68446 04/05/01 001097 ROADLINE PRODUCTS INC MISC SUPPLIES PW STENCIL TRUCK 001-16~.-601-5218 1,026.56 1,026.56
68447 04/05/01 003027 RODFTEK RES IMPRV PRGM:P.DEROEUX 165-199-813-5804 3,523.50
68447 04/05/01 003027 RODFTEK CREDIT:CLIENT'S PORTION OF PMT 165-199-813-5804 350.00- 3,1~.50
68448 04/05/01 003001 ROSS FENCE COHPANY RES IMPRV PRGM: A. DANKINS 165-199-813-5804 1,392.00
68448 04/05/01 003001 ROSS FENCE COMPANY RES IMPRV PROM: S. SPERA 165-199-813-5804 3,859.00 5,251.00
68449 04/05/01 000277 S & S ARTS & CRAFTS INC SUPPLIES FOR TINY TOTS 190-183-999-5320 67.86 67.86
68/*50 04/05/01 S.A.F.E. S.A.F.E. 8ENEFIT:O4/18/O1:R.R. 001-100-999-5260 75.00 75.00
68451 04/05/01 SANCHEZ, VIOLA REFUND:TINY TOTS-CREATIVE BEG 190-183-4982 65.00 65.00
68/*52 04/05/01 SANTA, RUTH REFUND:DANCE-BALLROOM 190-183-4982 43.00 43.00
68453 04/05/01 000537 SO CALIF EDISON MAR 2-10-747-1393 VARIOUS MTRS 190-180-999-5240 25.58
68/*53 04/05/01 000537 SO CALIF EDISON MAR 2-20-792-2444 VARIOUS MTRS 190-180-999-5319 277.86
68453 04/05/01 000537 SO CALIF EDISON 2-22-496-3439 WINCHESTER RO 190-180-999-5319 3,090.07
68453 04/05/01 000537 SO CALIF EDISON MAR 2-22-231-4502 VARIOUS MTRS 190-180-999-5240 353.28
68453 04/05/01 000537 SO CALIF EDISON MAR 2-00-397-5042 CITY HALL 340-199-701-5240 4,152.10
68453 04/05/01 000537 SO CALIF EDISON MAR 2-00-397-5067 VARIOUS MTRS 193-180-999-5240 711.59
68453 04/05/01 000537 SO CALIF EDISON MAR 2-00-397-5067 VARIOUS MTRS 190-180-999-5240 25.92
68453 04/05/01 000537 SO CALIF EOISON HAR 2-19-999-9442 VARIOUS MTRS 190-180-999-5319 1,927.04
68453 04/05/01 000537 SO CALIF EDISON MAR 2-18-528-9980 SANTIAGO RD 190-180-999-5319 184.08 10,747.52
68454 04/05/01 000282 SO CALIF MUNICIPAL ATHL ADULT SOFTBALL BO0~S WNTR/FALL 190-187-999-5301 8~0.00 840.00
68455 04/05/01 000519 SOUTH COUNTY PEST CONTR CRC PEST CONTROL SERVICES 190-182-999-5250 90.00 90.00
68456 04/05/01 004207 STEINY & COMPANY INC REL RETENTION:TRF SGNL UPGRADE 210-2035 2,179.30 2,179.30
68457 04/05/01 003960 TEMECULA SECURITY FENCI RES IMPRV PRGM: J. BENZING 165-199-813-5804 4,965.00 4,965.00
68458 04/05/01 000307 TEMECULA TROPHY COMPANY NAMETAGE FOR H. MILLER - TCSD 190-185-999-5222 6.99 6.99
68459 04/05/01 004274 TEMECULA VALLEY SECURIT LOCKSMITH SVCS:TEMEKU HILLS PK 190-180-999-5212 54.01
68459 04/05/01 004274 TEMECULA VALLEY SECURIT LOCKSMITH SVCS:TEMEKU HILLS PK 190-180-999-5212 45.99
6~59 04/05/01 004274 TEHECULA VALLEY SECURIT LOCKSMITH SVCS:PALOHA D.S.PARK 190-180-999-5212 50.00 150.00
VOUCHRE2 CITY OF TEMECULA PAGE 6
04/05/01 08:52 VOUCHER/CHECK REGISTER
FOR ALL PERIOOS
VOUCHER/
CHECK CHECK VENDOR VENDOR
NUMBER DATE NUMBER NAME
68460 04/05/01 001483 TOM DOOSON & ASSOCIATES
68461 04/05/01 003031 TRAFFIC CONTROL SERVICE
68462 04/05/01 000459 TUMBLE JUNGLE FITNESS G
68462 04/05/01 000459 TUMBLE JUNGLE FITNESS G
68462 04/05/01 000459 TUMBLE JUNGLE FITNESS G
68462 04/05/01 000459 TUMBLE JUNGLE FITNESS G
68462 04/05/01 000459 TUMBLE JUNGLE FITNESS G
68462 04/05/01 000459 TUMBLE JUNGLE FITNESS G
68462 04/05/01 000459 TUMBLE JUNGLE FITNESS G
68462 04/05/01 000459 TUMBLE dUNGLE FITNESS G
68462 04/05/01 000459 TUMBLE JUNGLE FITNESS G
68462 04/05/01 000459 TUMBLE JUNGLE FITNESS G
68463 04/05/01 003228 U S BANK TRUST NATIONAL
68463 04/05/01 003228 U S BANK TRUST NATIONAL
68464 04/05/01 004486 UNION 76
68465 04/05/01 004440 UNIVERSITY PROOUCTS INC
68466 04/05/01 004261 VERIZON CALIFORNIA
68467 04/05/01 003191 WEDEKING, BRUCE
68460 04/05/01 003835 WEST COAST SUPPLY COMPA
68468 04/05/01 003835 WEST COAST SUPPLY CGMPA
68468 04/05/01 003835 WEST COAST SUPPLY COMPA
68469 04/05/01 000570 WIMBERLY, VALERIE
68470 04/05/01 WOLNICK, GLORIA
68471 04/05/01 000345 XEROX CORPORATION BILLI
68471 04/05/01 000345 XEROX CORPORATION BILLI
68471 04/05/01 000345 XEROX CORPORATION BILLI
68472 04/05/01 003607 XPECT FIRST AID
68472 04/05/01 003607 XPECT FIRST AID
ITEM AOCOUNT
DESCRIPTION NUMBER
FEB CONSULT SVCS:MURRIETA CRK 210-165-707-5801
REPAIR PW MAINT EQUIPMENT 001-164-601-5218
TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
190-183-999-5330
190-183-999-5330
190-183-999-5330
190-183-999-5330
190-183-999-5330
190-183-999-5330
190-183-999-5330
190-183-999-5330
190-183-999-5330
190-183-999-5330
ARBITRAGE REBATE RPR'~-88-12/92 261-199-999-5248
ARBITRAGE REBATE RPRT-88-12/98 261-199-999-5248
CITY VEHICLE FUEL USAGE
001-161-999-5263
MUSEUM SUPPLIES
190-185-999-5250
I~AR XXX-9897 GENERAL USAGE 320-199-999-5208
REIMB:CPRS C0NF:3/13-17/01 190-180-999-5258
GAS SENSOR BATTERIES-PW MAINT
FREIGHT
SALES TAX
001-164-601-5218
001-164-601-5218
001-16~-601-5218
REIMB:REFRESHMNTS:CE~ MEETING 001-161-999-5260
REINB:LA TRAVEL SHON:3/2-3/01 001-111-999-5270
FEB LEASE DC220 COPIER 330-2800
FEB MNTC/SUPPLIES DC220 COPIER 330-1~-999-5217
FEB INTEREST DC220 COPIER 330-199-999-5391
FIRST AID SUPPLIES FOR TCC
FIRST AID SUPPLIES F~R MPSC
190-184-999-5301
190-181-~-5301
ITEM
AMOUNT
1,080.00
160.00
220.00
230.40
384.00
268.80
230.40
384.00
230.40
115.20
268.80
440.00
2,500.00
2,500.00
21.75
673.95
75.91
188.06
270.00
15.00
20.25
66.90
165.42
128.10
76.98
47.30
101.98
101.98
CHECK
AMOUNT
1,080.00
160.00
2,772.00
5,000.00
21.75
673.95
75.91
188.06
305.25
66.90
165.42
252.38
203.96
TOTAL CHECKS 175,508.53
VCXJCHRE2 CITY OF TEMECULA PAGE 18
04/12/01 12:49 VOUCHER/CHECK REGISTER
FOR ALL PERIOUS
FUND TITLE
001 GENERAL FUND
165 RDA DEV- LON/MOD SET ASIDE
190 COHMUNITY SERVICES DISTRICT
192 TCSD SERVICE LEVEL B
193 TCSD SERVICE LEVEL C
194 TCSD SERVICE LEVEL D
210 CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT PROd FUND
280 REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY - CIP
300 INSURANCE FUND
320 INFORMATION SYSTEMS
330 SUPPORT SERVICES
340 FACILITIES
AMOUNT
213,611.47
17,893.36
52,344.29
45.76
2,941.56
1,132.94
11,0T?.37
6,624.37
410.36
14,445,00
12,370.13
?,661.71
TOTAL 340,558.32
VOUCHRE2
04/12/01 12:49
VOUCBER/
CHECK CHECK VENDOR VENDOR
NUMBER DATE NUMBER NAME
21623 04/12/01 000246 PERS
21623 04/12/01 000246 PERS
21623 04/12/01 000246 PERS
21623 04/12/01 000246 PERS
21623 04/12/01 000246 PERS
21623 04/12/01 000246 PERS
21623 04/12/01 000246 PERS
21623 04/12/01 000246 PERB
21623 04/12/01 000246 PERS
21623 04/12/01 000246 PERS
21623 04/12/01 000246 PERS
21623 04/12/01 000246 PERS
21623 04/12/01 000246 PERB
21623 04/12/01 000246 PERS
21623 04/12/01 000246 PERB
21623 04/12/01 000246 PERB
21623 04/12/01 000246 PERS
21623 04/12/01 000246 PERS
21623 04/12/01 000246 PERS
21623 04/12/01 000246 PERS
21623 04/12/01 000246 PERS
21623 04/12/01 000246 PERS
21623 04/12/01 000246 PERS
21623 04/12/01 000246 PBRS
21709 04/12/01 000245 PERS
21709 04/12/01 000245 PERS
21709 04/12/01 000245 PERS
21709 04/12/01 000245 PERS
21709 04/12/01 000245 PERS
21709 04/12/01 000245 PERS
21709 04/12/01 000245 PERS
21709 04/12/01 000245 PERS
21709 04/12/01 000245 PERS
21709 04/12/01 000245 PERS
21709 04/12/01 000245 PERS
21709 04/12/01 000245 PERS
21709 04/12/01 000245 PERS
21709 04/12/01 000245 PERS
217O9 04/12/01 000245 PERS
21709 04/12/01 000245 PERS
21709 04/12/01 000245 PERS
21709 04/12/01 000245 PERS
21709 04/12/01 000245 PERS
21709 04/12/01 000245 PERS
217O9 04/12/01 000245 PERS
21709 04/12/01 000245 PERS
21709 04/12/01 000245 PEES
21709 04/12/01 000245 PERS
21709 04/12/01 000245 PERS
CITY OF TEMECULA
VOUCHER/CHECK REGISTER
FOR ALL PERIODS
ITEM
DESCRIPTION
iEMPLOYEES' RETIRE 000246 PERS RET
iEMPLOYEES' RETIRE 000246 PERS RET
EMPLOYEES~ RETIRE 000246 PERS RET
EMPLOYEES' RETIRE 000246 PERS RET
EMPLOYEESv RETIRE 000246 PERS RET
EMPLOYEESv RETIRE 000246 PERB RET
EMPLOYEES~ RETIRE 000246 PERS RET
EMPLOYEES~ RETIRE 000246 PERS RET
EMPLOYEES~ RETIRE 000246 PERB RET
EMPLOYEES' RETIRE 000246 PERS RET
EMPLOYEES~ RETIRE 000246 PERS RET
EMPLOYEES~ RETIRE 000246 PERS RET
EMPLOYEES' RETIRE 000246 PERS-PRE
EMPLOYEES' RETIRE 000246 SURVIVOR
EMPLOYEES' RETIRE 000246 SURVIVOR
EMPLOYEES~ RETIRE 000246 SURVIVOR
EMPLOYEES~ RETIRE 000246 SURVIVOR
EMPLOYEES~ RETIRE 000246 SURVIVOR
EMPLOYEES~ RETIRE 000246 SURVIVOR
EMPLOYEESv RETIRE 000246 SURVIVOR
EMPLOYEES' RETIRE 000246 SURVIVOR
EMPLOYEES' RETIRE 000246 SURVIVOR
EMPLOYEES~ RETIRE 000246 SURVIVOR
EMPLOYEES~ RETIRE 000246 SURVIVOR
HEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 AETNA
HEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 AETNA
HEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 AETNA
:HEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 AETNA
tEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 AETNA
HEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 AETNA
HEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 BLSHIELD
HEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 BLSHZELD
HEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 CIGNA
HEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 BELTHNET
HEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 HELTHNET
HEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 HELTHNET
HEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 HELTHNET
HEALTH INSUR, PRE 000245 HELTHNET
NEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 KAISER
HEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 PA(CARE
HEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 PACCARE
HEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 PA(CARE
HEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 PA(CARE
HEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 PC
HEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 PERS CHO
(HEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 PERS DED
(HEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 PERS-ADM
(HEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 UNI
(HEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 UNI
ACCOUNT
NUMBER
001-2390
165-2390
190-2390
192-2390
193-2390
194-2390
280-2390
300-2390
320-2130
320-2390
330-2390
340-2390
001-2130
001-2390
165-2390
190-2390
192-2390
193-2390
194-2390
280-2390
300-2390
320-2390
330-2390
340-2390
001-2090
165-2090
190-2090
280-2090
330-2090
340-2090
001-2090
190-2090
001-2090
001'2090
190-2090
193-2090
194-2090
340-2090
001-2090
001-2090
190-2090
193-2090
340-2090
001-2090
001-2090
001-2090
001-2090
001-2090
190-2090
ITEM
AMOUNT
27,156.33
651.49
4,544.83
11.61
415.42
68.20
282.59
127.80
26.51
1 · 003.44
206.19
589.34
182.91
96.59
1
19,07
.05
1.82
.36
.92
.46
3.72
1.39
2.65
3,042.39
254.63
1,141.99
84.87
97.00
244.07
1,594.12
468.53
890.72
4,922.45
1,438.39
59.18
29.55
?68.96
2,120.00
4,149.17
944.84
244.62
144.45
738.00
4,056.44
1,028.80
100.76
2,037.16
166.98
PAGE 1
CHECK
AMOUNT
35,4~5.56
30,768.07
VOUCHRE2
04/12/01 12:49
CITY OF TEMECULA
VOUCHER/CHECK REGISTER
FOR ALL PERIODS
PAGE 2
VOUCHER/
CHECK CHECK VENDOR VENDOR ITEM ACCOUNT
NUMBER DATE NUMBER NAME DESCRIPTION NUMBER
774738 04/12/01 000283
7747~8 04/12/01 000285
774738 04/12/01 000283
774738 04/12/01 000283
774738 04/12/01 000283
774738 04/12/01 000283
774738 04/12/01 000283
7747~8 04/12/01 000283
774738 04/12/01 000283
774738 04/12/01 000283
774738 04/12/01 000283
774738 04/12/01 000283
774738 04/12/01 000283
774738 04/12/01 000283
7~4738 04/12/01 000283
7747~8 04/12/01 000283
774738 04/12/01 000283
774738 04/12/01 000283
774?38 04/12/01 000283
774738 04/12/01 000283
774738 04/12/01 000283
774738 04/12/01 000285
774738 04/12/01 000283
ITEM
AMOUNT
INSTATAX (IRS) 000283 FEDERAL 001-2070 29,220.64
IRSTATAX (IRS) 000285 FEDERAL 165-2070 477.97
INSTATAX (IRS) 000283 FEDERAL 190-2070 4,939.67
INSTATAX (IRS) 000285 FEDERAL 192-2070 15.84
INSTATAX (IRS) 000283 FEDERAL 193-2070 354.90
INSTATAX (IRS) 000283 FEDERAL 194-2070 72.88
INSTATAX (IRS) 000283 FEDERAL 280-2070 191.41
INSTATAX (IRS) 000283 FEDERAL 300-2070 74.25
INSTATAX (IRS) 000285 FEDERAL 320~2070 1,090.70
]NSTATAX (IRS) 000283 FEDERAL 550-2070 232.54
INSTATAX (IRS) 000283 FEDERAL 340-2070 569.39
INSTATAX (IRS) 000283 MEDICARE 001-2070 6,441.49
INSTATAX (IRS) 000283 MEDICARE 165-2070 150.22
INSTATAX (IRS) 000283 MEDICARE 190-2070 1,371.;'7
INSTATAX (IRS) 000283 MEDICARE 192-2070 2.62
INSTATAX (IRS) 000283 MEDICARE 193-2070 105.78
INSTATAX (IRS) 000283 MEDICARE 194-2070 15.56
INSTATAX (IRS) 000283 MEDICARE 280-2070 70.41
INSTATAX (IRS) 000283 MEDICARE 300-2070 29.24
INSTATAX (IRS) 000283 MEDICARE 320-2070 314.08
INSTATAX (IRS) 000283 MEDICARE 330-2070 65.71
INSTATAX (IRS) 00028~ MEDICARE 340-2070 159.21
INSTATAX (IRS) OVERPAYMENT OF 2000 4TH QTR 001-2070 6.55-
000444 SDI
000444 SDI
000444 SDI
000444 SD!
000444 SDI
000444 SDI
000444
000444 SDI
000444 STATE
000444 STATE
000444 STATE
000444 STATE
000444 STATE
000444 STATE
000444 STATE
000444 STATE
000444 STATE
000444 STATE
000444 STATE
774791 04/12/01 000444 INSTATAX (EDD)
774791 04/12/01 000444 INSTATAX (EDD)
774791 04/12/01 000444 INSTATAX (EDD)
774791 04/12/01 000444 INSTATAX (EDD)
774791 04/12/01 000444 INSTATAX (EDD)
774791 04/12/01 000444 INSTATAX (EDD)
774791 04/12/01 000444 INSTATAX (EDD
774791 04/12/01 000444 INSTATAX (EDD
774791 04/12/01 000444 INSTATAX (EDD
774791 04/12/01 000444 INSTATAX (EDD
774791 04/12/01 000444 INSTATAX (EDD
774791 04/12/01 000444 INSTATAX (EDD
774~91 04/12/01 000444 INSTATAX (EDD
774791 04/12/01 000444 INSTATAX (EDD
774791 04/12/01 000444 INSTATAX (EO0)
774791 04/12/01 000444 INSTATAX (EOD)
774791 04/12/01 000444 INSTATAX (EDD)
774791 04/12/01 000444 INSTATAX (EDD)
774791 04/12/01 000444 IRSTATAX (EDD)
001-2070
165-2070
190~2070
193-2070
280-2070
320-2070
330-2070
340-2070
001-2070
165-2070
190-2070
192-2070
193-2070
194-2070
280-2070
300-2070
320-2070
330~2070
340-2070
001-2090
165-2090
190-2090
280-2090
340-2090
001-2090
190-2090
000 00/00/00 000245 PENS (HEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 AETNA
000 00/00/00 000245 PERS (HEALTH IHSUR. PRE 000245 AETNA
000 00/00/00 000245 PENS (HEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 AETNA
000 00/00/00 000245 PERS (HEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 AETNA
000 00/00/00 000245 PERS (HEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 AETNA
000 00/00/00 000245 PERS (HEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 BLSHIELD
000 00/00/00 000245 PENS (HEALTH INSUR. PRE 000245 SLSHIELD
67.30
2.60
110.36
2.53
.39
8.08
5.85
4.44
7,849.53
139.56
1,081.58
4.68
80.34
20.06
61.35
15.34
231.89
54.88
129.48
158.61
123.68
119.01
41.22
8.13
55.47
54.51
CHECK
AMOUNT
45,959.93
9,870.24
VOUCHRE2 CITY OF TEMECULA PAGE 3
04/12/01 12:49 VOUCHER/CHECK REGISTER
FOR ALL PERIODS
VOUCHER/
CHECK CHECK
NUMBER DATE
000 00/00/00
000 00/00/00
000 00/00/00
000 00/00/00
000 00/00/00
000 00/00/00
000 00/00/00
000 00/00/00
000 00/00/00
000 00/00/00
VENDOR VENDOR
NUMBER NAME
000245 PERS HEALTH INSUR. PRE
000245 PERS HEALTH INSUR. PRE
000245 PERS HEALTH INSUR. PRE
000245 PERS HEALTH INSUR. PRE
000245 PERS HEALTH INSUR. PRE
000245 PERS HEALTH INSUR. PRE
000245 PERS HEALTH INSUR. PRE
000245 PERS HEALTH INSUR. PRE
000245 PERS HEALTH INSUR. PRE
000245 PERS HEALTH INSUR. PRE
68476 04/12/01 003552 A F L A C
68476 04/12/01 003552 A F L A C
68476 04/12/01 003552 A F L A C
68476 04/12/01 003552 A F L A C
68476 04/12/01 003552 A F L A C
68476 04/12/01 003552 A F L A C
68476 04/12/01 003552 A F L A C
68476 04/12/01 003552 A F L A C
68476 04/12/01 003552 A F L A C
68476 04/12/01 003552 A F L A C
68476 04/12/01 003552 A F L A C
68476 04/12/01 003552 A F L A C
68476 04/12/01 003552 A F L A C
68476 04/12/01 003552 A F L A C
68477 04/12/01 000116 A V P VISION PLANS
684~7 04/12/01 000116 A V P VISION PLANS
68477 04/12/01 000116 A V P VISION PLANS
684?7 04/12/01 000116 A V P VISION PLANS
68477 04/12/01 000116 A V P VISION PLANS
68477 04/12/01 000116 A V P VISION PLANS
68477 04/12/01 000116 A V P VZSION PLANS
68477 04/12/01 000116 A V P VISION PLANS
68478 04/12/01 002038 ACTION POOL & SPA SUPPL
68479 04/12/01 002662 AGRICULTURAL PEST CONTR
68479 04/12/01 002662 AGRICULTURAL PEST CONTR
68479 04/12/01 002662 AGRICULTURAL PEST CONTR
68480 04/12/01 00287? ALTA LOMA CHARTER LINES
68480 04/12/01 002877 ALTA LOMA CHARTER LINES
68481 04/12/01 004240 AMERICAN FORENSIC NURSE
68481 04/12/01 004240 AMERICAN FORENSIC NURSE
68482 04/12/01 000747 AMERICAN PLANNING ASSOC
ITEM
DESCRIPTION
000245 CIGNA
000245 HELTHNET
000245 HELTHNET
000245 HELTHNET
000245 KAISER
000245 PACCARE
000245 PACCARE
000245 PACCARE
000245 PERS CHO
000245 PERS REV
003552 CANCER
003552 CANCER
003552 CANCER
003552 CANCER
003552 CANCER
003552 EXP PROT
003552 EXP PROT
003552 EXP PROT
003552 HOSP IC
003552 STD
003552 STD
003552 STD
003552 STD
003552 STD
000116 AVP
000116 AVP
000116 AVP
000116 AVP
000116 AVP
000116 AVP
000116 AVP
000116 AVP
POOL SANITIZING CHEMICALS
DUCK POND PRE-BAIT PI3GRAM
DUCK POND:DUCK & GEESE REMOVAL
DUCK POND:DUCK & GEESE REMOVAL
TRANSPORTATION:LIBRARy EXCURSI
TRANSPORTATION:LIBRARY EXCURSI
CITY LIMITS 8LODO DRAWS-PD/CHP
CITY LIMITS BLOOD DRAWS-PD/CHP
SUBSCRIPTION:ZONING NEWS
ACCOUNT
NUMSER
001-2090
001-2090
190-2090
340-2090
001-2090
001-2090
190-2090
340-2090
001-2090
001-2090
001-2330
190-2330
193-2330
194-2330
340-2330
001-2330
190-2330
320-2330
001-2330
001-2330
190-2330
193-2330
194-2330
340-2330
001-2310
165-2310
190-2310
193-2310
194-2310
280-2310
330-2310
340-2310
190-186-999-5212
190-180-999-5212
190-180-999-5212
190-180-999-5212
190-185-999-5250
190-185-999-5250
001-170-999-5328
001-170-999-5328
001-161-999-5228
ITEM
AMOUNT
35.78
143.43
31.24
.36
23.43
119.46
5.42
2.32
93.56
1,015.63-
357.70
14.34
14.34
4.78
14.34
156.20
55.80
27.90
17.50
494.40
91.20
9.60
3.20
20.80
729.49
17.60
89.04
5.58
1.67
5.86
5.58
42.23
18.86
225.00
325.00
200,00
320.00
97.10
63.00
378.00
60.00
CHECK
AMOUNT
.00
1,282.10
897.05
18.86
750.00
417.10
441.00
60.00
68483 04/12/01 003285 AMERIPR1DE UNIFORM SERV RAR RAT/TO~EL RENTAL:CITY HALL 340-199-701-5250 134.25
68483 04/12/01 003285 AMERIPRIDE UNIFORM SERV MAR MAT/TOWEL RENTAL:MNTC FAC 340-199-702-5250 57.75
VOUCHRE2
04/12/01 12:49
CITY OF TEMECULA
VOUCHER/CHECK REGISTER
FOR ALL PERIODS
PAGE 4
VOUCHER/
CHECK CHECK VENDOR VENDOR
NUMRER DATE NUMBER NAME
68483 04/12/01 003285 AMERIPRIDE UNIFORM SERV
68485 04/12/01 003285 AMERIPRIDE URIFORM SERV
68483 04/12/01 003285 AMERIPRIDE UNIFORM SERV
6~83 04/12/01 003285 AMERIPRIDE UNIFORM SERV
68483 04/12/01 003285 AMERIPRIDE UNIFORM SERV
68483 04/12/01 003285 AMERIPRIDE UNIFORM SERV
68483 04/12/01 003285 AMERIPRIDE UNIFORM SERV
68483 04/12/01 003285 AMERIPRIDE UNIFORM SERV
68483 04/12/01 003285 AMERIPRZDE UNIFORM SERV
68483 04/12/01 003285 AMERIPRIDE UNIFORM SERV
6848~ 04/12/01 003285 AMERIPRIDE UNIFORM SERV
68/*83 04/12/01 003285 AMERIPRIDE UNIFORM SERV
68485 04/12/01 003285 AMERIPRIDE UNIFORM SERV
68483 04/12/01 003285 AMERIPRIDE UNIFORM SERV
68484 04/12/01 ANDERSON, KATHY
68485 04/12/01 000101 APPLE ONE, INC.
68486 04/12/01 001561 ARCH
68486 04/12/01 001561 ARCH
68486 04/12/01 001561 ARCH
68486 04/12/01 001561 ARCH
68486 04/12/01 001561 ARCH
68486 04/12/01 001561 ARCH
68487 04/12/01
003266 ARCUS DATA SECURITY
68488 04/12/01 000122
68489 04/12/01
68490 04/12/01
68490 04/12/01
68491 04/12/01
68491 04/12/01
68492 04/12/01
B S N SPORTS
000622 BANTA ELECTRIC-REFRIGER
004206 BANUELOS, TERESA
004206 BANUELOS, TERESA
002541 BECKER CONSTRUCTION SRV
002541 BECKER CONSTRUCTION SRV
003126 BOOHGAARDEN, DENNIS
68493 04/12/01 004059
68493 04/12/01 004059
68493 04/12/01 004059
68493 04/12/01 004059
68494 04/12/01
68495 04/12/01
68496 04/12/01
DOWLEY, DAVID
BOWLEY, DAVID
BO~LEY, DAVID
BOWLEY, DAVID
003582 BROWN JR., WILLIAM E.
BUSINESS FURN. SOLUTION
002099 BUTTERFIELD ENTERPRISES
ITEM
DESCRIPTION
ACCOUNT
NUMRER
NAR MAT/TO~EL RENTAL:SH CTR
HAR NAT/TOWEL RENTAL:CRC
MAR NAT/TO~EL RENTAL:TCC
NAR NAT/TOWEL RENTAL:MUSEUM
NAR UNIFORMS FOR PUBLIC WORKS
MAR UNIFORMS FOR TCSD MNTC
CREDIT: TEMP ENERGY CHARGES
CREDIT: TENP ENERGY CHARGES
CREDIT: TEMP ENERGY CHARGES
CREDIT: TEMP ENERGY CHARGES
CREDIT: TEMP ENERGY CHARGES
CREDIT: TEMP ENERGY CHARGES
CREDIT: TEMP ENERGY CHARGES
CREDIT: TEMP ENERGY CHARGES
190-181-999-5250
190-182-999-5250
190-184-999-5250
190-185-999-5250
001-164-601-5243
190-180-999-5243
001-164-601-5243
190-180-999-5243
340-199-701-5250
340-199-702-5250
190-181-999-5250
190-182-999-5250
190-184-999-5250
190-105-999-5250
REFUND: ARTS/CRAFTS-DRAWING 190-183-4982
TEMP HELP W/E 03/24 SIMPKINS 001-161-999-5118
NAR PAGING/RENTAL SVCS
HAH PAGING/RENTAL SVCS
MAR PAGING/RENTAL SVCS
NAR PAGING/RERTAL SVCS
MAR PAGING/RENTAL SVC$
MAR PAGING/RENTAL SVCS
MAR:MICROFILM OFFSITE STORAGE
001-110-999-5238
001-150-999-5250
330-1990
190-180-999-5238
001'164-601-5238
001-170-999-5238
001-120-999-527T
RECREATION SUPPLIES:TEEN ROOM
TCC FREEZER REPAIR SVCS
TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
190-182-999-5301
190-184-999-5212
190-183-999-5330
190-183-999-5330
REPAIR PW MNTC TRAILER/VACTRON 001-164-601-5214
REGRADE CORNER OF YNEZ/VALLEJO 001-164-601-5402
TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
190-183-999-5330
TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
MILEAGE REIMB-PW SIGNAL TECH
REFUND: SPORTS-EB MENS LEAGUE
190-183-999-5330
190-183-999-5530
190-183-999-5330
190-183-999-5330
001-164-602-5262
190-183-4994
280-199-999-5234
OLD TWN RESTRCX~M RENTAL
ITEM
AMOUNT
79.20
120.30
61.20
54.55
186.50
103.25
15.00-
15.00-
15.00-
15.00-
15.00-
15.00-
15.00-
15.00-
36.00
468.00
40.65
40.65
40.65
484.50
81.30
153.90
125.50
199.39
156.88
170.00
170.00
1,625.00
2,790.00
444.00
129.60
230.40
43.20
28.80
38.64
40.00
826.00
CHECK
AMOUNT
677.00
36.00
468.00
841.65
125.50
199.39
156.88
340.00
4,415.00
444.00
432.00
38.64
40.00
826.00
VOUEHRE2 CITY OF TEMECULA PAGE 5
04/12/01 12:49 VOUCHER/CHECK REGISTER
FOR ALL PERIODS
VOUCHER/
CHECK
NUMGER
68497
68497
68497
68497
68497
68497
68497
68497
68497
68497
68497
68497
68497
68497
68497
68497
68497
68497
68497
68497
68497
68497
68499
68500
68501
68501
68502
68502
68503
CHECK VENDOR VENDOR ITEM ACCOUNT ITEM
DATE NUMBER NAME DESCRIPTION NUMGER AMOUNT
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
003553
003553
003553
003553
003553
003553
003553
003553
003553
003553
003553
003553
003553
003553
003553
003553
003553
003553
003553
003553
003553
003553
c GNA
C GNA
C GNA
C GNA
C GNA
C GNA
C GNA
C GNA
C GNA
C GNA
C GNA
C GNA
C GNA
C GNA
C GNA
C GNA
C GNA
C GNA
C GNA
C GNA
C GNA
C 6NA
003553 LTD 001-2380 1,623.26
003553 LTD 165-2380 39.10
003553 LTD 190-2380 299.92
003553 LTD 192-2380 .71
003553 LTD 193-2380 26.38
003553 LTD 194-2380 6.08
003553 LTD 280-2380 17.29
003553 LTD 300-2380 7.99
003553 LTD 320-2380 66.99
003553 LTD 330-2380 13.45
003553 LTD 340-2380 37.67
003553 STD 001-2500 2,265.79
003553 STD 165-2500 54.57
003553 STD 190-2500 418.65
003553 STD 192-2500 .99
003553 STD 193-2500 36.81
003553 STD 194-2500 8.49
003553 STD 200-2500 24.15
003553 STD 300-2500 11.15
003553 STD 320-2500 93.49
003553 STD 330-2500 18.78
003553 STD 340-2500 52.59
003138 CAL MAT PW PATCH TRUCK MATER]ALS 001-16~-601-5218
003138 CAL MAT PW PATCH TRUCK MATERIALS 001-164-601-5218
002566 CALIF STATE OF BOARD OF
002566 CALIF STATE OF SOARD OF
002520 CALIF T'S BY TRANSCEND
002520 CALIF T'S BY TRANSCEND
004228 CAMERON WELDING SUPPLY
VAIL RANCH ANNE)L~TION FEES
VAIL RANCH ANNEXATION FEES
001-110-999-5307
001-161-999-5250
T-SHIRTS/HATS:MAKE A DIF EVENT 194-180-999-5250
SALES TAX 194-180-999-5250
RECREATION SUPPLIES: TCC 190-184-999-5301
205.72
1,684.96
2,000.00
1,200.00
766.80
57.51
25.70
68504 04/12/01 003554 CANADA LIFE ASSURANCE C 003554 LIFE [NS 001-2360 645.13
68504 04/12/01 003554 CANADA LIFE ASSURANCE C 003554 LIFE [NS 165-2360 13.01
68504 04/12/01 003554 CANADA LIFE ASSURANCE C 003554 LIFE INS 190-2360 133.26
68504 04/12/01 003554 CANADA LIFE ASSURANCE C 003554 LIFE INS 192-2360 .33
68504 04/12/01 003554 CANADA LIFE ASSURANCE C 003554 LIFE INS 193-2360 12.68
68504 04/12/01 003554 CANADA LIFE ASSURANCE C 003554 LIFE INS 194-2360 2.59
68504 04/12/01 003554 CANADA LIFE ASSURANCE C 003554 LIFE 1NS 280-2360 6.49
68504 04/12/01 003554 CANADA LIFE ASSURANCE C 003554 LIFE INS 300-2360 3.24
68504 04/12/01 003554 CANADA LIFE ASSURANCE C 003554 LIFE INS 320-2360 26.00
68504 04/12/01 003554 CANADA LIFE ASSURANCE C 003554 LIFE INS 330-2360 9.~5
68504 04/12/01 003554 CANADA LIFE ASSURANCE C 003554 LIFE INS 340-2360 18.52
04/12/01 004093 CARDIO CARE PLUS TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS 190-183-999-5330
685O5
352.00
CHECK
AMOUNT
5,124.30
205.72
1,684.96
3,200.00
824.31
25.70
871.00
352.00
68506 04/12/01 002534 CATERERS CAFE REFSHMNTS:TRNG 1ST RESPONDER 001-150-999-5261 118.10
68506 04/12/01 002534 CATERERS CAFE REFSHMNTS:TRNG IST RESPONDER 001-150-999-5261 118.10
VOUCHRE2
04/12/01 12:49
CITY OF TEMECULA
VOUCHER/CHECK REGISTER
FOR ALL PERIODS
PAGE 6
VOUCHER/
CHECK CHECK VENDOR
NUMBER DATE NUMBER
68506 04/12/01 002534
68506 04/12/01 002534
68506 04/12/01 002534
68507 04/12/01 004203
68508 04/12/01 004203
68509 04/12/01 001197
VENDOR ITEM ACCOUNT
NAME DESCRIPTION NUMBER
CATERERS CAFE
CATERERS CAFE
CATERERS CAFE
REFSHMENTS:TRNG 1ST RESPOMDER
REFSHMNTS:TRNG 1ST RESPONDER
REFSHMNTS:OM BUSINESS MTG
CHILD SUPPORT COLLECTIO 004203 AR CHILD
CHILD SUPPORT COLLECTIO
CHOCOLATE FLORIST, THE
68510 04/12/01 CLARK, JOHN
001-150-999-5261
001-150-999-5261
001-110-999-5260
190-2140
RE-ISSUE CK:PAYROLL DEDUCTION 190-2140
CNOCO CARD:SD/OC CONCIERGE MTG
001-111-999-5270
REFUND: SKYHAWKS-SOCCER 190-183-4982
68511 04/12/01 COLLINS, DARROLYN REFUND: SPORTS-CS MENS LEAGUE
68512 04/12/01 004405 COMMUNITY HEALTH CHARIT 004405 CHC
68512 04/12/01 004405 COMMUNITY HEALTH CHARIT 004405 CHC
68512 04/12/01 004405 COMMUNITY HEALTH CHARIT 004405 CHC
68512 04/12/01 004405 COMMUNITY HEALTH CHARIT 004405 CHC
68512 04/12/01 004405 COMMUNITY HEALTH CHARIT 004405 CHC
68512 04/12/01 004405 COMMUNITY HEALTH CHARIT 004405 CHC
68513 04/12/01 000447 COMTRONIX OF HEMET IL4DIO FOR TCSD TRUCK #01-068
68513 04/12/01 000447 COMTRONIX OF HEMET ANTENNA
68513 04/12/01 000447 COMTRONIX OF HEMET OUTSIDE SPEAKER
68513 04/12/01 000447 COMTRONIX OF HEMET LABOR
68513 04/12/01 000447 COMTRONIX OF HEMET SALES TAX
68514 04/12/01 CRANDELL, MARIE
68515 04/12/01 001320 CROUE-PELLETIER, JULIE
68516 04/12/01 001233 DANS FEED & SEED INC
REFUND: GYMNASTICS-RHYTH KIDZ
REIMB:CPRS CONF:3/14-3/18/01
PROPANE GAS FOR FIELD TANKS
CONSULTANT SVC:NNTC FAC PHASE3
REPAIR HOT WATER LINE:STN 8~
RES IMPRV PRGM:SPERA,SHAWN
68517 04/12/01 003681 DAVIDSOM & ALLEN, ARCHI
68518 04/12/01 004450 DENNIS A HIBBERT PLUMBI
68519 04/12/01 002954 DIAMOND GARAGE
68520 04/12/01 004470 DOWN THE ROAD BLUEGRASS OLD TWN ENTERTAINMENT:3/24/01
68520 04/12/01 004470 DOWN THE ROAD BLUEGRASS OLD TWN ENTERTAINMENT:3/25/01
68521 04/12/01 004192 DOUNS COHMERCIAL FUELIN FUEL FOR CITY VEHICLES
68521 04/12/01 004192 DOWNS COMMERCIAL FUELIN FUEL FOR CITY VEHICLES
68521 04/12/01 004192 DOWNS COMMERCIAL FUELIN FUEL FOR CITY VEHICLES
68521 04/12/01 004192 DCR~NS COMMERCIAL FUELIN FUEL FOR CITY VEHICLFS
68521 04/12/01 004192 DOWNS COMMERCIAL FUELIN FUEL FOR CITY VEHICLES
68521 04/12/01 004192 DOWNS COMMERCIAL FUELIN FUEL FOR CITY VEHICLES
68521 04/12/01 004192 OCR~NS COHMERCIAL FUELIN FUEL FOR CITY VEHICLES
~521 04/12/01 004192 DOWNS COMMERCIAL FUELIN FUEL FOR CITY VEHICLES
68521 04/12/01 004192 DONRS COMMERCIAL FUELIN FUEL FOR CITY VEHICLES
190-183-4994
001-2120
190-2120
193-2120
194-2120
330-2120
340-2120
340-199-701-5610
340-199-701-5610
340-199o701-5610
340-199-701-5610
340-199-701-5610
190-183-4982
190-180-999-5258
001-164-601-5218
210-190-158-5802
001-171-999-5212
165-199-813-5804
280-199-999-5362
280-199-999-5362
190-180-999-5263
001-163-999-5263
280-199-999-5262
001-161-999-5263
001-162-999-5263
001-111-999-5262
001-165-999-5263
001-164-601-5263
001-164-604-5263
ITEM
AMOUNT
118.10
118.10
54.14
6.97
12.50
85.00
25.00
40.00
118.50
5.60
.60
.20
5.50
.60
915.00
60.55
65.00
180.00
78.04
36.00
242.22
6.00
44.39
950.00
1,025.00
500.00
500.00
205.84
126.94
34.93
83.14
24.08
21.99
82.49
368.27
41.34
CHECK
AMOUNT
526.54
6.97
12.50
85.00
25.00
40.00
131.00
1,298.59
36.00
242.22
6.00
44.39
950.00
1,025.00
1,000.00
989.02
VOUCHRE2 CITY OF TEMECULA PAGE 7
04/12/01 12:49 VOUCHER/CHECK REGISTER
FOR ALL PERIODS
VOUCHER/
CHECK CHECK VENDOR
NUMBER DATE NUHBER
VENDOR
NAME
ITEM
DESCRIPTION
ACCOUNT
NUMBER
ITEM
AMOUNT
CHECK
AMOUNT
68522 04/12/01 001380
68522 04/12/01 001380
68522 04/12/01 001380
68522 04/12/01 001380
68522 04/12/01 001380
68522 04/12/01 001380
68522 04/12/01 001380
68522 04/12/01 001380
E S EMPLOYMENT SERVIC
E S EMPLOYMENT SERVIC
E S EMPLOYMENT SERVIC
E S EMPLOYMENT SERVIC
E S EMPLOYMENT SERVIC
E S EMPLOYMENT SERVIC
E S EMPLOYMENT SERVIC
E S EMPLOYMENT SERVIC
68523 04/12/01 004130 ELSINORE ELECTRICAL SUP
68523 04/12/01 004130 ELSINORE ELECTRICAL SUP
68523 04/12/01 004130 ELSINORE ELECTRICAL SUP
TEMP HELP W/E 03/23 RUSH
TEMP HELP W/E 03/23 EBON
TEMP HELP W/E 03/23 EBON
TEMP HELP W/E 03/23 THURSTON
TEMP HELP N/E 03/23 BRCR~N
TEMP HELP N/E 03/23 VOSHALL
TEMP HELP N/E 03/23 OBMANN
TEMP HELP N/E 03/23 LEER
CRC ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES
SALES TAX
CITY HALL ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES
001-161-999-5118
340-199-701-5118
340-199-702-5118
190-186-999-5118
001-164-604-5118
001-161-999-5118
001-171-999-5118
001-162-999-5118
190-182-999-5212
190-182-999-5212
340-199-701-5212
1,663.50
853.80
28~.60
1,465.60
4,299.7~
2,075.20
1,520.80
2,286.40
342.30
25.67
77.40
14,449.65
445.37
68524 04/12/01 000164 ESGIL CORPORATION
68524 04/12/01 000164 ESGIL CORPORATION
6B525 04/12/01 002060 EUROPEAN DELI & CATERIN
68525 04/12/01 002060 EUROPEAN DELI & CATERIN
CREDIT:INVOICE EXCEEDS P.O.
MAR 2001 PLAN CHECK SVCS
REFSHMNTS:LIBRARY EXCURSION
SALES TAX
001-162-999-5248
001-162-999-5248
190-185-999-5250
190-185-999-5250
20,531.48-
36,225.00
17~.25
12.99
15,693.52
186.24
68526 04/12/01 001056 EXCEL LANDSCAPE
MAR LDSC IMPRV:RCSDP-CREEK 190-180-999-5212
225.00
225.00
68527 04/12/01 002037 EXPANETS
68528 04/12/01 000478 FAST SIGHS
QTRLY TELEPHONE MNTC AGREEMENT 320-199-999-5215
LABELS FOR MUSEUM EXHIBITS 190-185-999-5250
2,256.00
37.52
2,256.00
37.52
6B529 04/12/01 000165 FEDERAL EXPRESS INC
68529 04/12/01 000165 FEDERAL EXPRESS IHt
68529 04/12/01 000165 FEDERAL EXPRESS INC
68529 04/12/01 000165 FEDERAL EXPRESS INC
68529 04/12/01 000165 FEDERAL EXPRESS INC
68530 04/12/01 000170 FRANKLIN QUEST COMPANY
68531 04/12/01 000177
68531 04/12/01 000177
68531 04/12/01 000177
68531 04/12/01 000177
68531 04/12/01 000177
68531 04/12/01 000177
68531 04/12/01 000177
68531 04/12/01 000177
68531 04/12/01 00017'/
68531 04/12/01 000177
68531 04/12/01 000177
68531 04/12/01 000177
68531 04/12/01 000177
68531 04/12/01 000177
68531 04/12/01 000177
68531 04/12/01 000177
68531 04/12/01 00017'/
GLENNIES OFFICE PRODUCT
GLENNIES OFFICE PROOUCT
GLENNIES OFF]CE PRODUCT
GLENNIES OFFICE PRODUCT
GLENNIES OFFICE PRODUCT
GLENNIES OFFICE PRODUCT
GLENNIES OFFICE PRODUCT
GLENNIES OFFICE PRODUCT
GLENNIES OFFICE PRODUCT
GLENNIES OFFICE PRODUCT
GLENNIES OFFICE PRODUCT
GLENNIES OFFICE PRODUCT
GLENNIES OFFICE PRODUCT
GLENN]ES OFF]CE PRODUCT
GLENNIES OFFICE PRODUCT
GLENNIES OFFICE PRODUCT
GLENNIES OFFICE PRODUCT
EXPRESS MAIL SERVICEG
EXPRESS MAIL SERVICEG
EXPRESS MAIL SERVICES
EXPRESS MAIL SERVICES
EXPRESS MAIL SERVICES
001-111-999-5230
001-162-999-5230
001-161-999-5230
001-165-999-5230
001-1990
DAY TIMER SUPPLIES - TCSD 190-180-999-5220
MISC OFFICE SUPPLIES:CM DEPT 001-110-999-5220
MISC OFF]CE SUPPLIES:MUSEUM 190-185-999-5220
MISC OFFICE SUPPLIES:CITY CLRK 001-120-999-5220
MISC OFFICE SUPPLIES:COPY CTR
MISC OFFICE SUPPLIES:COPY CTR
MISC OFFICE SUPPLIES:FINANCE
MISC OFFICE SUPPLIES:BE DEPT
MISC OFFICE SUPPLIES:PLANNING
MISC OFFICE SUPPLIES:B&S DEPT
MISC OFFICE SUPPLIES:MUSEUM
MISC OFFICE SUPPLIES:CRC
MISC OFFICE SUPPLIES: TCSD
MISC OFFICE SUPPLIES:POLICE
MISC OFFICE SUPPLIES:FIRE DEPT
MISC OFFICE SUPPLIES:FIRE DEPT
MISC OFFICE SUPPLIES:RDA/LO~-M
MISC OFFICE SUPPLIES:RDA/LOt4-M
330-199-999-5220
330-199-999-5220
001-140-999-5220
001-150-999-5220
001-161-999-5220
001-162-999-5220
190-185o999-5220
190-182-999-5220
190-180-999-5220
001-170-999-5220
001-171-999-5220
001-171-999-5220
165-199-999-5220
280-199-999-5220
26.06
13.58
12.92
22.00
15.81
47.52
103.30
33.05
447.54
22.32
202.75
132.78
57.74
259.11
140.06
81.94
25.22
400.56
2.83
75.18
443.96
73.22
7~.21
90.37
47.52
2,574.7'/
VODCHRE2
04/12/01 12:49
CITY OF TEMECULA
VOUCHER/CHECK REGIbrER
FOR ALL PERIODS
PAGE 8
VOUCHER/
CHECK CHECK
NUHBER DATE
68532 04/12/01
68533 04/12/01
68534 04/12/01
68535 04/12/01
68536 04/12/01
68537 04/12/01
VENDOR VENDOR
NUMBER NAME
GOEHRS, STAR
004159 GOOOENOUGH, DONNA
004133 H D L SOFTWARE LLC
000]78 HAFELI, THOMAS
HAMBY, CHRISTINE
000186 HANKS HARDWARE ING
ITEM
DESCRIPTION
REFUND: SKYHAWKS-SOCCER
TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
BUSINESS LICENSE SOFTWARE MNTC
REIMS:NOVELL ADMIN MANUALS
REFUND: SKYHAWKS-SOCCER
HARDWARE SUPPLIES:FIRE OEPT
ACCOUNT
NUMBER
190-183-4982
190-183-999-5330
320-199-999-5211
320-199-999-5228
190-183-4982
001-171-999-5212
ITEM
AMOUNT
25.00
84.00
4,400.00
170.11
25.00
152.98
CHECK
AMOUNT
25.00
84.00
4,400.00
170.11
25.00
152.98
68538 04/12/01 002372 HARMON, JUDY
68539 04/12/01 003895 HAROLD, MARK S.
68540 04/12/01 HARRIS, PEGGIE
68541 04/12/01 HAYNES, AMELIA
68542 04/12/01 002107 HIGHMARK INC
68542 04/12/01 002107 HIGHMARK INC
68542 04/12/01 002107 HIGHMARK INC
68542 04/12/01 002107 GIGHMARK lNG
68542 04/12/01 002107 HIGHMARK INC
68542 04/12/01 002107 H]GHMARK INC
68542 04/12/01 002107 HIGHMARK INC
68542 04/12/01 002107 HIGHMARK INC ·
68542 04/12/01 002107 HIGHMARK ]NC
68542 04/12/01 002107 NIGHMARK INC "
68542 04/12/01 002107 HIGHMARK lNG
68542 04/12/01 002107 H]GHMARK ]NC
68542 04/12/01 002107 HIGHMARK INC
68542 04/12/01 002107 NIGHMARK INC
68543 04/12/01 001013 HINDERLITER DE LLAMAS &
68543 04/12/01 001013 NINDERLITER DE LLAMAS &
68544 04/12/01 HOLLANDER, DEBORAH
68545 04/12/01 000193 I C M A
68546 04/12/01
68546 04/12/01
68546 04/12/01
68546 04/12/01
68546 04/12/01
· 68546 04/12/01
68546 04/12/01
68547 04/12/01
000194 C M A RETIREMENT TRUS
000194 C M A RETIREMENT TRUS
000194 C M A RETIREMENT TRUS
000194 C M A RETIREMENT TRUS
000194 C M A RETIREMENT TRUS
000194 C M A RETIREMENT TRUS
000194 C M A RETIREMENT TRUS
001407 INTER VALLEY POOL SUPPL
TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
REIMB:CBO CERTIFICATION
REFUND: SKYHAWKS-SOCCER
REFUND: SI(YNAWKS-SOCCER
002107 VL ADVAN
002107 VOL LIFE
002107 VOL LIFE
002107 VOL LIFE
002107 VOL LIFE
002107 VOL LIFE
002107 VOL LIFE
002107 VL REVER
002107 VOL LIFE
002107 VOL LIFE
00E107 VOL LIFE
002107 VOL LIFE
002107 VOL LIFE
002107 VOL LIFE
SALES TAX CONSULTING SERVICES
SALES TAX RECOVERY FEES
REFUND: SKYHAWK$-SOCCER
WORKBOOK:WORKING TOGETHER TRNG
000194 DEF COMP
000194 DEF COMP
000194 DEF COMP
000194 DEF COMp
000194 DEF COMP
000194 DEF COMP
000194 DEF COMP
POOL SANITIZING CHEMICALS
190-183-999-5330
001-162-999-5261
190-183-4982
190-183-4982
001-2510
001-2510
190-2510
193-2510
194-2510
300-2510
340-2510
001-2510
001-2510
190-2510
193-2510
194-2510
300-2510
340-2510
001-140-999-5248
001-140-999-5248
190-183-4982
001-110-999-5228
001-2080
165-2080
190-2080
193-2080
194-2080
280-2080
300-2080
190'186-999-5250
438.64
180.00
25.OO
25.00
227.50
207.00
11.87
2.22
.74
.80
4.87
215.30-
194.80
11.87
2.22
.74
.80
4.87
900.00
4,491.52
50.00
49.80
2,830.74
445.85
474.06
40.01
16.50
166.79
50.00
380.55
438.64
180.00
25.00
25.00
455.00
5,391.52
50.00
49.80
4,023.95
380.55
VOUCHRE2
04/12/01 12:49
VOUCHER/
CHECK CHECK
HUMBER DATE
68548 04/12/01
68549 04/12/01
68550 04/12/01
68551 04/12/01
68552 04/12/01
68553 04/12/01
68554 04/12/01
68554 04/12/01
68555 04/12/01
68555 04/12/01
68556 04/12/01
6855? 04/12/01
68557 04/12/01
68557 04/12/01
68558 04/12/01
68559 04/12/01
68560 04/12/01
68561 04/12/01
68562 04/12/01
68562 04/12/01
68563 04/12/01
68564 04/12/01
68565 04/12/01
68566 04/12/01
68566 04/12/01
68566 04/12/01
68566 04/12/01
68566 04/12/01
68566 04/12/01
68566 04/12/01
68567 04/12/01
CITY OF TEMEOULA
VOUCHER/CHECK REGISTER
FOR ALL PERIODS
VENDOR VENDOR ITEM
NUMBER NAME DESCRIPTION
000388 INTL CONFERENCE BLDG OF FSD VOTING MBSHP:M. NORRIS
004488
002140
0040~9 JENKENS & GILDHRIBT
JURKOSKY, MIKE
003223 K E A ENVIRONMENTAL, IN
004104 KINETIC SYSTEMS INC
004104 KINETIC SYSTEMS INC
000206 KINKOS INC
000206 KINKOS INC
KROPPo PATRICIA
000945 L P S COMPUTER SERVICE
000945 L P S COMPUTER SERVICE
000945 L P S COMPUTER SERVICE
001534
003286
004087
004087
004493
J S A PUBLISHING CONSUL CITY STREET MAP AD FOR MUSEUM
JAGUAR COMPUTER SYSTEMS EMAIL MONTHLY SUPPORT & MAINT
FEB 2001 LEGAL SVCS: HR
REFUND: SKYHAWKS-SOCCER
BIOLOGICAL SVD:PALA RD PN97-15
REPAIR BLOWER PANELS:TCC
REPLACE HOT IGNITOR:SA CTR
OLD TWN WESTERN DAYS FLYERS
STATIONERY PAPER/MISC SUPPLIES
TCSO INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
HP PRINTER SUPPLIES
HP PRINTER SUPPLIES
HP PRINTER SUPPLIES
LA MASTERS OF FINE TRAV A[RFARE:SIERRA CF:WESTON:4/30
LIBRARY SYSTEMS & SERVI MAR SVCS-LIBRARY SYSTEM AGRMT
LIPOT~ TERESA
LONG, TIM
LOWE~S
LOWE'S
M & N MONTGOMERY INC
REFUND: SKYHAWKS-SOCLER
REFUND:GRADING DPST LD99-222GR
MISC HARDWARE SUPPLIES:FIRE
HARDWARE SUPPLIES:CITY HALL
REIM8: FACADE IMPROVEMENT PGRM
004428 MAIN STREET HOME IMPROV RES IMPRV:GARAGE DOOR GARCIA
003782 MAIN STREET SIGNS CITY SIGNAGE FOR PW
004141 MAINTEX INC
004141 MAINTEX INC
004141 MAINTEX INC
004141 MAINTEX INC
004141 MAINTEX INC
004141 MAINTEX INC
004141 MAINTEX IHt
CUSTODIAL SUPPLIES: MUSEUM
CUSTOOIAL SUPPLIES: CITY HALL
CUSTODIAL SUPPLIES: MAINT. FAC
CUSTODIAL SUPPLIES: TCC
OUSTOUIAL SUPPLIES: VAR. PARKS
CUSTODIAL SUPPLIES: CRC
CUSTODIAL SUPPLIES: SR CENTER
003669 MARC FAULKENBURY PAINTI RES IMPRV:PAINTING FOR MESSER
ACCOUNT
NUMBER
001-171-999-5226
190-185-999-5254
320-199-999-5211
001-130-999-5247
190-183-4982
210-165-631-5801
190-184-999-5250
190-181-999-5250
280-199-999-5362
330-199-999-5220
190-183-4982
320-199-999-5221
320-199-999-5221
320-199-999-5221
001-140-999-5261
001-101-999-5285
190-183-4982
001-2670
001-171-999-5212
340-199-701-5212
165-199-813-5804
165-199-813-5804
001-164-601-5244
190-185-99~-5212
340-199-701-5212
340-199-702-5212
190-184-999-5212
190-180-999-5212
190-182-999-5212
190-181-999-5212
165-199-813-5804
ITEM
AMOUNT
60.00
195.00
300.00
48.00
25.00
592.50
60.00
300.00
438.60
50.26
25,00
241.63
190.00
451.50
174.00
1,144.57
25.00
995.00
11.05
144.05
10~082.50
920.00
508.48
125.69
170.97
125.69
125.69
160.82
148.33
125.69
1,900.00
PAGE 9
CHECK
AMOUNT
60.00
195.00
300.00
48.00
25.00
592.50
360.00
488.86
25.00
883.13
174.00
1,144~57
25,00
995.00
155.10
10,082.50
920.00
508.48
982.88
1,900.00
VOUCHRE2
04/12/01 12:49
VOUCHER/
CHECK CHECK
NUMBER DATE
68568 04/12/01
68569 04/12/01
68570 04/12/01
68571 04/12/01
68572 04/12/01
68573 04/12/01
68574 04/12/01
68574 04/12/01
68574 04/12/01
68574 04/12/01
68574 04/12/01
68574 04/12/01
68574 04/12/01
68574 04/12/01
68575 04/12/01
68575 04/12/01
68576 04/12/01
6857? 04/12/01
68578 04/12/01
68579 04/12/01
68580 04/12/01
68580 04/12/01
68581 04/12/01
68582 04/12/01
68583 04/12/01
68583 04/12/01
68584 04/12/01
68584 04/12/01
68584 04/12/01
68584 04/12/01
68585 04/12/01
68586 04/12/01
68586 04/12/01
VENDOR VENDOR
NUMBER NAME
000217 MARGARITA OFFICIALS ASS
002011 MARTIN, KATHARINA E.
MASCARIBA-VO, JUDITH
002693 MATROS, ANDREA
000944 MCCAIN TRAFFIC SUPPLY
MCCRANNw C
003076 MET LIFE INSURANCE COMP
003076 MET LIFE INSURANCE COMP
003076 MET LIFE INSURANCE COMP
003076 MET LIFE INSURANCE COMP
003076 NET LIFE INSURANCE COMP
003076 MET LIFE INSURANCE COMP
003076 MET LIFE INSURANCE COMP
003076 MET LIFE INSURANCE COMP
001384 MINUTEMAN PRESS
001384 MINUTEMAN PRESS
000883 MONTELEONE EXCAVATING
004128 MORAMARCOw ANTHONY J.
MORAMARCOo TONY
000437 MORELAND & ASSOCIATES
002257 MOST DEPENDABLE FOUNTAI
002257 MOST DEPENDABLE FOUNTAI
002925 NAPA AUTO PARTS
NATIONAL ARBOR DAY FOUB
002139 NORTH COUNTY TIMES- ATT
002139 NORTH COUNTY TIMES- ATT
004401 NU VISION PRODUCTIONS
004401 NU VISION PRODUCTIONS
004401 NU VISION PRODUCTIONS
004401 NU VISION PRODUCTIONS
002100 OBJECT RADIANCE INC
003964 OFFICE DEPOT BUSINESS S
003964 OFFICE DEPOT BUSINESS S
CITY OF TEMECULA
VOUCHER/CHECK REGISTER
FOR ALL PERIODS
ITEM
DESCRIPTION
UMPIRE SERVICES: SOFTBALL
TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
REFUND:TINY TOTS PGRM 0002-103
TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARRINGS
TRAFFIC SIGNS & STUDYS
REFUND:TINY TOTS PGRM 0003.102
003076 DENTALML
0030?6 DENTALML
003076 DENTALML
003076 DENTALML
003076 DENTALML
003076 DENTALML
003076 DENTALML
003076 DENTALML
BUSINESS CARDS FOR POLICE
SALES TAX
STREET REPAIRS:GRADE OIAZ RO
TCSO INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
REFUND:BB MENS LEAGUE 4418-101
SPECIAL AUDIT-SLTPP FUNDS
VALVE CARTRIDGE: VAR PARKS
FREIGHT
AUTO PARTS & MISC SUPPLIES
BOW TO KILL A TREE BULLETINS
HR RECRUITMENT ADS:Ab #182130
DISPLAY ADS: PW CONST. UPDATES
EVERY 15 MINUTE PRGM VIOEO
ADDTL CAMERA ~ORK:EVERY 15
ADDTL VHS COPIES:EVERY 15 HIM
SALES TAX
TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
MISC OFFICE SUPPLIES: MAIN STN
M1SC OFFICE SUPPLIES: PD MAIN
ACCOUNT
NUMBER
190-187-999-5250
190-183-999-5330
190-183-4982
190-183-999-5330
001-164-602-5242
190-183-4982
001-2340
165-2340
190-2340
193-2340
194-2340
280-2340
330-2340
340-2340
001-170-999-5222
001-170-999-5222
001-164-601-5402
190-18~-999-5330
190-183-4994
210-165-681-5801
190-180-999-5212
190-180-999-5212
001-164-601-5215
001-164-604-5228
001-150-999-5254
001-165-999-5256
001-170-999-5371
001-170-999-5371
001-170-999-5371
001-170-999-5371
190-183-999-5330
001-170-999-5220
001-170-999-5220
ITEM
AMOUNT
2,156.00
489.60
65. O0
249.60
193.50
30.00
3,950.43
200.93
687.56
61.12
5.44
100.45
18.15
130.60
573.75
43.03
1,260. O0
552.00
40.00
3,500.00
432.00
10.00
5.13
100.00
60.00
533.80
913.75
300.00
215.00
22.50
691.20
17.20
26.74
PAGE 10
CHECK
AMOUNT
2,156.00
489.60
65.00
249.60
193.50
30.00
5,154.68
616.78
1,260.00
552.00
40.00
3,500.00
442.00
5.13
100.00
593.80
1,451.25
691.20
43.94
VOUCHRE2 CITY OF TEMECULA
04/12/01 12:49 VOUCHER/CHECK REGISTER
FOR ALL PERIODS
PAGE 11
VOUCHER/
CHECK CHECK VENDOR VENDOR ITEM ACCOUNT
NUMBER DATE NUMBER NAME DESCRIPTION NUMBER
ITEH
AMOUNT
CHECK
AMOUNT
68587 04/12/01 002105 OLD TOWN TIRE & SERVICE REPAIR & MAINT VEHICLE:99-049 001-162-999-5214
68587 04/12/01 002105 OLD TOWN TIRE & SERVICE SALES TAX 001-162-999-5214
68587 04/12/01 002105 OLD TOWN TIRE & SERVICE CITY VEH REPAIR/MAINT:PN01-067 001-164-601-5214
68587 04/12/01 002105 OLD TOWN TIRE & SERVICE CITY VEHICLE REPAIR: 95-026 190-180-999-5214
68587 04/12/01 002105 OLD TOWN TIRE & SERVICE REPAIR & MAINT. VEHICLE:V-8051 001-162-999-5214
68587 04/12/01 002105 OLO TOWN TIRE & SERVICE REPAIR & MAINT. VEHICLE:V-1658 001-110-999-5214
17.95
1.24
66.45
29.15
20.00
65.05
199.84
68588 04/12/01 003762 P M X MEDICAL SPECIALTY MEDICAL SUPPLIES: MEDIC SQUAD 001-171-999-5311
90.93
90.93
68589 04/12/01 PACIFIC BELL REFUND: CELL SITE PA95-0033 001-2650
68590 04/12/01 002297 PACIFIC RELOCATION CONS RELOCATION:TRADE POST dAN/FEB 210-190-165-5804
68591 04/12/01 PAGEL, TERESA REFUND:SKYHA~K SOCCER 4062-102 190-183-4982
1,500.00
2,515.00
25.00
1,500.00
2,515.00
25.00
68592 04/12/01 PARRICK, LORA
REFUND:BALLROOM DANCE 2036-103 190-183-4982
40.00
40.00
68593 04/12/01 PAVA, KENDRA
REFUND:SELF DEFENSE 2040-105 190-183-4982
20.00
20.00
68594 04/12/01 004463 PERFECT FORM CASH RECEIPT FORMS FOR BUS LIC 001-140-999-5222
68594 04/12/01 004463 PERFECT FORM FREIGHT 001-140-999-5222
68594 04/12/01 004463 PERFECT FORM SALES TAX 001-140-999-5222
68594 04/12/01 004463 PERFECT FORM ACCOUNTS PAYABLE CHECKS 001-140-9~9-5222
68594 04/12/01 004463 PERFECT FORM FREIGHT 001-140-999-5222
68594 04/12/01 004463 PERFECT EORM SALES TAX 001-140-999-5222
68594 04/12/01 004463 PERFECT FORM BUSINESS LICENSE CERTIFICATES 001-140-999-5222
68594 04/12/01 004463 PERFECT FORM FREIGHT 001-140-999-5222
68594 04/12/01 004463 PERFECT FORM SALES TAX 001-140-~-5222
68595 04/12/01 001958 PERS LONG TERM CARE PRO 001958 PERS L-T 001-2122
845.03
15.88
65.49
1,081.74
15.88
83.83
498.22
3.97
38.61
154.60
2,648.65
154.60
68596 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH
TCSD SPRING EGG HUNT EVENT 190-183-999-5370
225.00
225.00
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 001-150-999-5261
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMSURSEMENT 001-111-999-5270
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 280-199-999-5260
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 001-111-999-5270
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 001-111-999-5220
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 001-111-999-5270
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 001-111-999-5270
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 190-183-999-5320
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 001-150-999-5260
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 001-170-999-5243
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 001-170-999-5229
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 001-170-999-5230
6~597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 001-170-999-5371
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 001-150-999-5265
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 190-180-999-5212
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 001-2175
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT 001-2175
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH PETTY CASH REIMBURSEI2NT 001-101-999-5280
20.00
20.00
12.74
37.50
9.34
32.90
32.64
4.26
20.26
14.00
15.54
12.25
3.00
30.76
31.11
37.56
43.87
50.00
VOUCHRE2
04/12/01 12:49
CITY OF TEMECULA
VOUCHER/CHECK REGISTER
FOR ALL PERIOOS
PAGE 12
VOUCHER/
CHECK CHECK VENDOR VEHDOR
NUMBER DATE NUMBER NAME
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH
68597 04/12/01 000249 PETTY CASH
68598 04/12/01
68599 04/12/01
68600 04/12/01 000254
68600 04/12/01 000254
68600 04/12/01 000254
68601 04/12/01
68602 04/12/01
68603 04/12/01
68605 04/12/01
68604 04/12/01
68604 04/12/01
68605 04/12/01
68605 04/12/01
68606 04/12/01
68606 04/12/01
68606 04/12/01
PICARD, CATHERINE
PLANT EQUIPMENT
PRESS ENTERPRISE COMPAN
PRESS ENTERPRISE COMPAN
PRESS EHTERPRISE COMPAH
ITEM
DESCRIPTION
PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT
PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT
PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT
PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT
PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT
PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT
PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT
PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT
PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT
PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT
PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT
PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT
PETTY CASH REIMBURSEMENT
002110 PRIME EQUIPMENT
REFUND:DPJ~WING CLASS 0204-104
REFUHD:BB MENS LEAGUE 4418-101
MAR VARIOUS LEaL NOTICES
MAR VARIOUS PUBLIC NOTICES
MAR VARIOUS PUBLIC NOTICES
PROFANCIK, EDWARD
000635 R & J PARTY PALACE
000635 R & d PARTY PALACE
004029 R J M DESIGN GROUP INC
004029 R J M DESIGN GROUP INC
002612 RADIO SHACK INC
002612 RADIO SHACK INC
EQUIPMENT RENTAL: CRC
REFUND:SKYHAWK SOCCER 4062.104
RENTAL OF EQUIP:BLUEGRASS FEST
EQUIP RENTAL:WELCOMING LUNCH
DESIGN:NORTHWEST SPORTS COHPLX
DESIGN:NORTHWEST SPORTS COHPLX
MISC COMPUTER SUPPLIES
MISC COMPUTER SUPPLIES
000947 RANCHO BELL BLUEPRINT C BLUEPRINTS:LOW/FLOW P~99-15
000947 RANCHO BELL BLUEPRINT C BLUEPRINTS:RANCHO CAL/YNEZ
000947 RANCHO 8ELL BLUEPRINT C BLUEPRIHTS:RCSP PWOO'~3CSW
68607 04/12/01 000262 RANCHO
68607 04/12/01 000262 P, ANCHO
68607 04/12/01 000262 RANCHO
~07 04/12/01 000262 RANCHO
68607 04/12/01 000262 RANCHO
68607 04/12/01 000262 RANCHO
68607 04/12/01 000262 RANCHO
68607 04/12/01 000262 RANCHO
68607 04/12/01 000262 RANCHO
68607 04/12/01 000262 RANCHO
68607 04/12/01 000262
68607 04/12/01 000262
CALIF WATER DIST APR 01-08-00035-0 30765 HWY 79
CALIF WATER DIST APR 01-06-26305-0 28379 FRONT
CALIF WATER DIST APR 01-06-30205-0 41952 6TH ST
CALIF WATER DIST
CALIF WATER DIST
CALIF WATER DIST
CALIF WATER DIST
CALIF WATER DIST
CALIF WATER DIST
APR 01-06-30206-0 41952 6TH ST
APR 01-06-55015-0 28667 FRONT
APR 01-06-60005-0 41991 MAIN
APR 01-06-81000-1 28699 FRONT
APR 01-06-84~0-5 28747 PUJOL
APR 01-02-98000-0 FIRE STN 8/*
CALIF WATER DIST APR 01-02-98010-0 FIRE STN 84
RANCHO CALIF WATER DIST VARIOUS WATER METERS
RANCHO CALIF WATER DIST VARIOUS WATER METERS
A~COUNT
NUMBER
190-183-999-5320
001-2175
001-111-999-5270
001-111-999-5260
340-199-701-5250
340-199-701-5250
001-111-999-5270
001-2175
001-2175
001-2175
001-2175
001-2175
001-2175
190-183-4982
190-183-4994
001-120-999-5256
001-161-999-5256
001-161-999-5256
190-182-999-5238
190 - 183 - 4982
280-199-999-5362
001-111-999-5270
210-190-17'3-5802
210-190-173-5802
320-199-999-5221
320-199-999-5221
210-165-707-5804
210-165-611-5802
210-190-178-5804
001-165-~99-5250
001-164-603-5240
001-164-603-5240
001-164-603-5240
001-164-603-5240
001-164-603-5240
210-165-828-5804
280-199-807-5801
001-171-999-5240
001-171-999-5240
190-180-999-5240
190-181-999-5240
ITEM
AMOUNT
26.76
28.02
39.52
12.00
6.22
15.00
41.87
20.00
20.00
30.00
25.00
25.00
20,00
36.00
40.00
210.23
18.50
75.75
195.68
25.00
866.00
589.00
1,857.00
924.48
24.68
21.98
19.30
34.54
9.65
75.25
44.61
76.50
34.85
29.63
10.27
40.51
42.73
9.62
85.14
2,627.85
89.6~
CHECK
AMOUNT
7~7.12
36.00
40.00
304.48
195.68
25.00
1,455.00
2,781.48
46.66
63.49
VOUCHRE2
04/12/01 12:49
CITY OF TEMECULA
VOUCHER/CHECK REGISTER
FOR ALL PERIODS
PAGE 13
VOUCHER/
CHECK CHECK VENDOR VENDOR
NUMBER DATE NUMBER NAME
ITEM
DESCRIPTION
ACCOUNT
NUMBER
ITEM
AJ4OUNT
CHECK
AMOUNT
68607 04/12/01 000262 PJ~NCHO CALIF WATER DIST
68607 04/12/01 000262 RANCHO CAL1F WATER DIST
68607 04/12/01 000262 RANCRO CALIF WATER DIST
68607 04/12/01 000262 RANCHO CALIF WATER DIST
68607 04/12/01 000262 RANCHO CALIF WATER DIST
68608 04/12/01 000907 RANCHO CAR WASH
68608 04/12/01 000907 RANCHO CAR WASH
68608 04/12/01 000907 1~4NCHO CAR WASH
68608 04/12/01 000907 RANCHO CAR WASH
68608 04/12/01 000907 RANCHO CAR WASH
68608 04/12/01 000907 RANCHO CAR WASH
68608 04/12/01 000907 RANCHO CAR WASH
68608 04/12/01 000907 RANCHO CAR WASH
VARIOUS WATER RETERS
VARIOUS WATER METERS
VARIOUS WATER NETERS
VARIOUS WATER METERS
VARIOUS WATER METERS
CITY VEHICLE DETAILING
CITY VEHICLE DETAILING
CITY VEHICLE DETAILING & FUEL
CITY VEHICLE DETAILING & FUEL
CITY VEHICLE DETAILING
CITY VEHICLE DETAILING
CITY VEHICLE DETAILING & FUEL
CITY VEHICLE DETAILING & FUEL
190-182-999-5240
190-186-999-5240
193-180-9~9-5240
340-1¢9-701-5240
190-185-999-5240
001-162-999-5214
001-165-999-5214
001-110-~9-5214
001-110-~-5263
001-163-~-5214
001-164-601-5214
190-180-999-3214
190-180-999-5263
480.01
114.35
1,254.03
314.86
56.11
28.00
19.25
21.00
108.27
14.00
21.00
42.00
60.48
5,385.96
314.00
68609 04/12/01 REDFIELD, SEAM
REFUND:BB MENS LEAGUE 4418-101 190-183-4994
40,00
40.00
68610 04/12/01 003742 REHA8 FINANCIAL CORPORA
68610 04/12/01 003742 REHAB FINANCIAL CORPORA
68610 04/12/01 003742 RENAB FINANCIAL CORPORA
SERVICING AGENCY FOR CITIES
SERVICING AGENCY FOR CITIES
SERVICING AGENCY FOR CITIES
165-199-813-5804
165-199-813-5804
165-199-813-5804
150.00
150.00
600.00
900.00
68611 04/12/01 003591 RENES COMMERCIAL MANAGE
68612 04/12/01 000353 RIVERSIDE CO AUDITOR
68612 04/12/01 000353 RIVERSIDE CO AUDITOR
68613 04/12/01 ROSENBAUM, RICHARD
WEEDABATE VARIOUS LOTS
FEB PARKING CITATION ASSESMENT
FEB PARKING CITATION ASSESMENT
REFUND:SKYHAWK SOCCER 4062-103
001-164-601-5402
001-2260
001-2265
190-183-4982
2,475.00
1,690.00
440.00
25.00
2,475.00
2,130.00
25.00
68614 04/12/01 001309 RUSE, PHYLLIS
REIMB:CPRS CONF:3/14-3/18/01 190-180-999-5258
152.85
152.85
68615 04/12/01 0002?7 S & S ARTS & CRAFTS INC MISC SUPPLIES:TINY TOT PGRM 190-183-999-5320
250.27
250.27
68616 04/12/01 003277 S T A ENGINEERING INC
DESIGN:SIGNING/STRIPE PWO0-31
210-165-720-5802
68617 04/12/01 002285 SCANTRON CORPORATION PURCHASE SCANTRON FORMS FOR 001-163-999-5222
68617 04/12/01 002285 SCANTRON CORPORATION FREIGHT 001-163-999-5222
68617 04/12/01 002285 SCANTRON CORPORATION SALES TAX 001~163-999-5222
1,540.00
628.35
13.94
47,12
1,540.00
689.41
68618 04/12/01 000793 SCANTRON FPC CORPORATZO SCANTRON MAINT AGMNT/SUPPLIES 320-199-999-5215
899.00
899.00
68619 04/12/01 SICRCH, MARIA
REFUND:SKYHAWK SOCCER 4062-104 190-183-4982
25.00
25.00'
68620 04/12/01 000751 SKILLPATH INC CONFLICT MGMT SKILLS:5/24 KC 001-171-999-5261
68620 04/12/01 000751 SKILLPATH [NC CONFLICT MGMT SKILLS:6/18 WIMS 001-161-999-5261
68621 04/12/01 0006~5 SMART & FINAL INC MISC SUPPLIES:EVERY 15 NIH PGR 001-170-999-5371
68621 04/12/01 000645 SMART & FINAL Igc MISC SUPPLIES: VOLUNTEER RECOG 190-183-999-5370
68622 04/12/01 003002 SMODTHILL SPORTS DISTRI MISC EQUIPMENT: SKATF PARK 190-183-999-5305
68622 04/12/01 003002 SMOOTHILL SPORTS DISTRI FREIGHT 190-183-999-5305
99.00
~.00
504.11
86.85
1,700.38
27.77
198.00
590.96
1,728.15
VOUCHRE2 CITY OF TEMECULA PAGE 14
04/12/01 12:49 VOUCHER/CHECK REGISTER
FOB ALL PERIOOS
VOUCHER/
CHECK CHECK VENDOR VENDOR
NUMBER DATE NUMSER NAHE
ITEM ACCOUNT ITEM CHECK
DESCRIPTION HUMBER AMOUNT AMOUNT
68623 04/12/01 000537 SO CALIF EDISON
68623 04/12/01 000537 SO CALIF EDISON
68623 04/12/01 000537 SO CALIF EDISON
68623 04/12/01 000537 SO CALIF EDISON
68623 04/12/01 000537 SO CALIF EDISON
68623 04/12/01 000537 SO CALIF EDISON
68623 04/12/01 000537 SO CALIF EDISON
68623 04/12/01 000537 SO CALIF EDISON
68624 04/12/01 000519 SOUTH COUNTY PEST CONTR
68624 04/12/01 000519 SOUTH COUNTY PEST CONTR
68624 04/12/01 000519 SOUTH COUNTY PEST CONTR
68624 04/12/01 000519 SOUTH COUNTY PEST CONTR
68624 04/12/01 000519 SOUTH COUNTY PEST CONTR
68624 04/12/01 000519 SOUTH COUNTY PEST CONTR
APR 2-10-331-1353 FIRE STN 84 001-171-999-5240
APR 2-10-331-2153 TCC 190-184-999-5240
APR 2-19-538-2262 FRONT/MONROE 190-180-999-5240
APR 2-20-798-3248 KIDS MUSEUM 190-180-999-5240
APR 2-19-683-3255 FRONT ST PED 001-16~-603-5319
MAR 2-19-683-3263 FRONT ST PED 001-164-603-5319
APR 2-02-351-5281 CRC 190-182-999-5240
APR 2-02-502-807? MAINT. FAC. 340-199-702-5240
PEST CONTROLS SERVICES: TCC 190-184-999-5250
PEST CONTROL SERVICEf:STN 8~ 001-171-999-5212
PEST CONTROL SERVS: MAINT. FAC 340-199-702-5250
PEST CONTROL: POLICE CABOOSE 001-170-999-5250
PEST CONTROL:WEDOING CHAPEL 190-185-999-5250
PEST CONTROL:MUSEUM 190-185-999-5250
666.21
581.43
7~.67
203.95
351.24
331.06
3,621.11
809.29
36.00
80.00
40.00
29.00
32.00
42.00
6,637.96
259.00
68625 04/12/01 000465 STRADLEY, MARY KATHLEEN TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
68625 04/12/01 000465 $TRAOLEY~ MARY KATHLEEN TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
190-183-999-5330
190-183-999-5330
432.00
288.00
720.00
68626 04/12/01 SYKES, LINDA
REFUND:SKYHAWK SOCCER 4062-102 190-183-4982
25.00
25.00
68627 04/12/01 000305 TARGET STORE.
68627 04/12/01 000305 TARGET STORE
68627 04/12/01 000305 TARGET STORE
68627 04/12/01 000305 TARGET STORE
68627 04/12/01 000305 TARGET STORE
68627 04/12/01 000305 TARGET STORE
68627 04/12/01 000305 TARGET STORE
68627 04/12/01 000305 TARGET STORE
68627 04/12/01 000305 TARGET STORE
MISC SUPPLIES FOR: P~ & ENG
MISC SUPPLIES:PUB UORKS/ENG
MISC SUPPLIES:PUB WORKS/ENG
MISC SUPPLIES:PUB ~ORKS/ENG
MISC SUPPLIES:RECREATION
MISC SUPPLIES FOR:P W & ENG
MISC SUPPLIES FOR:P ~ & ENG
MISC SUPPLIES FOR:P ~ & ENG
MISC SUPPLIES:FAMILY FUN NIGHT
190-183-999-5371
001-163-999-5220
001-165-999-5220
001-164-604-5220
190-183-999-5320
001-163-999-5220
001-165-~-5220
001-164.-604-5220
190-183-999-5371
23.61
16.96
5.65
28.28
103.52
33.93
11.31
56.54
70.91
350.71
68628 04/12/01 001547 TEAMSTERS LOCAL 911 001547 UN DUES 001-2125 585.00
68628 04/12/01 001547 TEAMSTERS LOCAL 911 001547 UN DUES 190-2125 96.75
68628 04/12/01 001547 TEAMSTERS LOCAL 911 001547 UN DUES 193-2125 6.75
68628 04/12/01 001547 TEAMSTERS LOCAL 911 001547 UN DUES 194-2125 2.25
68628 04/12/01 001547 TEAMSTERS LOCAL 911 001547 UN DUES 320-2125 22.50
68628 04/12/01 001547 TEAMSTERS LOCAL 911 001547 UN DUES 330-2125 22.50
68628 04/12/01 001547 TEAHSTERS LOCAL 911 001547 UN DUES 340-2125 51.75
68629 04/12/01 003130 TECATE GRILL RESTAURANT
68629 04/12/01 003130 TECATE GRILL RESTAURANT
68630 04/12/01 000642 TEMECULA CITY FLEXIBLE
68630 04/12/01 000642 TEMECULA CITY FLEXIBLE
68630 04/12/01 0006/,2 TEMECULA CITY FLEXIBLE
68630 04/12/01 0006/+2 TEMECULA CITY FLEXIBLE
68630 04/12/01 000642 TEMECULA CITY. FLEXIBLE
68630 04/12/01 000642 TEMECULA CITY FLEXIBLE
68630 04/12/01 000642 TEMECULA CITY FLEXIBLE
68630 04/12/01 0006~2 TEMECULA CITY FLEXIBLE
68630 04/12/01 0006~2 TEMECULA CITY FLEXIBLE
FOOD FOR EMP LUNCHEON: 4/5/01
SALES TAX
001-150-999-5265
001-150-999-5265
EMPLOYEE CONTRIBUTION TO FLEX 001-1020
EMPLOYEE CONTRIBUTION TO FLEX 165-1020
EMPLOYEE CONTRIBUTION TO FLEX 190-1020
EMPLOYEE CONTRIBUTION TO FLEX 192-1020
EMPLOYEE CONTRIBUTION TO FLEX 193-1020
EMPLOYEE CONTRIBUTION TO FLEX 280-1020
EMPLOYEE CONTRIBUTION TO FLEX 194-1020
EMPLOYEE CONTRIBUTION TO FLEX 330-1020
EMPLOYEE CONTRIBUTION TO FLEX 340-1020
1,154.30
86.57
4,7~3.18
225.00
934. O0
1.25
9.75
~.00
3.75
466.66
11.25
787.50
1,240.87
6,4~9.84
VOUCHRE2 CITY OF TEMECULA PAGE 15
04/12/01 12:49 VOUCHER/CHECK REGISTER
FOR ALL PERIOOS
VOUCHER/
CHECK
NUMBER
68631
68632
68632
68633
68634
68635
68636
68636
68637
68637
68637
68637
68638
68638
CHECK VENDOR VENDOR
DATE NUMBER NAME
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
000168 TEMECULA FLOWER CORRAL
003677 TEMECULA MOTORSPORTS LL
003677 TEMECULA MOTORSPORTS LL
000306 TEMECULA VALLEY PIPE &
0042?4 TEMECULA VALLEY SECURIT
003140 TEMEEULA VALLEY TAEK~/ON
003862 THYSSEN DOVER ELEVATOR
003862 THYSSEN DOVER ELEVATOR
000668 TIMMY D PROOUCTIONS
000~8 TIMMY D PROOUCTIONS
000~ TIMMY D PRODUCTIONS
000668 TIMMY D PROOUCTIONS
000320 TOMNE CENTER STATIONERS
000320 TOWNE CENTER STATIONERS
ITEM ACCOUNT ITEM CHECK
DESCRIPTION NL~4BER AMOUNT AMOUNT
SUNSHINE FUND 001-2170 243.33
POLICE MOTORCYCLE REPAIR&~AINT 001-170-999-5214
POLICE MOTORCYCLE REPAIR/MAINT 001-170-999-5214
IRRIGATION SUPPLIES: VAR PARKS 190-180-999-5212
LOCKSMITH SERVICES:BUTTERFIELD 190-180-999-5212
TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS 190-183~999-5330
ELEVATOR REPAIR:CITY HALL/MUSE 340-199-701-5250
ELEVATOR REPAIR:CITY HALL/MUSE 190-185-999-5250
MUSCIAN:CONCIERGE MEETING 001-111-999-5270
PA SYSTEM:SPRING EGG HUNT/PALO 190-183-999-5370
PA SYSTEM: SPRING EGG BUNT 190-183-999-5370
P A SYSTEM:SPRING EGG HUNT/TEM 190-183-999-5370
MISE OFFICE SUPPLIES
MISC OFFICE SUPPLIES
001-164-604-5242
001-164-604-5220
93.79
341.50
1.87
100.00
135.00
135.00
;5.00
100.00
100.00
100.00
537.77
69.17
68639 04/12/01 003560 TRANSAMERICA 003560 AD&O 001-2360 148.88
68639 04/12/01 003560 TRANSAMERICA 003560 AD&D 165-2360 3.01
68639 04/12/01 003560 TRANSAMERICA 003560 AD&D 190-2360 30.76
68639 04/12/01 003560 TRANSAMERICA 003560 AO&D 192-2360 .08
68639 04/12/01 003560 TRANSAMERICA 003560 AD&O 193-2360 2.93
68639 04/12/01 003560 TRANSAMERICA 003560 AD&O 194-2360 .59
68639 04/12/01 003560 TRANSAMERICA 003560 AD&D 280-2360 1.49
68639 04/12/01 003560 TRANSAMERICA 003560 AD&D 300-2360 .74
68639 04/12/01 003560 TRANSAMERICA 003560 AD&D 320-2360 6.00
68639 04/12/01 003560 TRANSAMERICA 003560 AD&O 330-2360 2.25
68639 04/12/01 003560 TRANSAMERICA 003560 AO&D 340-2360 4.27
68640
68640
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
000978 TRAUFLR INTERVENTION PRG
0009?8 TP~UMA INTERVENTION PRG
2ND QTR EMERG.RESPONSE VOL. PR 001-171-999-5274
3RD QTR EMER.RESPONSE VOL. PGM 001-171-999-5274
TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
TCSD INSTRUCTOR EARNINGS
190-183-999-5330
190-183-999-5330
190-183-999-5330
190-183-999-5330
SEMINAR REGISTRATION: HOGAN 001-161-999-5261
000459 TUMBLE JUNGLE FITNESS G
000459 TUMBLE JUNGLE FITNESS G
000459 TUMBLE JUNGLE FITNESS G
000459 TUMBLE JUNGLE FITNESS G
001-2080
165-2080
190-2080
192-2080
193-2080
194-2080
280-2080
U C L A EXTENSION
001065 U S C M WEST (DEF COMP) 001065 DEF COMP
001065 U S C M WEST (DEF COMp) 001065 DEF COMP
001065 U S C M WEST (DEF COMP) 001065 DEF COMP
001065 U S C M WEST (DEF COMP) 001065 DEF COMP
001065 U S C M WEST (DEF COMP) 001065 DEF CC~4P
001065 U S C M WEST (DEF COI4p) 001065 DEF COMp
001065 U S C M WEST (DEF COMP) 001065 DEF COMP
68642
68643
68643
68663
68643
68643
68643
68643
1,620.00
1,620.00
176.00
153.60
192.00
176.00
410.00
10,746.82
101.16
2,094.22
7.50
168.70
44.50
117.36
243.33
435.29
1.87
68.76
100.00
270.00
3;5.00
606.94
201.00
3,240.00
697.60
410.00
VOUCHRE2 CITY OF TEMECULA
04/12/01 12:49 VOUCHER/CHECK REGISTER
FOR ALL PERIOOS
VOUCHER/
CHECK CHECK VENDOR VENDOR ITEM
NUMBER DATE NUMBER NAME DESCRIPTION
68643 04/12/01 001065 U S C M WEST (DEF COHP) 001065 DEF COMP
68643 04/12/01 001065 U S C M WEST (DEE COMP) 001065 DEE COHP
68643 04/12/01 001065 U S C M WEST (DEE COHP) 001065 DEE COHP
68644 04/12/01 ,000389 U S C M WEST (OBRA) 000389 PT RETIR
68644 04/12/01 000389 U S C M WEST (OBRA) 000389 PT RETIR
68644 04/12/01 000389 U S C M WEST (OBRA) 000389 PT RETIR
68644 04/12/01 000389 U S C M WEST (OBRA) 000389 PT RETIR
68644 04/12/01 000389 U S C M WEST (OBRA) 000589 PT RETIR
68644 04/12/01 000389 U S C H WEST (OBRA) 000389 PT RETIR
68644 04/12/01 000389 U S C M WEST (OBRA) 000389 PT RETIE
68644 04/12/01 000389 U S C M WEST (OBRA) 000389 PT RETIE
68645 04/12/01 002702 U S POSTAL SERVICE:CMRS POSTAGE METER DEPOSIT
68645 04/12/01 002702 U S POSTAL SERVICE:CMRS POSTAGE METER DEPOSIT
68645 04/12/01 002702 U S POSTAL SERVICE:CMRS POSTAGE HETER DEPOSIT
68645 04/12/01 002702 U S POSTAL SERV[CE:CMRS POSTAGE METER DEPOSIT
68645 04/12/01 002702 U S POSTAL SERVICE:CMRS POSTAGE METER DEPOSIT
68645 04/12/01 002702 U S POSTAL SERVICE:CMRS POSTAGE METER DEPOSIT
68645 04/12/01 002702 U S POSTAL SERVICE:CMRS POSTAGE METER DEPOSIT
68645 04/12/01 002702 U S POSTAL SERVICE:CMRS POSTAGE METER DEPOSIT
68645 04/12/01 002702 U S POSTAL SERVICE:CMRS POSTAGE METER DEPOSIT
68645 04/12/01 002702 U S POSTAL SERVICE:CMRS POSTAGE METER DEPOSIT
68645 04/12/01 002702 O S POSTAL SERVICE:CMRS POSTAGE METER DEPOSIT
68645 04/12/01 002702 U S POSTAL SERVICE:CMRS POSTAGE METER DEPOSIT
68645 04/12/01 002702 U S POSTAL SERVICE:CMRS POSTAGE METER DEPOSIT
68645 04/12/01 002702 U S POSTAL SERVICE:CMRS POSTAGE HETER DEPOSIT
ACCOUNT
NUMBER
300-2080
320-2080
540-2080
001-2160
165-2160
190-2160
193-2160
280-2160
320-2160
330-2160
340-2160
001-100-999-5230
001-110-999-5230
001-120-999-5230
001-162-999-5230
190-180-999-5230
280-199-999-5230
001-140-999-5230
001-150-999-5230
001-161-999-5230
001-164-604-5230
320-199-999-5230
001-171-999-5230
001-111-999-5230
190-185-999-5230
ITEM
AMOUNT
~.55
1,416.68
169.46
610.94
81.64
999.75
21.05
23.24
67.26
48.72
37.02
9.26
120.99
160.30
183.58
494.82
56.38
789.06
89.86
854.46
577.67
6.35
6.46
212.05
708.22
68646 04/12/01 000325 UNITED WAY 000325 UW 001-2120 127.05
68646 04/12/01 000325 UNITED WAY 000325 UW 165-2120 8.75
68646 04/12/01 000325 UNITED WAY 000325 UW 190-2120 22.60
68646 04/12/01 000325 UNITED WAY 000325 UW 192-2120 .10
68646 04/12/01 000325 UNITED WAY 000325 UW 193-2120 2.20
68646 04/12/01 000325 UNITED WAY 000325 UW 194-2120 .50
68646 04/12/01 000325 UNITED WAY 000325 UW 280-2120 2.50
68646 04/12/01 000325 UNITED WAY 000325 UW 320-2120 5.00
68646 04/12/01 000325 UNITED WAY 000325 UW 330-2120 5.00
68646 04/12/01 000325 UNITED WAY 000325 UW 340-2120 .60
68647 04/12/01 004440 UNIVERSITY PRODUCTS INC MUSEUM SUPPLIES
686/*8 04/12/01 000332 VANDORPE CHOU ASSOCIATE PLAN CHECK SVCS: DEC O0
6~8 04/12/01 000332 VANDORPE CHOU ASSOCIATE PLAN CHECK SVCS: JAN 2001
190-185-999-5250
001-162-999-5248
001-162-999-5248
68649 04/12/01 004261 VERIZON CALIFORNIA MAR XXX-1289 PRATT 320-199-999-5208
68649 04/12/01 004261 VERIZON CALIFORNIA MAR XXX-2629 HAGGAR 320-199-999-5208
68649 04/12/01 004261 VERIZOR CALIFORNIA MAR XXX-2670 911 AUTO DIALER 520-199-999-5208
~49 04/12/01 004261 VERIZON CALIFORNIA MAR XXX-3539 GENERAL USAGE 320-199-999-5208
68649 04/12/01 004261 VERIZON CALIFORNIA MAR XXX-5509 GENERAL USAGE 320-199-999-5208
40.35
3,282.52
3,046.72
66.03
47.48
28.37
38.46
130.41
PAGE 16
CHECK
AMOUNT
14,954.95
1,889.62
4,269.46
174.30
40.35
6,329.24
310.75
~50 04/12/01 00427'9 VERIZON CALIFORNIA INC. APR ACCESS-CRC OPEN PHONE LINE 320-199-999-5208 341.38
VOUCHRE2 CITY OF TEMECULA PAGE 17
04/12/01 12:49 VOUCHER/CHECK REGISTER
FOR ALL PER[OOS
VOUCHER/
CHECK
NUMBER
68650
68651
68652
68653
68654
68655
68655
68655
68655
68655
68655
68655
68655
68655
CHECK
DATE
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/1Z/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
04/12/01
VENDOR
NUMBER
004279
004480
VENDOR
NAME
VERIZON CALIFORNIA INC.
WALDEN DANL
WEDDLE~ DONALD
WINCHESTER PROPERTIES
NO00S, DEENA
000345 XEROX CORPORATION BILLI
000345 XEROX CORPORATION BILLI
000345 XEROX CORPORATION BILLI
000345 XEROX CORPORATION BILL[
000345 XEROX CORPORATION B[LLI
000345 XEROX CORPORATION BILL!
000345 XEROX CORPORATION BILL[
000345 XEROX CORPORATION BILL[
000345 XEROX CORPORATION BILLI
ITEM
DESCRIPTION
APR ACCESS-RVSD CO OPEN LINE
SOUND SYSTEM: BLUEGRASS FEST
REFUND:BB MENS LEAGUE 4418-101
REFUND: LDSP BOND PA96-0018
REFUND:SKYHAWX SOCCER 4062-104
LEASE FOR COPIERS:460 & 240
INTEREST FOR COP[ERS:MAINT FAC
LEASE OF COP[ER: DC420 MAINT
POOLED MAINT.FOR CITY COP[ERS
LEASE OF COPIER: 420 AT TCC
LEASE FOR COP[ER: 420 STN 8/,
SALES TAX
LEASE OF COPIER: 5800 COPY CTR
MA[NT & SUPPLIES FOR 5800
ACCOUNT
NUMBER
320-199-999-5208
280-199-999-5362
190-183-4994
001-2650
190-183-4982
330-2800
330-199~999-5391
330-199-999-5217
330-199-999-5217
190-184-999-5239
001-171-999-5239
001-171-999-5239
330-2800
330-199-999~5391
ITEM
AMOUNT
341.38
2,000.00
40.00
1,928.00
50.00
1,632.76
1,095.48
223.62
5,440.92
224.62
208.02
15.60
1,776.50
604.97
CHECK
AMOUNT
682.76
2,000.00
40.00
1,928.00
50.00
11,222.49
TOTAL CHECKS 340,558.32
VOUCHRE2 CITY OF TEMECULA PAGE 2
04/12/01 16:26 VOUCHER/CHECK REGISTER
FOR ALL PERIODS
FUND TITLE
001 GENERAL FUND
165 RDA DEV- LOW/MOO SET ASIDE
190 COMMUNITY SERVICES DISTRICT
193 TCSD SERVICE LEVEL C
210 CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT PROJ FUND
261 CFD 88-12 ADM[N EXPENSE FUND
280 REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY - CIP
300 INSURANCE FUND
340 FACILITIES
AMOUNT
77,048.85
34,600.00
61,619.22
24,228.00
12,782.29
37.00
503.25
3,885.33
5,794.00
TOTAL 220,497.94
VOUCHRE2 CITY OF TEMECUi& PAGE 1
04/12/01 16:26 VOUCHER/CHECK REGISTER
FOR ALL PERIODS
VOUCHER/
CHECK CHECK VENDOR
HUMBER DATE NUMBER
68658 04/24/01
68659 04/24/01
68659 04/24/01
68660 04/24/01
68660 04/24/01
68660 04/24/01
68660 04/24/01
68660 04/24/01
68660 04/24/01
68660 04/24/01
68660 04/24/01
68660 04/24/01
68660 04/24/01
68660 04/24/01
68660 04/24/01
68660 04/24/01
68660 04/24/01
68660 04/24/01
68660 04/24/01
68661 04/24/01
68661 04/24/01
68662 04/24/01
68665 04/24/01
68664 04/24/01
VENDOR ITEM ACCOUNT
NAME DESCRIPTION NUMBER
003376 ARTS COUNCIL, THE
002541 BECKER CONSTRUCTION SRV
002541 BECKER CONSTRUCTION SRV
001056 EXCEL LANDSCAPE
001056 EXCEL LANDSCAPE
001056 EXCEL LANDSCAPE
001056 EXCEL LANDSCAPE
001056 EXCEL LANDSCAPE
001056 EXCEL LANDSCAPE
001056 EXCEL LANDSCAPE
001056 EXCEL LANDSCAPE
001056 EXCEL LANDSCAPE
001056 EXCEL LANDSCAPE
001056 EXCEL LANDSCAPE
001056 EXCEL LANDSCAPE
001056 EXCEL LANDSCAPE
001056 EXCEL LANDSCAPE
001056 EXCEL LANDSCAPE
001056 EXCEL LANDSCAPE
002174 GROUP 1 PRODUCTIONS
002174 GROUP 1 PROUUCTIONS
004115 K T U & ASSOCIATES
003286 LIBRARY SYSTEMS & SERVI
003715 MORTON TRAFFIC MARKINGS
68665 04/24/01 000230
68665 04/24/01 000230
68666 04/24/01
68666 04/24/01
68667 04/24/01
68668 04/24/01
68668 04/24/01
68668 04/24/01
68668 04/24/01
68668 04/24/01
68668 04/24/01
MUNIFINANCIAL
MUNIFINANCIAL
00100? N P G CORPORATION
001007 N P G CORPORATION
004029 R J M DESIGN GROUP INC
002412 RICHARDS WATSON & GERSH
002412 RICHARDS WATSON & GERSH
002412 RICHAROS WATSON & GERSH
002412 RICHARDS WATSON & GERSH
002412 RICHARDS WATSON & GERSH
002412 RICHARDS WATSON & GERSH
68669 04/24/01 004142
68669 04/24/01 004142
68669 04/24/01 004142
68669 04/24/01 004142
68669 04/24/01 004142
VISIONS WEST
VISIONS WEST
VISIONS WEST
VISIONS WEST
VISIONS WEST
COMMUNITY GRANT AGREEMENT 190-180-999-5286
INSTALL RIBBON GUTTER:PARKS
REPAIR SHOULDER @ NADA LANE
190-180-999-5212
001-164-601-5402
MAR LDSCP SVCS:HEIGHORHOOD PRK
MAR LDSCP SVCS:SPORTS PARK
MAR LDSCP SVCS:MEDIANS
MAR LDSCP SVCS:SOUTH SLOPES
MAR LDSCP SVCS:NORTH SLOPES
MAR LDSCP SVCS:CRC
MAR LDSCP SVCS:SR DTR
MAR LDSCP SVCS:MNTC FAC
MAR LDSCP SVCS: TCC
MAR LDSCP SVCS:STN B4
MAR LDSCP SVCS:OLD TWN PRKLOT
MAR DSCP SVCS:STREETSCAPE
MAR LDSCP SVCS:MUSEUN
190-180-999-5415
190-180-999-5415
193-180-999-5415
193-180-999-5415
193-180-999-5415
190-182-999-5415
190-181-999-5415
340-199-701-5415
190-184-999-5415
001-171-999-5212
001-164-603-5415
001-164-603-5415
190-185-999-5415
MAR LDSCP SVCS:NEIGHBORHO00 PK 190-180-999-5415
MAR LDSCP SVCS:MUSEUM 190-180-999-5415
MAR LDSCP SVCS:NAOA LANE FLD D 190-180-999-5415
STATE OF THE CITY:2000 VIDEO 001-110-999-5248
STATE OF THE CITY:2000 VIDEO 001-110-999-5250
FEB SVCS:TEM MULTI-USE TRAILS 210-190-176-5802
MAR SVCS-LIBRARY SYSTEM AGRMT 001-101-999-5285
PAINT & SUPPLIES:STENCIL TRUCK 001-164-601-5218
ASSESSMENT SRVS:APR-JUN 2001 190-180-999-5370
REIMBURSABLES FOR ASSESSMENT 190-180-999-5370
RE-STRIPE CITY HALL PRK LOT 340-199-701-5212
RE-STRIPE W.PRK LOT CITY HALL 340-199-701-5212
DESIGN:CHAPARRAL POOL-JAN/FEB 210-190-170-5802
MAR 2001 LEGAL SERVICES
MAR 2001 LEGAL SERVICES
MAR 2001 LEGAL SERVICES
MAR 2001 LEGAL SERVICES
MAR 2001 LEGAL SERVICES
MAR 2001 LEGAL SERVICES
001-130-999-5246
190-180-999-5246
300-199-999-5246
280-199-999-5246
261-199-999-5246
210-165-631-5801
ASBESTOS REMOVAL:PUJOL BT
ASBESTOS REMOVAL:6TH ST
ASBESTOS REMOVAL:6TH ST
ASBESTOS REMOVAL: PUJOL ST
ASBESTOS REMOVAL: PUJOL ST
165-199-823-5700
165-199-823-5700
165-199-823-5700
165-199-823-5700
165-199-823-5700
ITEM
AMOUNT
10,002.00
5,820.00
14,615.00
11,635.00
25,325.00
1,9~5.00
13,3~5.00
8,878.00
1,444.00
361.00
541.00
193.00
400.00
250.00
987.00
285.00
1,000.00
155.00
165.00
2,750.00
2,750.00
7,505.00
11,170.04
6,534.93
5,000.00
108.22
3,717.00
1,536.00
5,242.29
37,591.88
126.00
3,885.33
503.25
37.00
35.00
7,800.00
4,600.00
7,600.00
7,700.00
6,900.00
CHECK
AMOUNT
10,002.00
20,435.00
66,969.00
5,500.00
7,505.00
11,170.04
6,534.93
5,108.22
5,253.00
5,242.29
42,178.46
34,600.00
TOTAL CHECKS 220,497.94
ITEM 4
APPROVAL['"~/,
CITY ATTORNEY
DIRECTOR OF FINANCe'
CITY MANAGER
TO:
FROM:
DATE:
SUBJECT:
CITY OF TEMECULA
AGENDA REPORT
City Manager/City Council
Herman Parker, Director of Community Services
April 24, 2001
Request for Legislative Nominations for Grant Funding for the
Children's Museum and the CommunityTheater
PREPARED BY:
Phyllis L. Ruse, Deputy Director of Community Services
RECOMMENDATION:
That the City Council adopt a Resolution entitled:
RESOLUTION NO. 2001-
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF TEMECULA
REQUESTING THE NOMINATION OF THE TEMECULA CHILDREN'S MUSEUM
PROJECT BY OUR STATE LEGISLATOR FOR AN URBAN RECREATION AND
CULTURAL CENTERS GRANT THROUGH THE SAFE NEIGHBORHOOD PARKS,
CLEAN WATER, CLEAN AIR AND COASTAL PROTECTION BOND ACT OF 2000
and a Resolution entitled:
RESOLUTION NO. 2001-
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF TEMECULA
REQUESTING THE NOMINATION OF THE TEMECULA COMMUNITY THEATER
PROJECT BY OUR STATE LEGISLATOR FOR AN URBAN RECREATION AND
CULTURAL CENTERS GRANT THROUGH THE SAFE NEIGHBORHOOD PARKS,
CLEAN WATER, CLEAN AIR AND COASTAL PROTECTION BOND ACT OF 2000
DISCUSSION: The Safe Neighborhood Parks, Clean Water, Clean Air and Coastal
Protection Bond Act of 2000 (2000 Park Bond Act) was passed by the state constituents in March
2000. The Act provides for several competitive and non-competitive grant funding sources under
several different categories.
One competitive category of funding is for the Urban Recreational and Cultural Centers (Urban
Centers). Unlike the other funding opportunities under the 2000 Park Bond Act, this particular grant
requires the nomination of the project by a state legislator: All legislative nominations must be
R:\RUSEP~AGENDAS\urban centers grant.doc
submitted to the Office of Grants and Local Services (OGALS) by July 1, 2001. Nominated
applicants must submit a complete application to the OGALS by November 1, 2001. OGALS will
evaluate projects and prior to April 1, 2002, will submit to the Legislature a prioritized listing and
comparative evaluation of all projects nominated. Funds will then be dispersed after they are
appropriated in the state budget and the appropriate contracts ha~e been executed.
At total of $7,675,000 is available for the Urban Centers grants. These funds may be used for the
development or rehabilitation of real property only. They may not be used for land acquisition.
The competitive criteria for this funding includes:
The project will interpret one or more important Calibrnia historical, cultural, economic, or
resource themes or an important historical, cultural, economic, technological, or resource
them in a major region or California. Higher priority shall be assigned to projects whose
themes are not interpreted in any existing museum or have demonstrable deficiencies in
their presentation in an e~isting museum.
· The project is proposed to be operated on lands that are already in public ownership or on
lands that will be acquired and used for the project in conjunction with adjoining public lands.
Projects that are closely related geographical to the resources, activity, structure, place, or
collection of objects to be interpreted, and are close to population centers and access
routes.
· Projects that are in, or close to, population centers or are adjacent to, or readily served by a
state highway or other mode of public transportation.
· Projects for which there are commitments, or the sedous likelihood of commitments, of funds
or the donation of land or other propertysuitable for the project.
The two projects staff is recommending for consideration are the Children's Museum and the
Community Theater. The City has successfully acquired sites for both of these projects and has
begun the design phase for their construction. The City has committed substantial funding for both
projects and the projects are supported by the community. Kid's Voice, currently in the process of
obtaining their non-profit status, has committed to raising funds for the Children's Museum. The
Theater Foundation has committed to raising at least $1,000,000 for the community theater and has
already raised $500,000 toward that endeavor.
FISCAL IMPACT: Upon approval of this item, staff will prepare letters to our state
legislators requesting that they nominate the Children's Museum in the amount of $300,000 and the
Community Theater in the amount of $300,000 for consideration of Urban Centers grant funding.
R:\RUSEP~AGENDAS\urban centers grant,doc
RESOLUTION NO. 2001-
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
TEMECULA REQUESTING THE NOMINATION OF THE
TEMECULA CHILDREN'S MUSEUM PROJECT BY OUR STATE
LEGISLATOR FOR AN URBAN RECREATION AND CULTURAL
CENTERS GRANT THROUGH THE SAFE NEIGHBORHOOD
PARKS, CLEAN WATER, CLEAN AIR AND COASTAL
PROTECTION BOND ACT OF 2000
THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF TEMECULA DOES RESOLVE AS FOLLOWS:
Section 1.
declare that:
The City Council of the City of Temecuia does find, determine and
a. The Safe Neighborhood Parks, Clean Water, Clean Air and Coastal
Protection Bond Act of 2000 (2000 Park Bond Act) provides funding for Urban Recreational and
Cultural grants. Successful projects must be submitted to the California State Office of Grants
Services through the nomination of the City's state legislator by July 1, 2001.
b. The City of Temecula has completed a feasibility study, which has
concluded that the residents of the City would greatly benefit from a cultural center known as a
Children's Museum that would focus on youth education and recreation in a hands-on environment
that encourages imagination, e~loration and discovery.
c. The facility will be designed to meet the science and technology
interests of the children in the community. It will be inviting for children and encourage family
interaction in a f~n and safe environment.
d. There is not a similar type of facility or cultural center, either publicly or
privately owned and operated, within the City.
e. The City of Temecula has previous acquired and now owns, free and
clear, a 7,500 square foot building in the City's Old Town area that will be renovated to house the
Children's Museum.
f. The building for the proposed Children's Museum is within less than
one mile from the Rancho California Road on and off ramps of Interstate 15, and as such, is readily
served by a state highway.
g. The City of Temecula has a current population of 57,000 persons. On
July 1,2001, the City will complete the annexation of a populated area that will increase the City's
population by an additional 5,000 persons. The City of Temecula is the fastest growing City in
Riverside County, and at build out it is estimated that the City's population will be between 95,000
and 100,000 persons.
h. The City of Temecula has approved this project in its five year Capital
Improvement Program and allocated $1,500,000 of City funds to the propertyacquisition, design,
construction and exhibit fabrication and installation for this project.
i. Kid's Voice, a volunteer organization within the City, is in the process
of obtaining their non-profit status. Kid's Voice will play an instrumental role in the design and
operations of the facility.
j. Kid's Voice has committed to organize and lead a fund raising drive for
the Children's Museum, which will include private donations and corporate sponsorships.
The City of Temecula is in the 36th Senatorial District and in the 66th
Assembly District.
Section 2. That the City of Temecula authorizes staff to request a legislative
nomination for grant funding for the Children's Museum under the Urban Recreational and Cultural
grant program as part of the 2000 Park Bond Act.
Section 3.
The City Clerk shall certify to the passage and adoption of the
Resolution.
Temecula this
PASSED, APPROVED, AND ADOPTED, by the City Council of the City of
day of ,2001.
ATTEST:
Jeff Comerchero, Mayor
Susan W. Jones, CMC
City Clerk
[SEAL]
STATE OF CALIFORNIA )
COUNTY OF RIVERSIDE ) ss
CiTY OF TEMECULA )
I, Susan W. Jones, City Clerk of the City of Temecula, California, do hereby certify that Resolution
No. was duly and regularly adopted by the City Council of the City of Temecula at a regular
meeting thereof held on the __ day of ,2001 by the following vote:
AYES:
COUNCILMEMBERS:
NOES:
COUNCILMEMBERS:
ABSENT:
COUNCILMEMBERS:
RESOLUTION NO. 2001-
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
TEMECULA REQUESTING THE NOMINATION OF THE
TEMECULA COMMUNITY THEATER PROJECT BY OUR STATE
LEGISLATOR FOR AN URBAN RECREATION AND CULTURAL
CENTERS GRANT THROUGH THE SAFE NEIGHBORHOOD
PARKS, CLEAN WATER, CLEAN AIR AND COASTAL
PROTECTION BOND ACT OF 2000
THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF TEMECULA DOES RESOLVE AS FOLLOWS:
· Section 1.
declare that:
The City Council of the City of Temecula does find, determine and
a. The Safe Neighborhood Parks, Clean Water, Clean Air and Coastal
Protection Bond Act of 2000 (2000 Park Bond Act) provides funding for Urban Recreational and
Cultural grants. Successful projects m.ust be submitted to the California State Office of Grants
Services through the nomination of the City's state legislator by July 1, 2001.
b. The City of Temecula has completed a Cultural Arts Master Plan,
which has concluded that the residents of the City would greatly benefit from a community theater.
c. There are approximately 24 amateur performance groups in the City.
None of these groups have a permanent theater or venue for rehearsals and performances.
d. The City has designed an 18,000 square foot theater with a 316
seating capacity that will be available to all performing groups in the community.
e. There is not a similar type of facility or cultural center, either publicly or
privately owned and operated, within the City.
f. The City of Temecula has previous acquired and now owns, free and
clear, an historical building known as the Mercantile Building in the City's Old Town area that will be
renovated to house the communitytheater.
g. The building for the proposed community theater is within less than
one mile from the Rancho California Road on and off ramps of Interstate 15, and as such, is readily
served by state highway.
h. The City of Temecula has a currant population of 57,000 persons. On
July 1, 2001, the City will complete the annexation of a populated area that will increase the City's
population by an additional 5,000 person. The City of Temecula is the fastest growing City in
Riverside County, and at build out it is estimated that the City's population will be between 95,000
and 100,000 persons.
R:\RUSEP\RESOS\urban centers * playhouse.d~
i. The City of Temecula has approved this project in its five year Capital
Improvement Program and allocated $1,114,270 of City funds to the property acquisition, design
and construction of this project. An additional $385,730 has been identiied as unspecified funds
needed to complete this project.
j. The Theater Foundation, a non-profit organization, has committed to
raising an additional $1,000,000 for the completion of the communitytheater. To date, the Theater
Foundation has raised $500,000 for the project
The City of Temecula is in the 36th Senatorial District and in the 66t~
Assembly District.
Section 2. That the City of Temecula authorizes staff to request a legislative
nomination for grant funding for the community theater under the Urban Recreational and Cultural
grant program as pad ofthe 2000 Park Bond Act.
Section 3.
The City Clerk shall certify to the passage and adoption of the
Resolution.
Temecula this
PASSED, APPROVED, AND ADOPTED, by the City Council of the City of
__dayof ,2001.
ATTEST:
Jeff Comerchero, Mayor
City Clerk
[SEAL]
Susan W. Jones, CMC
STATE OF CALIFORNIA )
COUNTY OF RIVERSIDE ) ss
CITY OF TEMECULA )
I, Susan W. Jones, City Clerk of the City of Temecula, California, do hereby certify that Resolution
No. was duly and regularly adopted by the City Council of the City of Temecula at a regular
meeting thereof held on the day of ,2001 by the following vote:
AYES:
COUNCILMEMBERS:
NOES:
COUNCILMEMBERS:
ABSENT:
COUNCILMEMBERS:
R:\RUSEP\RESOS\urban centers - playhouse.doc
ITEM 5
TO:
FROM:
DATE:
SUBJECT:
APPROVAL ~
CITY ATTORNEY
DIRECTOR OF FINANC'~
CITYMANAGER ~,/~
CITY OF TEMECULA
AGENDA REPORT
City Council/City Manager
Anthony J. Elmo, Chief Building Offici~al///~
April 24, 2001
Approval of Funds for Plan Review Services with Van Dorpe Chou and
Associates
RECOMMENDATION: That the City Council approve:
An expenditure in an amount not to exceed thirty five thousand ($35,000) dollars for Plan Check
Services with Van Dorpe Chou and Associates.
DISCUSSION: The Building and Safety Department has experienced a large volume of plan
review activity over the past several months. To be responsive to this increased plan review
workload, the services of VanDorpe Chou and Associates has been utilized, with whom Building
and Safety currently maintains a Professional Service Agreement.
In July, 2000, the City Council approved an expenditure of $75,000 for Plan Check Services with
Van Dorpe Chou and Associates. Over the past several months plan review activity has increased.
As a result, the need to utilize the plan check services of Van Dorpe Chou and Associates will
exceed staffs previous estimates. This additional expenditure approval will provide adequate
funding for the balance of the fiscal year.
FISCAL IMPACT: Adequate funds are available in Account Number 001-162-999-52478,
"Consulting Services". The cost is supported by plan review fee revenue collected.
R: IBROCKMEI\AGENDA\VANDORPE 35K. DOC ] 4/12/01
ITEM 6
TO:
FROM:
DATE:
SUBJECT:
CITY OF TEMECULA
AGENDA REPORT
City Manager/City Council
~AL
CITY ATTORNEY
DIRECTOROF FINAN(7~ ~ II
CITY MANAGER ~
/~.~William G. Hughes, Director of Public Works/City Engineer
April 24, 2001
Approval of the Plans and Specifications and Authorization to Solicit
Construction Bids for the Pavement Management System - Citywide,
FY2000-2001, Project No. PW00-30
PREPARED BY:
Amer Attar, Senior Engineer
Steven W. Beswick, Associate Engineer
RECOMMENDATION: That the City Council approve the Construction Plans and
Specifications and authorize the Department of Public Works to solicit construction bids for the
Pavement Management System - Citywide, FY2000-2001, Project No. PW00-30.
BACKGROUND: The City Council approved the Annual Pavement Management
System Program. The Program includes the rehabilitation of pavement by reconstructing roads
within the City with the associated pavement striping and legends. This pavement management
system for FY2000-2001 is included in the Capital Improvement Program budget.
The roads included in this project are as follows: Rancho California Road, Ynez Road, Winchester
Road, Overland Drive, Nicholas Road, Enterprise Circle West and South, Mira Loma Drive, Main
Street, County Center Drive, and La Paz Street.
The specifications and contract documents have been completed and the project is ready to be
advertised for construction bids. The contact document is available for review in the City EngineeCs
office. The Engineer's Construction Estimate for this project is $2,000,000.00.
FISCAL IMPACT: The Pavement Management System Program is a Capital Improvement
Project funded through Measure A Funds and Capital Project Reserves.
1
r:\agdrpt~2001~0424\pw00-30.bid
ITEM 7
TO:
FROM:
DATE:
SUBJECT:
APPROVAL
CITY ATTORNEY
DIRECTOR OF FINANC_~
CITY MANAGER
CITY OF TEMECULA
AGENDA REPORT
City Manager/City Council
/~illiam G. Hughes, Director of Public Works/City Engineer
April 24, 2001
Approval of the Plans and Specifications and Authorization to Solicit
Construction Bids for Citywide Asphalt Concrete Repairs for
FY2000-2001, Project No. PW01-01
PREPARED BY:
Brad A. Buron, Maintenance Superintendent
Amer Attar, Senior Engineer
Steven W. Beswick, Associate Engineer
RECOMMENDATION: That the City Council approve the Construction Plans and
Specifications and authorize the Department of Public Works to solicit construction bids for the
Citywide Asphalt Concrete Repairs for FY2000-2001, Project No. PW01-01.
BACKGROUND: This Asphalt Repair Project for FY2000-2001 is part of the Annual
Street Maintenance Program. The Program involves fixing podions of streets that require minor
repairs and the associated pavement striping and legends.
The roads included in this project are as follows: Rancho California Road, Winchester Road,
Margarita Road, Jefferson Avenue, and Diaz Road.
The specifications and contract documents have been completed and the project is ready to be
advertised for construction bids. The contract document is available for review in the City Engineer's
office. The Engineer's Construction Estimate for this project is $100,000.00.
FISCAL IMPACT: Funds are available in the Public Works Department, Maintenance Division,
Routine Street Maintenance Account No. 001-164-601-5402 for Project No. PW01-01.
ATTACHMENTS: None
1
r:~agdrp¢,2001 \0424\pw01-01 .bid
ITEM 8
TO:
FROM:
DATE:
SUBJECT:
CITY OFTEMECULA
AGENDA REPORT
City Manager/City Council
APPROVAL
CITY ATTORNEY
DIRECTOR OF FINANC~ I
/~,~ William G. Hughes, Director of Public Works/City Engineer
April 24, 2001
Reimbursement Agreement between R.C.W.D. and the City of Temecula for
Margarita Road Widening from Plo Pico Road to Dartolo
Project No. PW99-01
PREPARED BY: ,,~.Amer Attar, Senior Engineer- Capital Projects
~ ~ff Scott Harvey, Associate Engineer- Capital Projects
RECOMMENDATION: That the City Council approve the Reimbursement Agreement
between Rancho California Water District and the City of Temecula for the Margarita Road
Widening from Pio Pico Road to Dartolo, Project No. PW99-O1.
BACKGROUND: On March 6, 2001 the City Council awarded the Margarita Road Widening
from Plo Pico Road to Dadolo, Project PW99-15 to R.J. Noble Company. The reimbursement
agreement states that R.C.W.D. will reimburse the City for the following water relocation and
installation bid items:
Bid Item 24
Bid Item 129
Bid Item 130
Adjust Existing Valve Cover to Grade
Water Facility Reconfiguration
Relocate Existing Water Meters
$ 3,600.00
$60,000.00
$18,200.00
Total: $81,800.00
FISCAL IMPACT: All costs associated with the Reimbursement Agreement will be paid for by
R.C.W.D. at no fiscal impact to the City.
ATTACHMENTS: Reimbursement Agreement with R.C.W.D.
1
R:~AGDRP'r~2001\0424\PW99-01 RCWD AGREEMENT.DOC
REIMBURSEMENT AGREEMENT
BETWEEN
CITY OF TEMECULA
MARGARITA ROAD WIDENING FROM PIO PICO ROAD TO DARTOLO
PROJECT NO. PW99-01
AND
RANCHO CALIFORNIA WATER DISTRICT
THIS AGREEMENT is made and entered into as of April 24, 2001, between the CITY OF
TEMECULA, a municipal corporation, hereinafter referred to as "CITY" and Rancho California Water
District, a public agency organized and existing pursuant to Division 20 of the California Water Code,
hereinafter referred to as "RCWD". In consideration of the mutual promises and covenants contained
herein, the parties hereto mutually agree as follows:
Section I. PURPOSE OF THE AGREEMENT. The purpose of this Agreement is to
establish reimbursement to CITY by RCWD for the cost of the relocation and installation of certain water
improvements made necessary by the construction of Margarita Road Widening from Pio Pico Road to
Dartolo, Project No. PW99-01, hereinafter referred to as "PROJECT".
Section II. RCWD shall reimburse CITY for one hundred percent (100%) of the costs
(hereinafter referred to as "REIMBURSEMENT"), for the relocation and installation of certain water
improvements within the PROJECT area that are affected by the PROJECT. The costs for the
REIMBURSEMENT to CITY by RCWD shall include the following items as shown within the attached Bid
Result Spreadsheet:
A. Water Item
Extended Bid Amounts
Bid Item 24
Bid Item 129
Bid Item 130
Adjust Existing Valve Cover to Grade
Water Facility Reconfiguration
Relocate Existing Water Meters
$ 3,600.00
$60,000.00
$18,200.00
$81,800.00Total
Section III. Costs are based on construction bids received for the PROJECT shown within the attached
Bid Result Spreadsheet as bid items //24 (adjust existing valve cover to grade), //129 (water facility
reconfiguration),//130 (relocate existing water meter). CITY has evaluated and analyzed all bids received
and selected the lowest responsible bidder for the PROJECT as R.J. Noble Company (herinafter referred to
as "CONTRACTOR"). RCWD has reviewed the bids and approved CITY's selection of CITY's
CONTRACTOR prior to the commencement of the work on the PROJECT.
RCWD shall maintain as a contingency an amount equal to ten percent (10%) of the total estimated costs of
constructing the water facilities to account for unforeseen changes to the work. The CITY shall obtain
approval from RCWD prior to the approval of any change orders associated with the relocation and
installation of these facilities, and authorizing the contractor to proceed unless failure to act immediately
may affect public safety. The cost of any delay in the work due to the delayed action of RCWD in
approving change orders associated with the water facility construction shall be borne by RCWD. RCWD
shall respond to water facility change orders within three business days.
CITY shall make payment to CONTRACTOR for work performed. Actual costs shall be identified and
billed to RCWD for payment on the following basis:
A. The CITY shall invoice RCWD on a monthly basis for all RCWD facilit!es completed by
r :~cip\project s\pw9 9\pw9 9 -01 ~RCWD reimburseagrmt
1
the CONTRACTOR. RCWD shall remit payment to the City within twenty-five days of receipt of
invoice.
Section IV. It is acknowledged that RCWD has reviewed and approved all CITY plans and
specifications for the relocation and installation of the water facility improvements and has approved the bid
amount as reasonable. Management and administration of the terms expressed herein shall be performed
by CITY for the PROJECT. CITY agrees to designate Mr. Scott Harvey, Associate Engineer, Capital
Projects, as the contact for CITY in regards to this agreement. RCWD agrees to designate Mr. Steve
Brannon, Development Engineering Manager, as a point of contact for RCWD to facilitate the
reimbursements identified herein.
Section V. INSPECTION RCWD shall provide and pay for inspection of all new and relocated
facilities specifically, Bid Items #24, adjust existing valve to grade, #129, water facility reconfiguration,
#130, relocate existing water meter.
Section VI. NOTICES All notices under this Agreement shall be sent as follows:
RCWD:
Rancho California Water District
42135 Winchester Road
Temecula, CA 92590
Attn: Steve Brannon, Development Engineering Manager
CITY:
City of Temecula
P.O. Box 9033
Temecula, CA 92589-9033
Attn: Scott Harvey, Associate Engineer, Capital Projects
Either party may change its address for notices by notifying the other party. All notices given at the most
recent address specified shall be deemed to have been properly given.
r:\cip\projects[pw99\pw99-01 ~RCWD reimburseagrmt
2
This Agreement is dated as of the date set forth above.
District:
RANCHO CALIFORNIA WATER DISTRICT
By:
City:
CITY OF TEMECULA
By:
By:
Jeff Comerchero, Mayor
Peter M. Thorson, City Attorney
ATTEST:
Susan W. Jones, CMC, City Clerk
r :\cip\project s~pw99\pw99-01 \RCWD reimburseagrmt
3
Margariat Road Widening Phase I, Project PW99-01
Bid Open~ng: 2/28/2001
1
· ~. R,J. Noble Company
Item Description Estimate Unit Unit Extended
No, Quantity Price Amount
I ~ obilizatio n/De mo blization 1 L.S. $25~000.00 $25,000,00
::~29:1 WetetFacilityRec~nfigu~,atior~ : !! ii:11 E~S~i
ITEM 9
APPROVAL
CITY ATTORNEY
DIRECTOR OF FINANO~
CITY MANAGER
CITY OF TEMECUL.~
AGENDA REPORT
TO:
FROM:
City Manager/City Council
· '~,~William G. Hughes, Director of Public Works/City Engineer
DATE: April 24, 2001
SUBJECT:
Award of Construction Contract for the Pavement Management System -
Project No. PW99-17, Jefferson Avenue Pavement Rehabilitation
PREPARED BY:~..................~kmer Attar, Senior Engineer
----'r~Scott Harvey, Associate Engineer
RECOMMENDATION: That the City Council:
Award a contract for the Pavement Management System - Project No. PW99-17,
Jefferson Avenue Pavement Rehabilitation to R.J. Noble Companyfor $603,425.00, and
authorize the City Manager to execute the contract.
Authorize the City Manager to approve change orders not to exceed the contingency amount
of $60,342.50, which is equal to 10% of the contract amount.
BACKGROUND: On October 10, 2000, the City Council approved the plans and
specifications, and authorized the Department of Public Works to solicit public construction bids.
This project will rehabilitate the pavement on Jefferson Avenue from the northerly city limits to 300
feet north of Overland Drive. The work to be performed will include cold planning existing
pavement, removing & replacing pavement and base material, resurfacing with a layer of asphalt
concrete, crack sealing, treating of all oil stains and replacing of all traffic loops, striping and street
legends. The project specifications requires that the contractor perform his work in stages to
minimize traffic impact. Also, the contractor will allow at least one access to all properties, except for
some shod durations.
Five (5) bids were received and publicly opened on April 11, 2001 and results were as follows:
2.
3.
4.
5.
R.J. Noble Company .................................................................................... $603,425.00
All American Asphalt .................................................................................... $618,296.25
McLaughlin Engineering & Mining, Inc .......................................................... $644,725.75
Frank & Son Paving ....................................................................................... $693,948.75
Vance Corporation ......................................................................................... $727,222.00
The Engineer's estimate for this project is $750,000.
Staff has reviewed the bid proposals and found R.J. Noble Company of Orange, California to be the
lowest responsible bidder for this project. R.J. Noble Company is the construction contractor for the
Margarita Road Widening from Plo Pico Road to Dartolo Road. Staff has contacted references and
determined that R.J. Noble Company has satisfactorily performed similar type of work in the past.
1
r:\agdrpt\O 1\0424\pw99-17 awd/
The specifications allow forty five (45) working days for completion of this project,
A copy of the bid summary is available for review in the City Engineer's office.
FISCAL IMPACT: The Jefferson Avenue Pavement Management Improvement Project is
budgeted in the FY2000-2001 Capital Improvement Program budget and is funded by Capital
Project Reserves and State Transportation Improvement Program (STIP) funds. Adequate funds
are available in Account 210-165-656-5804. The total construction cost is $663,767.50, which
includes the contract amount of $603,425.00 plus 10% contingency of $60,342.50.
ATrACHMENT:
1. Project Location
2. Project Description
3. Contract
2
r:~egdrpt\01\0424\pw99-17awd/
oo
CITY OF TEMECULA, PUBLIC WORKS DEPARTMENT
CONTRACT
FOR
PROJECT NO. PW99-17
PA VEMENT MANAGEMENT SYSTEM -
JEFFERSON A VENUE PA VEMENT REHA BILITA TION
THIS CONTRACT, made and entered into the 24th day of April, 2001, by and between the City
of Temecula, a municipal corporation, hereinafter referred to as "CITY", and R.J. Noble
Company, hereinafter referred to as "CONTRACTOR."
WITNESSETH:
That CITY and CONTRACTOR, for the consideration hereinafter named, mutually agree
as follows:
,8.
CONTRACT DOCUMENTS. The complete Contract includes all of the Contract
Documents, to wit: Notice Inviting Bids, Instructions to Bidders, Proposal, Performance
Bond, Labor and Materials Bond, Plans and Specifications entitled PROJECT NO.
PW99-17, PAVEMENT MANAGEMENT SYSTEM JEFFERSON AVENUE
PAVEMENT REHABILITATION, Insurance Forms, this Contract, and all modifications
and amendments thereto, the State of California Department of Transportation Standard
Specifications (1992 Ed.) where specifically referenced in the Plans and Technical
Specifications, and the latest version of the Standard Specifications for Public Works
Constructioq, including all supplements as written and promulgated by the Joint
Cooperative Committee of the Southern California Chapter of the American Associated
General Contractors of California (hereinafter, "Standard Specifications") as amended by
the General Specifications, Special Provisions, and Technical Specifications for
PROJECT NO. PW99-17, PAVEMENT MANAGEMENT SYSTEM - JEFFERSON
AVENUE PAVEMENT REHABILITATION. Copies of these Standard Specifications are
available from the publisher:
Building New, Incorporated
3055 Overland Avenue
Los Angeles, California 90034
(213) 202-7775
The Standard Specifications will control the general provisions, construction materials,
and construction methods for this Contract except as amended by the General
Specifications, Special Provision, and Technical Specifications for PROJECT NO.
PW99-17, PAVEMENT MANAGEMENT SYSTEM JEFFERSON AVENUE
PAVEMENT REHABILITATION.
In case of conflict between the Standard Specifications and the other Contract
Documents, the other Contract Documents shall take precedence over, and be used in
lieu of, such conflicting portions.
Where the Contract Documents describe podions of the work in general terms, but not in
complete detail, it is understood that the item is to be furnished and installed completed
CONTRACT CA-1 r:\ciplprojecLs\pw99-17tContract
and in place and that only the best general practice is to be used. Unless otherwise
specified, the CONTRACTOR shall furnish all labor, materials, tools, equipment, and
incidentals, and do all the work involved in executing the Contract.
The Contract Documents are complementary, and what is called for by anyone shall be
as binding as if called for by all. Any conflict between this Contract and any other
Contract Document shall be resolved in favor of this Contract.
SCOPE OF WORK. CONTRACTOR shall perform everything required to be performed,
shall provide and furnish all the labor, materials, necessary tools, expendable
equipment, and all utility and transportation services required for the following:
PROJECT NO, PW99-17
PAVEMENT MANAGEMENT SYSTEM
JEFFERSON AVENUE PAVEMENT REHABILITATION
All of said work to be performed and materials to be furnished shall be in strict
accordance with the Drawings and Specifications and the provisions of the Contract
Documents hereinabove enumerated and adopted by CITY.
CITY APPROVAL. All labor, materials, tools, equipment, and services shall be furnished
and work performed and completed under the direction and supervision, and subject to
the approval of CITY or its authorized representatives.
CONTRACT AMOUNT AND SCHDULE. The CITY agrees to pay, and CONTRACTOR
agrees to accept, in full payment for, the work agreed to be done, the sum of: SIX
HUNDRED THREE THOUSAND FOUR HUNDRED TVVENTY FIVE DOLLARS and NO
CENTS ($603,425.00), the total amount of the base bid.
CONTRACTOR agrees to complete the work in a period not to exceed forty-five (45)
working days, commencing with delivery of a Notice to Proceed by CITY. Construction
shall not commence until bonds and insurance are approved by CITY.
CHANGE ORDERS. All change orders shall be approved by the City Council, except
that the City Manager is hereby authorized by the City Council to make, by written order,
changes or additions to the work in an amount not to exceed the contingency as
established by the City Council.
PAYMENTS
LUMP SUM BID SCEHDULE:
Before submittal of the first payment request, the CONTRACTOR shall submit to
the City Engineer a schedule of values allocated to the various podions of the
work, prepared in such form and suppoded by such data to substantiate its
accuracy as the City Engineer may require. This schedule, as approved by the
City Engineer, shall be used as the basis for reviewing the CONTRACTOR's
payment requests.
CONTRACT CA-2 r.\cip\projects\pw99-17~Contract
UNIT PRICE BID SCHEDULE:
Pursuant to Section 20104.50 of the Public Contract Code, within thirty (30) days
after submission of a payment request to the CITY, the CONTRACTOR shall be
paid a sum equal to ninety percent (90%) of the value of the work completed
according to the bid schedule. Payment request forms shall be submitted on or
about the thirtieth (30th) day of each successive month as the work progresses.
The final payment, if unencumbered, or any part thereof unencumbered, shall be
made sixty (60) days after acceptance of final payment and the CONTRACTOR
filing a one-year Warranty and an Affidavit of Final Release with the CITY on
forms provided by the CITY.
Payments shall be made on demands drawn in the manner required by law,
accompanied by a certificate signed by the City Manager, stating that the work
for which payment is demanded has been performed in accordance with the
terms of the Contract, and that the amount stated in the certificate is due under
the terms of the Contract. Partial payments on the Contract price shall not be
considered as an acceptance of any pad of the work.
Interest shall be paid on all undisputed payment requests not paid within thirty
(30) days pursuant to Public Contracts Code Section 20104.50. Public Contract
Code Section 7107 is hereby incorporated by reference.
In accordance with Section 9-3.2 of the Standard Specifications for Public Works
Construction and Section 9203 of the Public Contract Code, a reduction in the
retention may be requested by the Contractor for review and approval by the
Engineer if the progress of the construction has been satisfactory, and the project
is more than 50% complete. The Council hereby delegates its authority to
reduce the retention to the Engineer.
WARRANTY RETENTION. Commencing with the date the Notice of Completion is
recorded, the CITY shall retain a portion of the Contract award price, to assure warranty
performance and correction of construction deficiencies according to the following
schedule:
CONTRACT AMOUNT
$25,000 0 $75,000
RETENTION PERIOD RETENTION PERCENTAGE
180 days 3%
$75,00- $500,000
180 days
$2,250 + 2% ofamountin
excess of $75,000
Over $500,000
One Year
$10,750 + 1%of amount
in excess of $500,000
LIQUIDATED DAMAGES - EXTENSION OF TIME. In accordance with Government
Code Section 53069.85, CONTRACTOR agrees to forfeit and pay to CITY the sum of
one thousand dollars ($1,000.00) per day for each calendar day completion is delayed
beyond the time allowed pursuant to Paragraph 4 of this Contract. Such sum shall be
deducted from any payments due to or to become due to CONTRACTOR. Such sum
shall be deducted from any payments due to or to become due to CONTRACTOR.
CONTRACT CA-3 r:\ciplprojects\pw99-17\Contract
10.
11.
12.
13.
CONTRACTOR will be granted an extension of time and will not be assessed liquidated
damages for unforeseeable delays beyond the control of, and without the fault or
negligence of, the CONTRACTOR including delays caused by CITY. CONTRACTOR is
required to promptly notify CITY of any such delay.
WAIVER OF CLAIMS. On or before making each request for payment under Paragraph
6 above, CONTRACTOR shall submit to CITY, in writing, all claims for compensation as
to work related to the payment. Unless the CONTRACTOR has disputed the amount of
the
payment, the acceptance by CONTRACTOR of each payment shall constitute a release
of all claims against the CITY related to the payment. CONTRACTOR shall be required
to execute an affidavit, release, and indemnity agreement with each claim for payment.
PREVAILING WAGES. Pursuant to the provisions of Section 1773 of the Labor Code of
the State of California, the City Council has obtained the general prevailing rate of per
diem wages and the general rate for holiday and overtime work in this locality for each
craft, classification, or type of workman needed to execute this Contract, from the
Director of the Department of Industrial Relations. These rates are on file with the City
Clerk. Copies may be obtained at cost at the City Clerk's office of Temecula.
CONTRACTOR shall post a copy of such wage rates at the job site and shall pay the
adopted prevailing wage rates as a minimum. CONTRACTOR shall comply with the
provisions of Section 1773.8, 1775, 1776, 1777.5, 1777.6, and 1813 of the Labor Code.
Pursuant to the provisions of 1775 of the Labor Code, CONTRACTOR shall forfeit to the
CITY, as a penalty, the sum of $25.00 for each calendar day, or portion thereof, for each
laborer, worker, or mechanic employed, paid less than the stipulated prevailing rates for
any work done under this Contract, by him or by any subcontractor under him, in
violation of the provisions of the Contract.
TIME OF THE ESSENCE. Time is of the essence in this contract.
INDEMNIFICATION. All work covered by this Contract done at the site of construction
or in preparing or delivering materials to the site shall be at the risk of CONTRACTOR
alone. CONTRACTOR agrees to save, indemnify, hold harmless and defend CITY, its
officers, employees, and agents, against any and all liability, injuries, or death of persons
(CONTRACTOR's employees included) and damage to property, arising directly or
indirectly out of the obligations herein undertaken or out of the operations conducted by
CONTRACTOR, save and except claims or litigations arising through the sole active
negligence or sole willful misconduct of the CITY.
The CONTRACTOR shall indemnify and be responsible for reimbursing the CITY for any
and all costs incurred by the CITY as a result of Stop Notices filed against the project.
The CITY shall deduct such costs from Progress Payments or final payments due to the
CITY.
GRATUITIES. CONTRACTOR warrants that neither it nor any of its employees, agents,
or representatives has offered or given any gratuities or promises to CITY's employees,
agents, or representatives with a view toward securing this Contract or securing
favorable treatment with respect thereto.
CONTRACT CA4 r:\cip~projects\pw99-17~Contract
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
CONFLICT OF INTEREST. CONTRACTOR warrants that he has no blood or marriage
relationship, and that he is not in any way associated with any City officer or employee,
or any architect, engineer, or other preparers of the Drawings and Specifications for this
project. CONTRACTOR further warrants that no person in its employ has been
employed by the CITY within one year of the date of the Notice Inviting Bids.
CONTRACTOR'S AFFIDAVIT. After the completion of the work contemplated by this
Contract, CONTRACTOR shall file with the City Manager, its affidavit stating that all
workmen and persons employed, all firms supplying materials, and all subcontractors
upon the Project have been paid in full, and that there are no claims outstanding against
the Project for either labor or materials, except cedain items, if any, to be set fodh in an
affidavit covering disputed claims or items in connection with a Stop Notice which has
been filed under the provisions of the laws of the State of California.
NOTICE TO CITY OF LABOR DISPUTES. Whenever CONTRACTOR has knowledge
that any actual or potential labor dispute is delaying or threatens to delay the timely
performance of the Contract, CONTRACTOR shall immediately give notice thereof,
including all relevant information with respect thereto, to CITY.
BOOKS AND RECORDS. CONTRACTOR's books, records, and plans or such pad
thereof as may be engaged in the performance of this Contract, shall at all reasonable
times be subject to inspection and audit by any authorized representative of the CITY.
INSPECTION. The work shall be subject to inspection and testing by CITY and its
authorized representatives during manufacture and construction and all other times and
places, including without limitation, the plans of CONTRACTOR and any of its suppliers.
CONTRACTOR shall provide all reasonable facilities and assistance for the safety and
convenience of inspectors. All inspections and tests shall be performed in such manner
as to not unduly delay the work. The work shall be subject to final inspection and
acceptance notwithstanding any payments or other prior inspections. Such final
inspection shall be made within a reasonable time after completion of the work.
DISCRIMINATION. CONTRACTOR represents that it has not, and agrees that it will
not, discriminate in its employment practices on the basis of race, creed, religion,
national origin, color, sex age, or handicap.
GOVERNING LAW. The City and Contractor understand and agree that the laws of the
State of California shall govern the rights, obligations, duties and liabilities of the parties
to this Contract and also govern the interpretation of this Contract. Any litigation
concerning this Contract shall take place in the municipal, superior, or federal district
court with geographic jurisdiction over the City of Temecula. In the event of litigation
between the parties concerning this Contract, the prevailing party as determined by the
Court, shall be entitled to actual and reasonable attorney fees and litigation costs
incurred in the litigation.
PROHIBITED INTEREST. No member, officer, or employee of the City of Temecula or
of a local public body shall have any interest, direct or indirect, in the contract of the
proceeds thereof during his/her tenure or for one year thereafter.
CONTRACT CA-5 r:\cip\projects\pw99-17\Contract
22.
23.
Fudhermore, the contractor/consultant covenants and agrees to their knowledge that no
board member, officer or employee of the City of Temecula has any interest, whether
contractual, non-contractual, financial or otherwise, in this transaction, or in the business
of the contracting party other than the City of Temecula, and that if any such interest
comes to the knowledge of either party at any time, a full and complete disclosure of all
such information will be made, in writing, to the other party or parties, even if such
interest would not be considered a conflict of interest under Article 4 (commencing with
Section 1090) or Article 4.6 (commencing with Section 1220) of Division 4 of Title I of the
Government Code of the State of California.
ADA REQUIREMENTS. By signing this contract, Contractor certifies that the Contractor
is in total compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, Public Law 101-
336, as amended.
WRITTEN NOTICE. Any written notice required to be given in any part of the Contract
Documents shall be performed by depositing the same in the U.S. Mail, postage prepaid,
directed to the address of the CONTRACTOR as set forth in the Contract Documents,
and to the CITY addressed as follows:
Mailing Address:
William G. Hughes
Director of Public Works/City Engineer
City of Temecula
P.O. Box 9033
Temecula, CA 92589-9033
Street Address:
William (3. Hughes
Director of Public Works/City Engineer
City of Temecula
43200 Business Park Drive
Temecula, CA 92590
CONTRACT CA-6 r:\cip\projects~pw99-17\Contract
iN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have caused this Contract to be executed on the
date first above written.
DATED:
CONTRACTOR
R.J. Noble Company
15505 E. Lincoln Ave.
Orange, CA 92865
(714) 637-1550
By:
Michael J. Carver, President
DATED:
CITY OFTEMECULA
APPROVED AS TO FORM:
By:
Jeff Comerchero, Mayor
Peter M. Thorson, City Attorney
ATTEST:
Susan W. Jones, CMC, City Clerk
CONTRACT CA-7 r:\cip\projects\pw99-17\Contract
ITEM 10
APPROVAL
CITY ATTORNEY
DIRECTOR OF FINANCE/~
CITY MANAGER
TO:
FROM:
DATE:
SUBJECT:
CITY OF TEMECULA
AGENDA REPORT
City ManagedCity Council
,~J,~lWilliam G. Hughes, Director of Public Works/City Engineer
April 24, 2001
Meandering Sidewalk along North General Kearny Road for "Christ The Vine
Lutheran Church" project (LD00-210GR). Property is located south of North
General Kearny Road approximately 325 feet east of the Margarita Road and
North General Kearny Road centerline intersection.
PREPARED BY: ~L{ Ronald J. Parks, Deputy Director of Public Works
Mayra De La Torre, Assistant Engineer
RECOMMENDATION: That the City Council accept a meandering sidewalk easement along
North General Kearny Road for public use only.
BACKGROUND: Planning Application No. PA99-0124 (Conditional Use Permit/Development
Plan) included a request for a conditional use permit to design, construct, and operate a 15,288
square foot church, five classrooms and a garage on 3.07 acres within Planning Area 2 of the
Campos Verdes Specific Plan.
This development plan includes a meandering sidewalk through private property along North
General Kearny Road. Per this project's Conditions of Approval #15, "All access rights, easements
for sidewalks for public uses shall be submitted to and approved by the Director of the Department
of Public Works for dedication to the Citywhere sidewalks meander through private property."
Said meandering sidewalk easement is for rights to access for public use.
FISCAL IMPACT: None
ATTACHMENTS:
Two Signed and Notarized Easement Deeds for Meandering Sidewalk
Exhibit "A" - Legal Description
Exhibit "B" - Sketch
I
r:~agdrpt~2001\0424\Sdwlk Esmt LD00-210GR
EXEMPT RECORDING REQUESTED BY
City of Temecula
PER GOV'T CODE 6103
AND WHEN RECORDED MAIL TO
City of Temecula - City Clerk
PO Box 9033, 43200 Business Park Drive
Temeeula, CA 92589-9033
M~dL TAX STATEMENTS TO
PO Box 9033, 43200 Business Park Drive
Temecula, CA 92589-9033
EASEMENT DEED - MEANDERING SIDEWALK
FOR A VALUABLE CONSIDERATION, receipt of wh, ich is hereby acknowledged,
· CHRIST THE VINE LUTHERAN CHURCH
A CALIFORNIA NON-PROFIT RELIGIOUS CORPORATION~
GRANTS to the City OF TEMECULA, a political subdivision, an easement for meandering sidewalk, including
the construction and maintenance over, upon, across, and within real property in the City of Temecula, State of
California,
described as:
See Attached Exhibit "A" and "B" For Complete Description
thisIN WITNESS~...THEREOF, dayofthese presents Oaved,~-~//~-executed ,20 ~'9 t/this instrument ~.~ ~/~~5-,.Print Name~' and[ Tit leis/_
STATE OF CALIFORNIA }SS.
COUNTY OF RIVERSIDE
On.~,~).~ [ I 4 ~9/r'~) /, before me the undersigned,
a N~t~t~/P~blic in and for thc St~tte of California, personally appeared
personally knoWn'to me (or~oahe on'il~e'basis Of satisfactory evidence~)x
to be the personJp'J whose name~ is/g,r,~subscribe~l/[~
instrument and acknowledged to me that he/she~/t~xecuted the same
in his/hg, r/tlxok authorized capacity i~, and that by his/her/their signature(~
on the instrument the person(:~r the entity upon behalf of which the person~acted,
executed the instrument.
WITNESS MY HAND AND OFFICIAL SEAL
ACCEPTANCE CERTIFICATE
The City Council, Cityt~ Temecula hereby accepts the grant of real property as set forth above.
CITY OF TEMECULA
ATTEST:
BY:
Susan W. Jones, CMC
City Clerk
By:
Jeff Comerchero, Mayor
APPROVED AS TO FORM:
BY:
Peter M. Thorson, City Attorney
EXEMPT RECORDING REQUESTED BY
City of Temecula
PER GOV'F CODE 6103
AND WHEN RECORDED MAIL TO
City of Temecula - City Clerk
PO Box 9033, 43200 Business park Drive
Temecula, CA 92589-9033
MAIL TAX STATEMENTS TO
PO Box 9033, 43200 Business Park Drive
Temecula, CA 92589-9033
EASEMENT DEED - MEANDERING SIDEWALK
FOR A VALUABLE CONSIDERATION, receipt of which is hereby acknowledged,
CHRIST THE VINE LU'rtlERAN CHURCH (WELS)~
A CALIFORNIA NON-PROFIT RELIGIOUS CORPORATION~
GRANTS to the City OF TEMECULA, a political subdivision, an easement for meandering sidewalk, including
the construction and maintenance over, upon, across, and within real property in the City of Temecula, State of
California,
described as:
See Attached Exhibit "A" and "B" For Complete Description
IN WITNESS THEREOF, these presents have executed this instrument ..... ~.' .
this ~' day of //f,'~,,~//-~ ,20 c'9 t/ r.~/''''' Pnnt Name and Title
STA~ OF C~IFOR~A } SS.
COU~ OF ~~}
On ~' ~ [-- o/ , before me the undersigned,
a Not~ Public in and for the State of California, person~ly appe~ed
~ (or proved to me on the basis of satishctoW evidence)
to be the person ~ whose name~ is/~subscribed to the within
ins~ment and acknowledged to me that he/~ exerted the same
in his~zr/t~z~r authorized capaciW(~), and that by his~er~ir signature~)
on the inst~ment the person(~ or the entiW upon behalf of which the person(~ acted,
executed the inst~ment.
WITNESS MY HAND AND OFFICIAL SEAL
Signature
ACCEPTANCE CERTIFICATE
~a~ rub~= -- ~ _
Comm. Nov 1] 3
The City Council, City of Temecula hereby accepts the grant of real property as set forth above.
CITY OF TEMECULA
ATI'EST:
BY:
Susan W. Jones, CMC
City Clerk
By:
Jeff Comerchero, Mayor
APPROVED AS TO FORM:
BY:
Peter M. Thorson, City Attorney
RBF CONSULTING
27555 Ynez Road, Suite 400
Temecula, CA 92591
EXHIBIT "A"
SIDEWALK EASEMENT
February 20, 2001
JN 401381-M1
Page 1 of 2
That certain parcel of land situated in the City of Temecula, County of Riverside, State of
California, being that portion of Parcel "D" of Lot Adjustment No. PA 98-0054 recorded
April 9, 1998 as Instrument No. 137810 of Official Records in the Office of the County
Recorder of said Riverside County, described as follows:
BEGINNING at the northeasterly corner of said Parcel "D" being a point on a curve in the
most northerly line of said Parcel "D"(said northerly line being also the southerly line of North
General Kearny Road - 88.00 feet wide), said curve being concave northerly and having a
radius of 1244.00 feet, a radial line of said curve from said point bears North 12036'22'' West;
thence along said northerly line and curve westerly 87.78 feet through a central angle of
04°02'34" to the TRUE POINT OF BEGINNING and a point on a non-tangent curve concave
northerly and having a radius of 156.00 feet, a radial tine of said curve from said point bears
North 26°33'21'' West;
thence along said curve westerly 81.21 feet through a central angle of 29°49'39" to a point of
reverse curvature with a curve concave southerly and having a radius of 94.00 feet, a radial
line of said curve from said point bears South 03°16'18'' West;
thence along said curve westerly 24.91 f6et through central angle of 15010'55'' to a point of
reverse curvature with a curve concave northerly and having a radius of 156.00 feet, a radial
line of said curve from said point bears North 11054'37'' West;
thence along said curve westerly 81.21 feet through central angle of 29o49'39'' to the non-
tangent intersection with said first mentioned curve concave northerly and having a radius of
1244.00 feet, a radial line of said curve from said intersection bears North 00°04'31'' West;
Exhibit "A"
Sidewalk Easement
February 20, 2001
JN 401381-M1
Page 2 of 2
thence along said curve and northerly line easterly 184.29 feet through a central angle of
08°29'17'' to the TRUE POINT OF BEGINNING.
CONTAINING: 0.028 Acres, more or less.
SUBJECT TO all Covenants, Rights, Rights-of-Way and Easements of Record.
EXHIBIT "B" attached hereto and by this reference made a part hereof.
This description was prepared by
me or under my direction.
R~. )Mathe, P.L.S. 6185
My license expires 3/31/02.
~Exp.. '3i3'1 ,~02/ J/
H:\pdata\401381\OFFICE\WPWlI~81tg1001.wpd
60 0 60 120 180
GRAPHIC SCALE
I
_~--C/L NORTH GEN._.E_RAL KE/kRN¥
DATA TABLE
1 04°02'54" 1244.00' 87.78'
2 29°49'59" 156.00' 81.21'
3 15°10'55" 94.00' 24.91'
4 08°29'17" 1244.00' 184.29'
SHEET
EXHIBIT
SIDEWALK
EASEMENT
O0 NSLILTIN 8
1 DF 1 SHEET
27555 YNEZ ROAD. SUrFE 400
TEMECULA, CAUFORN1A 92591-4679
909.676.8042 · FAX 909.676.7240., vcew~BF.com
SCALE FIELD BOOK JOB ND,
FEBRUARY 20, 2001 1"=60' 401581-M1
ITEM 11
APPROVAL ~'~1~
CITY ATTORNEY
DIRECTOR OF FINAN~
CITY MANAGER ...Y~
TO:
FROM:
DATE:
SUBJECT:
TEMECULA CITY COUNCIL
AGENDA REPORT
City Manager/City Council
Jim O'Grady, Assistant City Manager
Apdl 24, 2001
Consideration of Sponsorship Request for the Temecula Valley International
Film Festival
Prepared by: Gloda Wolnick, Marketing Coordinator
RECOMMENDATION: That the City Council:
1)
Consider the sponsorship request of $30,000 for the Temecula Valley International Film
& Music Festival.
BACKGROUND: The City of Temecula has previously sponsored the Temecula Valley
Intemational Film Festival in the amount of $30,000. The Film Festival has again requested that
the City provide a sponsorship in this amount. This year the event will include a Music Festival
in addition to the Film Festival, and will be held September 13 - 16, 2001.
At the time that the City Council approved the City's FY2000/01 budget, funds were allocated for
this sponsorship. Most of the sponsorship agreements were brought to the City Council last
July, shortly after adoption of the budget. This sponsorship agreement was not brought at that
time because it was determined that it would be more appropriate to bdng the sponsorship
agreement and supporting documents closer in time to the planned events. Since this event will
be held in September it is now appropriate to bdng this forward for Council consideration.
Staff, as well as the Economic Development Subcommittee recommends approval of this
sponsorship. Following is further information concerning the 2001 Temecula Valley
International Film & Music Festival.
The 2001 Festival marks the 7th annual Film Festival presentation and the inaugural edition of
the music competition component of the Festival. For the first time in the Festival's history and
for four days in September, Temecula will host the marriage of two influential art forms - Film &
Music, The best up and coming creative talents in film and music from all over the world will
compete for recognition and pdzes.
The event will take place at the Movie Experience 10-plex at Tower Plaza in Temecula. The
Festival's subsequent events will be held at locations in the City of Temecula as well as Wine
Country and Pechanga Entertainment Center. The event attracted approximately 4,000 in
attendance in 2000 with the attendance expected to increase to 5,000 this year.
The 2001 Temecula Valley Intemational Film & Music Festival will include the following venues:
R:\Wolnickg~Agendarepo~ts~Film Festival 2001 Staff Report.doc
The Film Program
Since its inception in 1995, the festival has screened over 400 films from 20+ countries. They
are independent full-length features, shorts, documentaries, animation, music videos and
student films. The 2001 line up of films will feature over 50 film programs from around the
world. There will be two sidebars, which include a showcase of Australian Films and Amedcan
Film Institute's Best of AFl Shorts Series.
The Music Competition
The Musicfest participants consist of emerging, up and coming unsigned performing artists and
bands. Music genres include contemporary, traditional, rock, pop, folk and wodd music. The
main goal for this competition is to provide a forum by which new, unsigned musical talents are
showcased before an international audience of recording industry professionals.
Workshops/Dialogue Series
In addition to the usual slate of Casting, Film Finance and Film Distribution Workshops, the
Festival will program the "Coffee with... Breakfast with...An Afternoon with... Dialogue Sedes"
with film and music industry personalities and festival attendees. This additional programming
will be targeted at film students and novice filmmakers.
Special Events
The 4-day event's social calendar is designed to encourage more community involvement and
extended 4-day visits by festival attendees. The events include:
Opening Night Premiere & Reception
Friday Filmmaker's Bash
Saturday Moming Wine Tasting & Old Town Tour
Sunday Morning Hot Air Balloon Ride
Black Tie Awards Gala
Closing Night Premiere/Awards Ceremony & Wrap Party
Ongoing Activities Throughout The Festival
There will be film screenings in six theaters from 11:00 a.m. - 11:00 p.m. Music performances
by bands and individual performers from 4:00 p.m. - 11:00 p.m. Film and Music industry related
exhibits, gallery of fine, unique arts and crafts at the Festival Marketplace from 11:00 a.m. -
7:00 p.m.
Awards
Two Lifetime Achievement awards will be given for both Film and Music. Jury and Audience
awards for Film and Music Competition will also be given. In addition, College Scholarship
awards for two high school seniors will be awarded.
The Film Festival will be organized and presented by Cinema Entertainment Alliance in
cooperation with Temecula Valley Film Council. Jo Moulton and Eve Craig, Founder and Co-
founder of the Temecula Valley Film Council and Film Festival will serve as this year's Festival
Director and Festival Advisor. Mr. Steve Montal, American Film Institute's Director of Education
& Program Development, will help with film acquisition and programming as the Festival's Film
Program Director. Mr. Kevin Haasarud of HBO's US Comedy of Arts in Aspen will serve as
celebrity relations and programming consultant. See Attachment E for management team
listing.
The 2000 Festival publicity consisting of newspaper, magazine, radio and trade publications
coverage combined with their respective circulation numbers, received approximately 7.5 million
impressions. The Festival was also included in several intemational listings of upcoming film
festivals, and covered by the Hollywood Reporter and Vadety publications and websites.
R:\Wolnickg~Agendareports~Filrn FestivaJ 2001 Staff Report.doc
Festival filmmakers provided additional advertising on their own. Indiespace.com provided web
hosting services for the Film Festival plus generated web marketing, links to film industry
vendors and an On-line Film Market. VVebtrends reported over 50,000 hits from September 1 -
30, 2000, and 15,000 hits for October and November.
Publicity for the 2001 event will include a direct mail campaign to film industry professionals, a
public relations campaign to major industry trade publications, intemet, pdme national and local
television news/entertainment programs. The local newspapers will be the Festival's pdmary
advertising vehicles consisting of a media mix of broadcast, pdnt and outdoor advertising.
Information speaking engagements with local service organizations, Community Theater, school
and civic groups will also be scheduled.
The Film Festival provides many economic benefits to the community. The Festival's
effectiveness is measured by the filmmakers and musicians who attend the event. Through the
exposure of a Film & Music Festival, Temecula is considered as a viable filming destination for
the filmmaker's films, commercials, and television projects as well as forum for recording
industry talents. The Film Council and Festival provides local jobs when filming projects come
to the area. In addition, them is an increase in revenue for the City's restaurants, hotels, and
shopping centers while the Film Festival takes place as well as dudng filming projects
' throughout the year. The Film Council has generated many activities over the past year, which
is outlined in Attachment F for your review.
There will be no commissions, consultant fees and/or salades paid to any party from the City of
Temecula's sponsorship.
FISCAL IMPACT: Adequate funds have been included in the FY 2000-01 Operating Budget
(Economic Development line item, account #001-111-999-5266) for the recommended
sponsorship amount.
ATTACHMENTS:
Attachment A - Advertising Agreement
Attachment B - Sponsorship Package
Attachment C- Business/Media Plan and Budget
Attachment D - Recap of 2000 Temecula Valley Film Festival
Attachment E - Festival Management & Operations Team
R:\Wolnickg~Agendareports\Film Festival 2001 Staff Report.doc
ATTACHMENT A - ADVERTISING AGREEMENT
R:\Wolnickg~Agendareports~Film Festival 2001 Staff Report.doc
SPONSORSHIP AGREEMENT BETWEEN
CITY OF TEMECULA AND
TEMECULA VALLEY INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL
This Agreement, made this 24~ day of April, 2001, by and between the CITY OF
TEMECULA, (hereinafter referred to as "City"), and TEMECULA VALLEY
INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL, a California nonprofit corporation (hereinafter referred
to as ("TVIFF").
A. TVIFC will operate the "7th Annual Temecula Valley International Film Festival"
on September 13-16, 2001. The Temecula Valley International Film & Music Festival is a
special event located at the Movie Experience 10-plex at Tower Plaza in Temecula. Locations of
the Festival's subsequent events will be held in the City of Temecula as well as Wine Country
and at the Pechanga Entertainment Center. Attendance at last year's event was approximately
4,000 people. The anticipated attendance for the 2001 Festival is estimated at 5,000.
B. The City of Temecula desires to be a Major Sponsor of the 2001 Temecula Valley
International Film & Music Festival.
AGREEMENT
NOW, THEREFORE, it is agreed by and between the parties as follows:
A. In exchange for the payment of thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00), the City of
Temecula shall'be designated as a "Major Sponsor' of the 2001 Temecula Valley International
Film & Music Festival. In exchange for being a Major Sponsor, the City of Temecula will
receive the benefits as listed in Attachment B.
B. Within 60 days after conclusion of the Film & Music Festival, TVIFC shall
prepare and submit to the City Manager a written report evaluating the Film & Music Festival
event, its attendance, media coverage, description of the materials in which the City was listed
as a Major Sponsor and a financial statement of the revenue and expenses of the Film & Music
Festival.
C. TVIFC agrees that it will defend, indemnify and hold the City and its elected
officials, officer, agents, and employees free and harmless from all claims for damage to persons
or by mason of TVIFC's acts or omissions or those of TVIFC's employees, officers, agents, or
invites in connection with the Temecula Valley International Film & Music Festival to the
maximum extent allowed by law.
D. TVIFC shall secure from a good and responsible company or companies doing
insurance business in the State of California, pay for and maintain in full force and effect for the
duration of this Agreement a policy of comprehensive general liability and liquor liability in
which the City is named insured or is named as an additional insured with TVIFC and shall
furnish a Certificate of Liability by the City. Notwithstanding any inconsistent statement in the
policy or any subsequent endorsement attached hereto, the protection offered by the policy shall;
Include the City as the insured or named as an additional insured covering
all claims arising out of, or in connection with, the Temecula Valley
International Film & Music Festival.
R:\Wolnickg~Agendareports~Film Festival '01 .doc '1
Include the City, its officers, employees and agents while acting within the
scope of their duties under this Agreement against all claims arising out
of, or in connection with Temecula Valley International Film & Music
Festival.
Minimum Scope of Insurance. Coverage shall be at least as broad as:
Insurance Services Office Commercial General Liability coverage
provided on ISO-CGL Form No. CG 00 01 11 85 or 88.
Insurance Services Office Business Auto Coverage form CA 00 01
06 92 covering Automobile Liability, code 1 (any auto). If the
Consultant owns no automobiles, a non-owned endorsement to the
General Liability policy described above is acceptable.
(c)
Worker's Compensation Insurance as required by the State of
California and Employer's Liability Insurance. If the Consultant
has no employees while performing under this Agreement,
Worker's Compensation Insurance is not required, but Consultant
shall execute a declaration that it has no employees.
(D) Professional Liability Insurance shall be written on a policy form
providing professional liability for the Consultants profession.
Minimum Limits of Insurance. Consultant shall maintain limits no less
than:
General Liability: One million dollars ($1,000,000) per occurrence
for bodily injury, personal injury and property damage. If
Commercial General Liability Insurance or other form with a
general aggregate limit is used, either the general aggregate limit
shall apply separately to this project/location or the general
aggregate limit shall be twice the required occurrence limit.
Automobile Liability: One million dollars ($1,000,000) per
accident for bodily injury and property damage.
(c)
Worker's Compensation/Employer's Liability: Worker's
Compensation as required by the State; and Employer's Liability:
One million dollars ($1,000,000) per accident for bodily injury or
disease.
Professional Liability Coverage: One million dollars ($1,000,000)
per claim and in the aggregate.
Liquor Liability: One million dollars ($1,000,000) combined single
limit per occurrence for bodily injury, personal injury and property
damage.
R:\Wolnickg~Agendarepolts~ilm Festivat 'O'/.doc
The insurer shall agree to waive all rights of subrogation against the City,
its officer, officials, employees and volunteers for losses arising from the
Temecula Valley International Film & Music Festival.
Bear an endorsement or shall have attached a rider whereby it is provided
that, in the event of expiration or proposed cancellation of such policy for
any reason whatsoever, the City shall be notified by registered mall,
postage prepaid, remm receipt requested, not less than thirty (30) days
beforehand.
Any deductible or self-insured retention must be declared to and approved
by the City. At the option of the City, either the insurer shall reduce or
eliminate such deductible or self-insured retention as respects the City, its
officers, officials and employees or TVIFC shall procure a bond
guaranteeing payment of losses and related investigations, claim
administration and defense expenses.
Should any litigation be commenced between the parties, hereto, concerning the
provisions of this Agreement, the prevailing party concerning the provisions of
this Agreement, the prevailing party in such litigation shall be entitled to
reasonable attorney's fees, in addition to any other relief to which it may be
entitled.
R:\Wolnickg~Agendareports~Film Festival '01.doc
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the City has caused its corporate name and seal to be
hereunto subscribed and affixed by Chairperson and attest to by the City Clerk, both thereunto
duly authorized, and the Temecula Valley Film Council, has hereunto subscribed this Contract
day, month, and year hereinabove written.
DATED:
TEMECULA VALLEY INTERNATIONAL
FILM FESTIVAL
CITY OF TEMECULA
BY:
Jo Moulton
Founder and Advisory Board
Temecula Valley International Film Festival
Jeff Comerchero, Mayor
City of Temecula
ATTEST:
Susan W. Jones, CMC
City Clerk
APPROVED AS TO FORM:
Peter Thorson, City Attorney
R:\Wolnickg~Agendareports~Film Festival '01 .doc
ATTACHMENT B - SPONSORSHIP PACKAGE
R:\Wolnickg~Agendareports~Film Festival 2001 Staff Report.doc
City of Temecula as Major Sponsor ($30,000)
Sponsorship Benefits Include:
· Recognition of City of Temecula's sponsorship in all festival collateral materials.
· Recognition of City of Temecula's sponsorship in all applicable Broadcast and Print
Media advertising, signege and press releases.
· Acknowledgment of City of Temecula's sponsorship prior to and after every film
screening, live music performances and filmmaking workshops.
· Full page, black & white Inside Cover Page, City of Temecula ad in the program.
· 10 complimentary tickets to the Opening Night Premiere and Reception.
· 10 complimentary tickets to the Black Tie Awards Gala and Closing Night Wrap.
· 10 complimentary tickets to all Festival workshops/panel discussions/seminars.
· 10 complimentary tickets to all Nightly Networking Opportunity Parties.
· 10 complimentary tickets to any pre-festival fundraising events.
· 100 regular live music performance tickets for giveaway to city employees
· 100 regular screening tickets for giveaway to city employees
· Festival Souvenirs (festival shirts, mugs & hats)
· Access to the VIP Hospitality Suite.
· Acknowledgment of City of Temecula representativss st the Opening Night Premiere &
Post Premiere Reception, Black Tie Awards Gala, Closing Night Wrap Party.
· Opportunity to incorporate Festival Logo in any City of Temecula Marketing efforts,
insertion of City logo in the festival websita and in the program sponsors' logo page.
· Opportunity for City of Temecula to enhance community relations by involving City
officials and employees in different aspects of the festival (fi.om festival presenters to
hosts/hostsssss in all prime festival special events).
As Host City, the City will always be acknowledged as a cooperative entity in the event
tiffing regardless of who the eventual Presenting or Tire sponsor will be.
TVlFF will secure from a good and responsible company or companies doing insurance
business in the State of Califomia, pay for and maintain in full force and effect for the
duration of the event a policy of comprehensive general liability and liquor liability in which
the City of Temecula is named insured or as an additional insured covering all claims
arising out of, or in connection with the 2001 Temecula Valley Int'l Film & Music Festival.
Coverage will provide the following minimum limits:
General Liability - $1,000,000 combined single limit per occurrence for bodily injury,
personal injury and property damage.
Liquor Liability- $1,000,000 combine single limit per occurrence for bodily injury, personal
injury and property damage.
CINEMA ENTERTAINMENT ALLIANCE ,, 27740 JEFFERSON AVE~ ,, SUITE 100 · TEMECULA, CALIFORNIA 92590
909.699.6267 * 909.506.4193 fax
ATTACHMENT C - BUSINESS/MEDIA PLAN AND BUDGET
R:\Wolnickg~Agendareports~Film Festival 2001 Staff Report.doc
March 13, 2001
CINEMA ENTERTAINMENT ALLIANCE
27740 JEFFERSON AVE · SUITE 100 · TEMECULA, CALIFORNIA 92590
RECEIVED 909 699 6267 * 909 506 4193 faxwww tviff com
Mr. James O' Grady
Asst. City Manager
City of Temecula
43200 Business Park Drive
Temecula, CA 92590
IlAR 1 5 2001
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
Dear Jim,
Thank you for your letter dated February 26, 2001.
The 6~ Annual Temecula Valley Intemational Film Festival (TVIFF) was a smashing success last
September - with filled theaters, enthusiastic audiences, superb media coverage and great support from
within Temecula and beyond. In fast, it is with great pride for me to inform you that TVIFF was recently
named by the prestigious Ultimate Film Festival Survival Guide as one of the top nine "Best Kept Secret
Film Festivals" in the United States. We joined the ranks of a few elite groups as Rhode Island, Ann Arbor,
San Diego, Sedona, Atlanta and Portland International Film Festivals. This honor is significant as the
author, Chris Gore, based his rankings on interviews he did with thousands of festival attendees of over
600 film festivals that currently exist all over the world. This explains the barrage of inquiries and request
for entry forms to our festival months ahead of schedule. TVIFF 2001 is set for Sept. 13-16.
New to the festival this year will be the music competition. Already the idea of Music of all genres in
competition within a film festival is generating a lot of interest. Apparently there is no known film festival in
the world that combines film and music in a competitive scenario. We are proud to set the stage.
Another reason we look forward to this year is our collaboration with Amedcan Film Institute. Steve Montal,
AFI's Director of Education & Program Development will help with film acquisition and programming as
TVIFF's Film Program Director. Kevin Haasarud of HBO's US Comedy of Arts in Aspen has also agreed to
sign on again as celebrity relations and programming consultant, thus enhancing the festival's ability to
attract quality, critically acclaimed films and celebrities. Special tdbutes will now be given to several
accomplished and celebrated arrays of actors/astresses, musicians/composers, directors/walters and
film/music producers. Two Lifetime Achievement awards will be given for beth Film and Music.
As in the past, we request the same sponsorship contribution of $30,000 from the City. We will raise the
balance of funds required to produce the event. We would like to receive the sponsorship check to be
released May 1, 2001. Because of the added Music competition component, sponsorship benefits will now
include additional tickets to all music-related special events. Contract details remain the same.
A complete festival information packet is enclosed. Should you have any questions pdor to the
subcommittee meeting on Apdl 9, 2001, please call me at (909) 699-8681. Again, thank you for your
continued interest in the festival.
Sin(~lv~ ~,~ ,
Jo I~.dlton
Founder/Director
Our Vision
With the belief that moving images and music
are our culture's most influential art forms,
the Temecula Valley International Film & Music Festival
vision is clear.
Our Mission
To create an awareness of the diversity of film and music by
presenting creative cinematic efforts and musical talents of people
from various cultures and backgrounds within Temecula and
beyond;
To provide a stimulating, supportive environment and unique
experience for independent filmmakers and musicians from around
the world;
To showcase the finest in film and music, while offering cultural,
entertaining and educational opportunities for film and music lovers;
And
To provide grants to enhance existing high school film and music
programs and scholarships to deserving film and music students.
CINEMA ENTERTAINMENT ALLIANCE · 27740 JEFFERSON AVE. · SUITE 100 · TEMECULA, CALIFORNIA 92590
909.699~6267 * 909.506.4193 fax
Design By:
The Ar[
2001 Temecula Valley
International Film & Music Festival
Schedule of Events
Opening Night Premiere & Post Premiere Festivities
Thursday, Sept. 13, Movie Experience at Tower Plaza.
Cocktails/Reception at 5:30pm/Screening at 6:30pm
General Screenings/MusicFest Showcase
Friday, Sept. 14- Sunday, Sept. 16, The Movie Experience at Tower Plaza, from
1 l:00am to 1 l:00pm. Fihn Screenings & music competition begins.
Black Tie Awards Gala
Saturday, Sept. 15, 5:300pm, Cocktails, 6:30pm, Dinner/Special Awards
presentation (Awards of Excellence in various categories for film & music)
Festival Workshop Series
Saturday, Sept. 15-Sunday, Sept. 16, 10:00am-l: 00pm, The Movie Experience,
Tower Plaza. lndustW experts' lead dialogues; workshops and panel discussions
on various Film/Music industry related topics.
Festival Marketplace
Friday Sept. 14-Sunday, Sept. 16, 10AM -8PM, Tower Plaza
Festive bazaar atmosphere. Art Gallew, Artisan arts & Crafts,
Sponsor Row, Film/Music industry related booth displays.
Festival Hot Air Balloon Experience
Sunday, Sept. 16, 6AM. Am early morning jaunt over the lush vineyards of
Temecula Valley for festival participants.
Closing Night Premiere / Awards Ceremony & Wrap Party
Premiere 5pm. Sunday, Sept. 16, The Movie Experience at Tower Plaza.
Wrap/Awards Party, 7pm, Announcement of Film & Music Competition and
Scholarship Award winners.
Film Entries Accepted now. Visit www.tviff, com and download
for entry form or e-mail, jmmoulton@earthlink.net or call
(909) 699-6267 or fax (909) 506-4193.
For music competition details, and consideration, contact
the same phone, fax, e-mail and website information given above.
Note: Events, times and dates may be subject, to change.
2001 Temecdla Valley International Film & Music Festival
Schedule of Events & Ticket Information
Opening Night Premiere & Post Premiere Festivities
Thursday, Sept. 13, Movie Experience at Tower Plaza. Cockta~sa~eception at
5:30pm/Screnning at 6:30pm, $15 per person
General Screenings/MusicFest Showcase
Friday, Sept. 14- Sunday, Sept. 16, The Movie Experience at Tower Plaza, fi.om 11:00am to
11:00pm. Film Screenings & MusieFest Showcase begins. $4/screenings, $6/musicfest
Black Tie Awards Gala
Saturday, Sept. 15, 5:300pm, Cocktails, 6:30pm, Dinner/Special Awards. (Tributes & Awards in
various categories for film & music), $75
Festival Workshop Series
Saturday, Sept. 15-Sunday, Sept. 16, 10:00am-l: 00pm, The Movie Experience,
Tower Plaz~ lndastl¥ experts' lead dialogues; workshops end_panel discussions on various
Film/Music industries related topics. $5 per person
Festival Marketplace
Friday Sept. 14-Sunday, Sept. 16, 10AM -8PM, Tower Plaza
Festive bazaar atmosphere. Art Gallery, Artisan arts & Crafts,
Sponsor Row, Film/Music industry related booth displays. Free to public
Friday Late Night Bash
Friday, Sept. 14, 9PM. Filmmakers/Musicians Mingle and Party with the locals.
Festival Hot Air Balloon Experience
Sunday, Sept. 16, 6AM. Earlymorningjaunt over lush vineyards of Temecula for fcstivalguests.
Closing Night Premiere/Awards Ceremony & Wrap Party
Premiere 5pm. Sunday, Sept. 16, The Movie Experience at Tower Plaza.
Wrap-Film/Music/ScholarshipAwards Party, 7PM. $15 per person
Special Ticket Packages:
One Day Film/Music Pass, $20 - Workshop Series Pass, $15 - Festival Pass, $150
How to Purchase Tickets
General Admission tickets and special festival ticket packages may be purchased through the TVIFF at the
Hospitality Suite or at the Festival HQ starting September 1, 2001. To purchase ticket by phone or mail, please
make checks or money order payable to 'rV]FF and mail to: TVIFF, 27740 Jefferson Ave. Suite 100, Temecuia,
Ca 92590. For credit card users, we are set up to accept only Visa or Mastercard. All pass and ticket orders by
phone will be held at WILL CALL at the Festival Box. Office. Pick Up at WILL CALL starts September 10, 2000.
All ticket sales are final. No refunds or exchanges. For info, call TVIFF at (909) 699-6267 or www.tviff.com or
va*Jte us do TVIFF, 27740 Jefferson Ave. Suite 100, Temecula, Ca 92590.
Note: Events, times and dates may be subject to change.
CINEMA ENTERTAINMENT ALLIANCE · 27740 JEFFERSON AVE. ° SUITE ~00 ,, TEMECULA, CALIFORNIA 9259O
909.699.6267 · 909.506.4193 fax
TVlFF FESTIVAL FACTS
WHAT?
The 2001 Temecula Valley thtemational Film & Music Festival marks the 7~ annual film festival
presentation and the inaugural edition of the music competition component of the festival.
For the first time in the festival's history and for four days in September, Temecula will witness and host the
marriage of two influential arts forms - Film & Music. The best up and coming creative talents in film and
music from all over the world will compete for recognition, honor and prizes.
Indeed, the 2001 Temecula Valley International Film and Music Festival is a celebration of unparalleled
movie and music magic that has truly come into its own. The prestigious Ultimate Film Festival Survival
Guide recently ranked our festival as one of the top "Best Kept Film Festivals" from a field of 600,
worldwide. Temecula joined the ranks of Rhode Island, San Diego, Ann Arbor, Sedona, Atlanta, Ohio,
Taos and Portland.
WHEN?
As autumn a~ves in Temecula, so does the festival. The 2001 event is set for Sept. 13-16.
WHERE?
The Movie Experience 10-plex at the Tower Plaza.
HIGHLIGHTS
Each year, at the Black Tie Gala, a Lifetime Achievement Award is given for the honoree's significant
body of work, achievements and contributions to Film. For 2001, the festival will honor not one but two
artists- one for Film and one for Music. Past recipients include:
Howard Koch, award winner producer of $ Academy Awards, The Manchutfan Candidate, Maverick, The Odd
Couple. Plaza Suite, The Untouchables, etc.
Robert Wise, Diredor of Sound of Music, West Side Story, Sand Pebbles, Andromeda Slrain
Carl Reiner, Wdter, Comedian, Director- The Jerk, That Old Feeling, Oh Ged, Dick Van Dyke
Karl Malden, Award wining actor- Streets of San Frendsco, Patton, Birdman of Alcatraz, Gypsy, On The Waterfront,
SYeatcar Named Desire, How the West Was Won, SKAG, Fatal Vision, etc..
Shirley Jones, award winning ada*ess-Oklahoma, Partridge Family, Elmer Ganfly, Music Man.
Michael York, B~ish stage and film actor- Austin Powers, Three Musketeers, Murder on the Odent Express, The
Omega Code, Romeo and Juliet, Cabaret, Zeppelin, Logan's Run, etc.
Opening Night and Closing Night Premieres and Post Premiere Festivities
Daily screenings of no less than 80 futi-length features, short films, music videos, documentaries,
animation and student films from all over the world. Awards given to winners judged by jury and audience.
Performances of all genres of music (jazz, blues, country, rock, pep, reggie, world music, etc.) by
bands and individual vocal performers at the Music Compe~on. Awards given to winners judged by jury
and audience.
Workshops, panel discussions on film and music-industry related topics.
Q&A sessions with producers, directors, writers, musicians & actors
Festival Marketplace - Artisans' bazaar and Film / Music business showcase
CINEMA ENTERTAINMENT ALLIANCE · 27740 JEFFERSON AVE. · SUITE 100 * TEMECULA, CALIFORNIA 92590
909.699.6267 · 909.506.4193 fax
WHO PARTICIPATES AND WHO ATTENDS?
Countries who have participated in the past include Brazil, Portugal, England, Germany, Ireland,
Philippines, Spain, Australia, israel, China, Japan, Poland, Holland, Italy, The Netherlands, Canada,
Greece, Turkey, Mexico and Swilzerland.
Schools who have participated in the past include: USC School of Cinema & Television, UCLA Schools
of Theater and Film, NYU Tisch School of the Arts, American Film Institute, Columbia University, Columbia
College, California Institute of the Arts, Northwest Film School, University of Texas at Austin, Florida State
University, San Diego State University, San Francisco State University, UC-Santa Barbara, UC-Santa
Cruz, Boston University, Los Angeles College, Chaparral High School, Penn State University, Regent
University, Loyola Marymount University, Syracuse University, Art Center College of Design-Pasadena,
Wesleyan University, Emerson College, Los Angeles City College, Stanford University, Cai State-Long
Beech, Chapman University, Grauer School, Creative and Performing Arts Academy of San Diego,
Children's School of La Jolla, Academy of Our Lady of Peace High School, San Diego, Andrew A.
Robinson Elementary School, Jecksonville, FLA, Cleveland High School, Espanola High School, NM
Production companies and film distributors who have participated in the past include Miramax Films,
Lion's Gate, MGM / UA, Sony Pictures Classic, Tddent Releasing, FX Shorts, Cineguanon Pictures, Buena
Vista, Panorama Entertainment, Seventh Art Releasieg,Star Cinema Films, Blue Rider Pictures, Maslak-
Frladenn Films, Bigel / Mailer Films, Hypodon Studio, PFG Entertainment, Palomar Pictures, CBS News,
Beyond Films.
OTHER IMPORTANT FESTIVAL FACTS
The Festival is a great addition to the roster of Temecula annual events. It is an event with cultural,
educational, social and positive economic impect on the community.
In the same token that it has had the benefit of local business and community support, the Festival has
reciprocated by using and hiring the services of local professionals and businesses.
The Festival has awarded scholarships to students from Chaparral High School, Linfield High School and
Uurdeta Valley High School.
The first five years, the Festival's attendees have come mainly from outside Temecula and were
almost 80% composed of filmmakers. For the year 2000, the Festival saw a marked increase not
only in visitors but also in local residents' attendance.
In a study done by Webtrends for Indiespace.com of Santa Monica, the Festival website,
w,w.t~com, averaged over 150,000 hits from Sept. 1-30, 2000 (approximately just under 5,000
hits a day). For the months of October and November, 2000, two months after the event, the site
still averaged 18,000 and 15,000 hits or 587 and 516 hits a day, respectively.
The festivaJ has received the last six years over 3000 submissions, selected and screened over
460 full length features, shot[s, documentaries, and student films from 20+ countries, including
wodd and U.S. premieres.
TVlFF FESTIVAL FACTS
WHAT?
The 2001 Temeoula Valley International Film & Music Festival marks the ~ annual film festival
presentation and the inaugural edition o! the music competition component of the festival,
For the flint time in the festival's history and for four days in September, Temecula will witness and host the
marriage of two influential arts forms - Film & Music. The best up and coming creative talents in film and
music from all over the world will compete for recognition, honor and prizes.
Indeed, the 2001 Temecula Valley International Film and Music Festival is a celebration of unparalleled
movie and music magic that has truly come into its own. The prestigious Ultimate Film Festival Survival
Guide recently ranked our festival as one of the top "Best Kept Film Festivals" from a field of 600,
worldwide. Temecula joined the ranks of Rhode Island, San Diego, Ann Arbor, Sedona, Atlanta, Ohio,
Taos and Portland.
WHEN?
Asautumna~sinTem~ula, sod~sthe~stival. The2001e~ntisset~rSept. l~16.
WHERE? '-
TheMo~eEx~en~ l~plexatthe ~werPlaza.
HIGHLIGHTS
Each year, at the Black Tie Gala, a Lifetime Achievement Award is given for the honoree's significant
body of work, achievements and contributions to Film. For 2001, the festival will honor not one but two
artists- one for Film and one for Music. Past recipients include:
Howard Koch, award v~nner producer of 8 Academy Awards, The Manchurian Candidate, Maverick, The Odd
Couple. Plaza Suite, The Untouchables, etc.
Robert Wise, Director of Sound of Music, West Side sio,% Sand Pebbles, Andromeda Strain
Call Reiner, Writer, Comedian, Director- The Jerk, That Old Feeling, Oh God, Dick Van Dyke
Karl Malden, Award wfning actor- Streets of San Francisco, Patton, Birdman of Aicatraz, Gypsy, On The Watedront,
Streetcar Named Desire, How file West Was Won, SKAG, Fatal Vision, etc..
Shirley Jones, award ~nning adrass-Oklahoma, Pedddge Family, Elmer Ganby, Music Man.
Michael York, Bdgsh stage and film actor- Ausb'n Powers, Three Musketeers, Murder on the Orient Express, The
Omega Code, Romeo and Juliet, Cabaret, Zeppelin, Legan's Run, etc.
Opening Night and Closing Night Premieres and Post Premiere Festivities
Daily screenings of no less than 80 full-length features, short films, music videos, documentaries,
animation and student films from all over the wodd. Awards given to winners judged by jury and audience.
Performances of all genres of music (jazz, blues, country, rock, pep, raggae, world music, etc.) by
hands and individual vocal performers at the Music Competition. Awards given to winners judged by jury
and audience.
Workshops, panel discussions on film and music-industry related topics.
Q&A sessions with producers, directors, writers, musicians & actors
Festival Marketplace - Artisans' bazaar and Film / Music business showcase
CINEMA ENTERTAINMENT ALLIANCE · 27740 JEFFERSON AVE. · SUITE 100 · TEMECULA, CALIFORNIA 92590
909.699.6267 * 909.506.4193 fax
But don't just take our word for Jr, here's what they say about
our festJval...
"Another orbit for Hollywood... Hollywood has landed its s~tarohip in Temecula, in the heartland of
Southern California Wine Country..." The Morning Report, Los Angeles Times
"After having been to numerous film festivals including Cannes and Sundance..I can honestly say
yours was one of my happiest experiences. Your festival really provides an invaluable personable
forum for independent filmmakers to screen films outside the context of Hollywood."
Kevin Haasarud, Program Director, HBO's US Comedy of Arts Festival, Aspen
"A lot of small films get lost in big festivals. The few that get through get all the attention.
I look at this festival as a second chance- - a re-birth."
Charles Leventhal, Hollywood Director, "Mr. Write"
"Just wanted to thank you for all you and your staff did to make the TVIFF happen. We met great
people, made good contacts, saw a few really good films, got groat positive feedback on our film,
enjoyed the gala and the workshops, and loved the location. We left quite happy."
James McCabe, Director, "Who You Know; Baltimore, MD
"I want to say thank you for your hospitality. We had a groat stay. We enjoyed the festival
immensely. We were also very pleased with the reception our film received by the audiences and
other filmmakers...we were thdlled to be invited to participate in the festival. I really appreciate the
opportunity to screen my film three times, have time to network with other filmmakers, and to
participate on all the other activities. I wish you the best for next yea¢."
Phil Seneker, Prod/Director of"rats!" Seatle, WA
"We are still coming down from a great tdp to LA and Temecula. Everyone we met at the festival
were so pleasant-it makes my heart warm to remember all ~he organizers, volunteers and
filmmaking teams we met...Thanks for the support you gave our film. The extra screenings-made
the trip really groat for us especially to be one of the favorites."
Jennifer Treur, Director/Writer, "Not Not Now", Sydney, Australia
"Il was a great experience screening my film in Temecula... I got some nice feedback and support
from those who attended. The theaters were among the best I've screened at and I enjoyed
exploring Temecula. I hope to get the chance to screen some of my future projects there."
Jim FleJgner, Director, "From the Top of the Key; Los Angeles, CA
"We had a groat time for the few days that we could be in Temecula. You organized a groat
festival. You showed many films from first and second timers, which wouldn't get shown anywhere
else. You gave everyone three screenings, which other festivals often don't do. And thero were
always a number of films showing. The balloon dde and the car rally were wonderful additions.
Good luck on future festivals!"
Greg & Renee Tennan~ Producer/Director: "The Distraction", San Francisco, CA
"Thank you for making the TVIFF an enjoyable experience. I had a lot of fun while thero, and I
appreciate all the efforts of you and your staff of volunteers. Thanks!"
John Tranchina, Director, "Just Outside the Door", Dallas, Texas
CINEMA ENTERTAINMENT ALLIANCE · 27740 JEFFERSON AVE, ,, SUITE ]00 * TEMECULA, CALIFORNIA 9259o
909.699.6267 · 909.506.4193 fax
Think
Are you a :l°eal. band or individual performer Io~~kln~
to make'a splash on the seene?
Showcase yom' talent, join and eompetc~ with
h ' " 9
t e worlds best atthe
200i Tern
YalleY International
Musie. Festival
En[~rY Deadline:
& details, %11 (9'09) 699-626i~
'mmouiton®earthllnk.net
or visit,
CINEMA ENTERTAINMENT ALLIANCE · 27740 JEFFERSON AVE. · SUITE I00 · TEMECULA, CALIFORNIA 9259o
:
Please' c6~le~ th~ ::fo~::~elow. as neede:al'
Send complete~Brm alonff with your tape/CD, phota and bio, and
Fil ti3
m &MRsic:~es al
27740 J
e er'S~n Ave. :
TemeCUi~ CA 925~0
~ :.~:: ............ . :: :: :::~:::~
::: .:: : :~: :?'
For consideration, a!l:r~:i~C~ ~!ements must accompany you~ ~p~lication.
~:~::
If you would like:~ofi~mat~ff~:thM'~O~'~t~ h~ b~n ~eived please ~::::~:~:
~nciuae a ~e~-aaaf~:~a:¥~peU postcard w~t~ your ~u~m~on.
~nt~ mater¢~ ~in ~ ~e~ an~ may ~ ~ f0~ f~ promotion~.
Name o~ Band/Arti~:~
Address:
No. of Band================= == == = === .M~ :
Short
Name Th : tt d:
ii?:?::: [] payable to TVIFF)
~:.:::::::~ ~.J p ~:: .:
[] Publicity Materials i Photos
::: :::
For more info, call: 909.699.6267 · fgx 909.506.4193
e-mail: jmmoulton@earthlink.net ° www. tviff.com
This significant world class mu~i~ :co~P~Ri~r~¢~n{ 9f the aO0 ~ Te~ Va~t~ lnt'l Fil~ Mmic F~tiyal i, d~i~
to showc~e the music vision and a~istic wiza~ o~ mlent~d individual~ ~fid ~6~ ~ acr~ ~ a~d amend the w~ld.
Emerging, up and c~i~'~hsigned p~f~ifig a~iSts arid: bands.
~T GES~S ~OF MBSIC ARE CONSIDERED?
uSic
From Rock and Roii t0 C~[i~ ~an Folk, ~:~:~::: ~:~i:~an, Jazz, ~tin ~ythms,
Count~, Big Bafid~: Blues~'~:7~]~S, R & B, M:~:~ :Caj~:::Pop to~B~adway Tunes
rank~ of res
For conside~:i~h~
contestants will c6~F :i fi
to compete.as finalist~ i~;~h~:~
will C~e from the
ntertainment industry.
ette or videotape. If selected, all
;. Winners of the Battle o1: the Bands will go on
September 13-16, 2001.
:::: F~r ~side r~! applica~ ~ ~ submitted wiih ~ th~ re~r~d ~ements by --5 i~ 2~: ~ !i::: .
1. A ~pe or CE A photo of'a~i~ ~ ~:~: ~l~hrly labeled on the ha& (Photm submitt~
: ~he ~e of music perfo~ed 4. Press kits and any media info~ation
~11 not ::,
available for $25, made payable to: 'Temecula Valley lnt'l Film Fes~val ~FD"
I f selected, be sent via mail, fax, ~i~i ~:6~::{$1ephone no later than July 30, 2001.
Fill ou~:i of t~i:s fo~ arid Sefid ~}~ ail ~fi~ ?e~uired elements listed above, to:
do 277~0 Jefferson Ave., Suite 100 * Temecula, CA 92590
::: For more:info~ation, call
~:::~ (909) 699-6267: ~} ~:~iil :~~°filton&eanhlink-net
· :::::.:. or visit our site at ~.wiff.com
CINEMA ENTERTAINMENT ALLIANCE · 27740 JEFFERSON AVE. · SUI~ ~00 · TEMECU~, CALIFORNIA 92590
909.699.6267 · 909.506.4193 fax
This significant world class mu~i~ eo~petiti6~ ~6nt of the 2001 Temecula Va!Icy Int'l Film& Music FesdW, i is designed
to showcase the music vision and artistic wizardry of talent&d individual~::~d ~fi~ ~ across America and around the world.
WHO ~RE ~ pARTI~IPANTg~
Emerging, up and cSn{iri~ ~hsigned p~riormin~ ~r~:i~s arid bands.
WHAT GENRES OF MUSIC ARE CONSIDERED?::.:
CONTEMPORARY, T~DI~i~L, ROCK, POP, EOLK AND WORLD MU~i:~
From Rock and Roll:to c~i~i~; A&~i~:an Folk, ~:~l: ~14:;i~:an, Jazz, ~htin Rhythms
Country, Big Bandl Blues ::f~i:glfi~F~S, R & B, Mai:ia~hll Caju~ ::F'op to B~:~adway Tunes
Judging will be b~ fidjddi~a~fi~ ~fid will c~e from the
ran~s of respect~:ku~ic ~f~i~fi&i~ 0f:th~ :academe ~:~:~t ~e entertainment industry.
4Ow E!:eOk EsT, rrs SErECTED?
For consideration; anyod~i:i~te~:~ is requir~a ~ ~:~nd::~ CD:i: fi:~:aib~gg~ette or videotape. If selected, all
contestants:will c6~pe~:i~ a~:~fi~na3y: Ba~l~ ~f ~ B~fidS. Winners of the Battle of the Bands will go on
to compete as finalist~ i~ ~h~ 260 ~ :T~m~Edi~::9~ii~: ifi~ernati6fiil Eil~ ~M~Sic Festival, September 13- 16, 2001.
1. A ~pe or CD ¢i{h h~: 1~ ~an 2. A'photo of arti~:~ g~ ~i~krly labeled on the ba& (~otos submittea
~11 not be returnS,j: 3. ~i~ ~Ba,d Bi~t ~nd'the Wpe of music perfo~ed 4. Press kits and any media information
available 5. ~'~hi~r~ ~:or ~ O~aer for $25 made payable to: 'Temecula Valley Int'l Film FesUval ~FF)"
If selected a nbfia~ ~f ~kcepf~ ~ill be sep~ via mail, fax,:::~:2~ail ~f b:~:::f~lephone no later than July 30, 2001.
Fill out a~:~!~0n on th~ back of this fotm a~d send ~:~fi ~ii ~ f~uired elements listed above, to:
TVIFFjTA~m~ M0ulton c/o 277~0 Jefferson Ave., Suite 100. Temecula, CA 92590
.:
::::: (909) 699-6267:::~:f::~::~ail~ j~oa!ton&eanhlink.net
..?~. or visit our site at ~w. wiff.com
CINEMA ENTERTAINMENT ALLIANCE · 27740 JE[FERgO~ AVE. · [HITE 100 · TEM[CH~ CAUFORNIA 92590
909.699.6267 · 909.506.4193 ~ax
..' .~ ': Friday September q:~ ~ Sundas'[ September 16, 2001
: :'.:: :~:::: ::::~ T°~.f Plazal N.W/~:~r~ier of Yn:ez & Rancho California Rd.
: ::':i i: : T~:m~cula. California.
For non~pi:0fit~, give us a call for spectal rates.
:.: 10'xl0' exhibit space, a table with linen and two chairs:
::: ii. If electric outlet is required, there is an additional charge of $20.00
Artisans, Handcrafters, Specialty Items &
Anyone who has a umque product, service, talent:
Idea or concept to Pitch, Sell or Promote
Tar ' endar
Fill out information on the back of this form and Send or fax itto:
:::: Temecula Valley International Film& MuSic Festival
i:~:::27740 Jefferson Ave. Suite 100, Temecula~ Ca 92590
Fax No. (909) 506-4193
Or call (909) 699-6267 or e-mail: jmmoulton@earthlink.n6t
Or visit our site at www!tviff.com
CINEMA ENTERTAINMENT ALLIANCE · 27740 JEFFERSON AVE. · SUITE ~00 · TEMECULA, CALIFORNIA 9259O
909.699.6267 · 909.506.4193 fax
Vendor Application and Agreement
Address:
:~i~i~i~:. Phone: Fax:
~¥~:: e-mail: WEB URL, if any
agrees to rent exhibit space at the
2001 Temecula Valley International Film & Music Festival.
Vendor agrees to rent. space(s) for the sum of $
Exhibit space is 10~ x 10' and includes linen and two chairs.
Electricity, if needed, can be provided, for an additional fee of $20.00
The Festival Marketplace is open from 12:00 noon to 7pm, Sept 14 ~ Sept 15
and 12:00 noon to 4pm, Sept 16, 2001
Payment in full must be received at time of reservation.
Please make check payable to: Temecula Valley International Film Festival (TVIFE~iiiiii~:
Signature: Date:
Print Name:
CINEMA ENTERTAINMENT ALLIANCE · 2774O JEFFERSON AVE. · SUITE 100 · TEMECULA, CALIFORNIA 92590
909.699.6267 · 909.506.4193 fax
CINEMA ENTERTAINMENT ALLIANCE
27740 JEFFERSON AVE · SUITE 100 · TEMECULA, CALIFORNIA 92590
9096996267 · 9095064193 fa×
www tviff corn
2001 Temecula Valley International Film & Music Festival
Scholarship Award Program
To: High School Counselor
The Temecula Valley International Film Festival and Cinema Entertainment Alliance request
your assistance in facilitating the Cinema Entertainment Alliance Scholarship Award by first
notifying your students about the scholarship opportunity and then by submitting/mailing the
applications to the TVIFF at 27740 Jefferson Ave. Suite 100, Temecula, Ca 92590 by
August 24, 2001.
Cinema Entertainment Alliance's strong commitment to providing an environment for creativity
to flourish through education and hands-on training is the basis for establishing the Cinema
Entertainment Alliance Scholarship Awards.
Requirements:
Temecula Valley area (Public or private) high school graduating senior
Students desiring to pursue some form of higher education
Students intending to work in the industries of music, theater, film, video or multimedia
Minimum GPA of 3.0
Completed application form
One completed essay
Application must include:
Completed application form (typed or neatly written)
High School Transcript
Essa)441 - Signed by Teacher/Counselor, indicating authenticity
We will be awarding 2 one-time scholarships of $1,000.00 each recipient (for a total of $2,000).
The scholarship committee will make a final decision by September 1, 2001. Recipients will be
notified by telephone, fax, e-mail or regular mail no later than September 3, 2001. Presentation
of scholarship awards will be at the festival's Closing Night Wrap Party & Awards Ceremony,
September 16, 2001.
We greatly appreciate your help and cooperation.
Very truly yours,
Jo Moulton
Festival Founder & Director
The 2001 Temecula Valley Int'l Film & Music Festival
Sponsorship Package ElementS
The festival sponsorship package is tailored to meet the individual sponsor needs. The following
ara a vadety of programs included in the sponsor benefits package based on sponsor level of
participation:
Advertising: Advertisement in the 2001 Official Program. Sponsor racognition in the TVIFF
event advertising in print/broadcast media, whenever applicable. (Time and space allotment will
dictate sponsor recognition availabitity)
Publicity: Extensive distribution of press ralease announcement of sponsorship. On site
interviews of sponsors in printJbroadcast media may be arranged, whenever possible.
Corporate Logo: Placement in corporate sponsor page of event official Program. Placement in
event program with the sponsored film screening(s) or event. Placement/mention on
print/broadcast media advertisemen{s, whenever applicable. Placement on the TVIFF web site.
Corporate Banner: Placement of sponsor banner at any or all festival theater and special event
venues for the full run of the festival, whenever possible. (Subject to venue approval)
Corporate Signage: For sponsors of specific film screening (s) or special festival events, a
sponsor sign display board will be craated to announce sponsorship of the screening (s) or event.
Corporate Literature: Sponsor literafura, brochures or promotional items may be displayed,
distributed at various festival venues throughout the full run of the festival. Information and
corporate tables will be set up in Ihe lobbies of the festival theater venues, the festival box office,
media center and the Hospitality Suite.
Web Site: WWW.TVIFF.COM is the official year-round site of the TVIFF. Sponsorship is
acknowledged with sponsor logos and brief sponsor bio. Hyperlinks to sponsor websites can be
established.
Specific Corporate Identification: Depending on sponsor level of participation, a sponsor name
may be attached to a specific portion of the film festival, as the "Official" supplier of product or
service.
Hospitality Suite: Sponsors will have access to the Hospitality Suite. This suite is raserved for
special festival guests, filmmakers and sponsors.
Ticketing and Special Passes: All sponsors will receive complimentary tickets and passes to all
performances, workshops and special festival parties. Ticket and Pass allotment will depend on
level of sponsorship.
CINEMA ENTERTAINMENT ALLIANCE · 27740 JEFFERSON AVE. ° SUITE 100 ° TEMECULA, CALIFORNIA 9259O
909.699.6267 · 909.506.4193 fax
MARKETING PLAN
The 2001 Temecula Valley International Film & Music Festival's marketing strategy will
consist of the following:
INTERNET MARKETING
Indiespace.com will once again provide Web Hosting services for TVIFF plus generate web
marketing, links to film industry vendors and an On-line Film Market for all participants that includes
streaming trailers. Owner Jeannie Novak has represented the Santa Monica film Festival and
Newport Beach Film Festival. This new partnership will provide a new and exciting approach to
expanding the festival's audience. Webtrends reports 2000 TVIFF to average over 50,000 hits from
Sept. 1-30, 2000, just about 5,000 hits a day. Two months after the 2000 TVIFF, the site still
managed to pull respectable numbers (15,000 hits for October and November).
DIRECT MAIL
Informative and timely brochures, updates, reminders and bulletins will be sent via direct mail
campaign to filmmakers, film distributors, production companies, talent agents, publicists, schools,
musicians, recording studios, music -related trade magazines and websites.
PUBLICITY & MEDIA RELATIONS
Extensive public relations campaign before, dudng and after the festival.
Although area newspapers and publications, radio and cable are our pdme target outlets for event
coverage, major industry trade publications (Rolling Stone, Spin, Hollywood Reporter, Daily
Variety, Screen International), tour and travel publications will be aggressively pursued for calendar
listings, story editorials as well.
Prime national and local television news/entertainment programs such as Entertainment Tonight,
Access Hollywood, VH-1, etc. will be tapped for strategic story placements.
Festival fac~ sheets will be distributed to travel publications, local event calendar guides, chambers
of commeme, area schools, area organizations. Information speaking engagements with local
service organizations, theater, school and civic groups will be scheduled.
ADVERTISING
Although local newspapers will be the festival's primary advertising vehicles, a media mix of
broadcast, pdnt and outdoor advertising will be scheduled two months before the festival. Cross
promotions with festival sponsors and advertisers will be aggressively encouraged. Display
billboards in malls, on screen advertising in theaters, posters, free standing inserts or brochures
and ticket giveaways are just a few of the high impact promotional ideas planned to advertise the
festival.
TRADE SHOWS
As in past years, TVIFF will continue to participate in industry trade shows such as the Amedcan
Film Market in Santa Monica, Locations Expo and ShowBiz Expo in Los Angeles. TVIFF will also
collaborate with the Temecula Valley Chamber of Commerce and City of Temecula's Marketing
and Toudsm trade show activities by providing them with TVIFF promotional materials for mass
distribution.
CINEMA ENTERTAINMENT ALLIANCE ,, 27740 JEFFERSON AVE. ,, SUITE 100 · TEMECULA, CALIFORNIA 92590
909.699.6267 * 909.506.4193 fax
2001 Temecula-Valley International Film & Music Festival
Advisory Board
(in Alphabetical Order)
Maggi Allen, President, Temecula Valley Film Council
Eve Craig, President, Temecula Valley Historical Society
Terry Gilmore, VP, Paradise Chevrolet, Cadillac, Oldsmobile
Kevin Haasarud, Program Director, HBO/US Comedy Arts Fest in Aspen
Mike Kerrigan, Syndicated Columnist, Calpix International
Herbert Margolis, President, Cinema Entertainment Alliance
Steve Montal, AFl, Director of Education & Program Development
Jo Moulton, Founder, Temecula Valley Int'l Film Festival
Dan Stephenson, Chairman/CEO, Rancon Corporation
Pamayla Ziolkowski, VP, MarPam Productions
PAST LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD HONOREES
Howard W. Koch, Producer (1995)
Robert Wise, Director (1996)
Carl Reiner, Writer/Director/Comedian (1997)
Karl Malden, Actor (1998)
Shirley Jones, Actress (1999)
Michael York, Actor (2000)
YR 2001 Nominated Recipients*
Robert Stack, Actor
James Garner, Actor
Sally Field, Actress
John Frankenheimer, Director
Kenny Rogers, Singer
Smokey Robinson, Singer/Lyricist
Butt Bacharach, Composer
Dolly Patton, Singer/Actress
Special Tribute to the Golden Girls
(Betty White, Bea Arthur, Rue Mclanahan)
*All the above will be contacted to confirm acceptance of award and availability.
CINEMA ENTERTAINMENT ALLIANCE · 27740 JEFFERSON AVE. · SUITE 1oo * TEMECULA, CALIFORNIA 92590
909.699,6267 * 909.506.4193 fax
2001 Confirmed Sponsors, to date
Sanbom Theaters, Inc.
Pechanga Entertainment Center
Paraside Chevrolet-Cadillac-Oldsmobile
Rancon Real Estate
Subaru of North America
Federal Express
Indie Grip & lighting
Sammy's Woodfired Pizza
Potamus Press
KATY Radio
Timmy D. Productions
Indiespace.com
PTIversen.com
The Art Department
Eve Craig
Cooperating Entities
Temecula Valley Film Council
Inland Empire Film Commission
CINEMA ENTERTAINMENT ALLIANCE · 27740 JEFFERSON AVE. · SUITE 100 · TEMECULA, CALIFORNIA 9259O
909.699.6267 · 909.506.4193 fax
2001 Temecula Valley International Film & Music Festival
Budget
Expenses
Festival Markefin
$30,000
Printing $6,000
(collaterals - posters, programs, invitations, flyers, general info brochures
Graphics Design $4,000
(design of all festival collaterals)
Publicity / Advertising $20,000
(Trade shows, print and broadcast media buys)
Festival Operations
Transportation $3,000
Hospitality Suite $2,000
Accommedaiions $3,000
Trap hies/Plaques/Certificates $1,000
Film/Music Compe~on Cash Pdze $6,000
Scholarships $2,000
Secudty (3 days) $2,500
Equipment/Stage Rental $10,000
Theater Rental $6,000
Insurance $4,000
Postage/Freight $2,000
Telephone $3,000
Memhandise $3,000
Memhant Display Rentals $2,000
Party Rentals $2,000
Website Maintenance $1,000
Miscellaneous (Con~ngency) $2,000
$54,500
Special Events
Opening Night, Closing Night $3,000
Black Tie Awards Gala $12,000
$15,000
Festival Management & Production Coordination
Fees for PmduclJon and Programming, Technical, Editorial and Talent
Rela'dons, Marketing and PR/Media Relations (LA & Temecala)
Sponsor Bevelopment commissions, Film & Music Adjudicated Jury
and consultant fees
TOTAL FESTIVAL BUDGET
$148,000
CINEMA ENTERTAINMENT ALLIANCE · 27740 JEFFERSON AVE. · SUITE 100 · TEMECULA, CALIFORNIA 92590
909.699.6267 · 909.506.4193 fax
2001 Temecula Valley International Film & Music Festival
Budget
Projected Income
Sponsorships $80,000
Ticket//Event Sales $96,600
General Admission Screening Tickets @ $4.
5 screenings in 4 theaters for 3 days @ $4/person wi average viewer attendance of 60/screening, $14,400
General Admission Band/Music Performances @ $6.
6 acts in 2 theaters for 3 days @ $6 per person w/average audience of 200, $43,200.
Opening Night Premiere & Concert @ $15
$15 x 200 paid tjx, $3,000
Black Tie Awards Gala @ $75
$75 x 200 paid ~ckets, $15,000
Closing Night Premiere & Wrap Party @ $15
$15 x 200 paid tickets, $3,000
One Day FilmlMusicPass @ $20, good for ail day screenings & music pen~ormances
$20 x 300 paid tickets, $6,000
Festival Pass @ $150.00, good for all screenings,
music performances, workshops and parties.
$150 x $0 paid tickets, $9,000
Festival Workshop & Panel Discussion, @ $5
$5x300 paid attendees, $1,500
Workshop Pass @ 15, good for all workshops and panel discussions
$15 x 100 paid attendees, $1,500
Merchandise $4,500
Shirts @ $10 x 300, $3000 / Mugs @ $5 x200, $1,000 / Programs @ $1 x 500, $500
Entry Fees 200 x $25+$5,000/200x $10 (students) = $2,000 $7,000
Exhibit / On Site Promotions Fees, 30x$200=$6,000 $6,000
Total Projected Income: $194,100
Lees Event Expenses $148,000
Projected Net Proceeds: $46,100
CINEMA ENTERTAINMENT ALLIANCE · 27740 JEFFERSON AVE. · SUITE ~oo ° TEMECULA, CALIFORNIA 9259O
909.699.6267 · 909.506.4193 fax
CONCLUSIONS AND SUMMARY
To quote former California Govemor Pete Wilson,
"As an art form and as a commercial interest, movies have thrived in California.
Providing entertainment to millions of viewers, employment to thousands of people,
and attracting large amounts of revenue for our fine state, the movie business is an
integral part of the California economy, and the greater American experience...a
film festival is an appropriate celebration of the industry. '
As 2001 Temecula Valley International Film and Music festival expands
beyond its Temecula borders, our audience has become more diverse. Not
only have we reached the film industry (and the music industry this year), we
have touched almost every part of the world. Proof is the recent recognition
of our event as one of the top 'Best Kept Secret Film Festivals'
from a field of 600, worldwide.
The appearance of a city or region on the big screen and television screens is
a highly coveted form of free advertising. Filmed entertainment and live music
performances combined with celebrity studded gala events are natural
magnets for such 'free advertising' vehicles. Without a doubt, there is no more
cost-effective a showcase for the promotion of an area's attractions than a
world class event such as
The Temecula Valley International Film & Music Festival
A celebration of the imagination through film and music
CINEMA ENTERTAINMENT ALLIANCE · 27740 JEFFERSON AVE. * SUITE 100 * TEMECULA, CALIFORNIA 9259O
909,699.6267 * 909.506.4193 fax
ATTACHMENT D - RECAP OF 2000 TEMECULA VALLEY FILM FESTIVAL
R:\Wolnickg~Agendareports~Film Festival 2001 Staff Report.doc
The Press Enterprise
Publication dates:
September 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 2000
6th Annual Temecula Valley
International Film Festival
~ talents
all over the worldm ,,: ~ ,,~
~'~ iAl:~entation ot Cinema Ente~inm~'~tAJliance ~ cz~oerz~ wr~h ~e Ci~ of Temecula.
' ~,, ' , ~e Te~ ~ ~ ~ ~ the ~eater Foun~hon.
sponsorship ~ ~'~*~"*~ I*~1
pa~icipation by: CH~OL~.~DI~C.OLD~O8~ I~'~'1
And ~an~ to our o~er sponsom: ~e Promenade, ~ 101.3fm, T94.5 ~K-~, Neighbors. tnlandEmpire Magazine
, Communi~ Pubii~tions Group , The Rancho News , EnteAainment Roundup . The Press-Enterprise
, Froggy 92.9, ~lla's Italian Gdll, Prestos, S~dium P~a. InteHors ~or T~ay. ~e Californian. Fallbrook National
Bank, Uni~ ~ ~ California, Isle of Man Tourism. FedEx, Firerose Communi~fions, Temeku Hills Golf & Coum~
Club Indi~pam.~ Indie Gdp & Lighting Big ~reen Ci~ ~mmy Productions Po~mus Pre~ Bob Baker Subaru.
~sbad C~ Gear A~en Real~ Inc. ~e Mer~ants of Tower Pt~ Emba~ Suites, ~e Movie Experience.
Tem~u~ Cr~ I~. He~ E C~aig, Jon L~kin B~d, PT lversen.com. Millennium ~mousine. Inc.. Baskets & Ba~l~ns
Apr-12-01 08:39A Ti,,u,,y O. Productions 909 6931682 P.02
TEMECULA VALLEY INTERNATIONAL
FILM FESTIVAL
2000
Strategic Marketin~ Summa~
Overall the 2000 £cstival succeeded in getting extcusive local,
~regional, national and inte/-national ~xpost.re.
International exposure for the festival and the City of Temecula is
real/zed through internet exposure as well as marketing from each
of the individual film festival panic/pants. (See attached).
International exposure is proven through participation from
companies such as Virgin Atlantic Airways and isle of Man
Tourism Board.
Regional and national exposure is also realized through internet
exposure and individual film entries marketing efforts.
C
ompames sttch as Miramax, Indiespace.com and Del Mar
Thoroughbred Club partnered with the festival in promotion
activities.
The marketing strategy ofthe 2000 Festival emphasized highly
on local media coverage. Due to past attendance fignres,
organizers deliberately focused marketing efforts towards
promoting community awareness and educating locals on what a
film festival has to offer. High local visibility resulted in
victorious local atteudance numbers. Locals not only attended
the festival bnt also learned what a film tbstival otters. The
overall consensus from locals was very positive.
TEMECULA VALLEY INTERNATIONAL
FILM FESTIVAl,
2000
Media Impressions Summaq,
Based on press clippings from various newspapers and
publications such as The Press Enterprise, North County Times,
Union Tribune, Los Angeles "l'imes, Daily Breeze, Daily Variety,
Hollywood Reporter, Long Beach Press Telegram, The '
Californian, San Diego Union Tribune, San }3ernardino Sun,
Country Review, Neighbors Newspaper, Vineyard Press,
Entertainment Round-up, Temeeula Valley Chamber of
Commerce Newsletter, Temeeula Valley Business Journal and
Rancho News, combined estimated impress/on is 7,500,000.
In addition, TVIFF general information brochures and spec/al
event invitations were mailed and distributed to schools,
production companies, tv and film distributors and
Temecula/Murrieta residents.
Broadcasl coverage included mentions, promotional ads and
ticket giveaways in KATY, KTMK, and KFRG.
Several local businesses d/splayed posters and distributed
brochures.
Apr-12-01 08:39A Ti~y D. Production~ gO9 6931682 P.04
Print
Media Impressionn
Country Review
Daily Breeze
IO, O00
Daily Variety
Entertainment Round-up
ltollywood Reporter
LA Times
1, I { 1,000
30,O00
3O,OOO
Long Beach Press Telegram
Neighbors Newspaper
15,000
North County Times
100,075
Pechanga Entertainment Center - Employee Newsletter
Rancho News
San Bernardino Sun 80,000
San Diego Union Tribune
378,766
Tcrnecula Valley Chamber of Commerce Newsletter
2,000
The Calilbmian
The Press Enterprise
~Ihe Vineyard Press
Union Tribune
Valley Business Journal
Radio
KATY
# o f spots
KTMK
available
KFRG
# of'spots
10,000
1,500
Not
10,700
Apr'-12-01 08:39A T'~,,,..y O. Pr'oduct~ions 909 6931682 P.06
Web-sites
www.iviff, com
~---v~Ew._~_~- ien_~, fict jo n. _COrn
',"/~ ~,'. i n__&.'.c~!~, cc corn
.Links
Www. FihnFes[ vaIs.com
v,~. Hollow _o3~1..col~!
w ww.i
www.lndicWire, cgra
The Californian
q · ~0.'2, oo0
Temecula preview
night a success
Steve Phelps, TVIFF workshop coordinator, and Pamela
Miod and Molly Mathes, volunteers.
Terry and Cindy Gilmore of Paradise
Chevrolet Cadillac Oldsmobile, sponsors.
Jim Meyer of the Temecula Arts Council, with Bev Hoff-
man. festival volunteer, an.d, Joan Tussing, chamber b~ard Ellen Watkins with Kathy F(Moas of The
member. Califemian, a festival sponsor.
q - · 'ZOOO
The Temecula Valley International Film Festival,
which begins Thursday and runs through Sunday, re-
cently held a Preview Night to introduce many film-
makers, producers and actors, in-
cluding those from short films
and movies that will be screened
ing festival. Some came from as
far away as New York to get a
peek at what's in store.
The TVIFF Preview Night,
held at the Tower Plaza Movie
Experience Theater in Temecula,
featured delicious hors d'oeu-
wes from Presto's Gourmet Grill
SYLVIA and wines from Wilson Creek
ROCHIN Winery.
SELBY Masters of ceremonies Bever-
ly Stephenson and Timrny d. in-
troduced the preview film,
"Shergar," which won both the critics' and audience
awards at last year's festival.
"Shergar" stars Ian Holm, Mickey Rourke and
Dav/d Warner in a true story of a legendary champi-
on racehorse that was kidnapped and held for ran-
The film, produced by Blue Rider Pictures, was
filmed on the Isle of Man, which has a very active
film program. The movie appropriately began with
the sound of trumpeter Larry Grosman.
The Isle of Man Film Council came on board as
sponsors this year and donated a pr/ze for a fabu-
lous vacation, including airfare and hotel accommo-
dations on the British island. Drawing tickets can be
purchased during the festival.
Major sponsors this year are the city of Temecula,
Pechanga Entertainment Center, Paradise Chevro-
let Cadillac Oldsmobile and Rancon Real Estate.
Call the festival office at 699-6267 or visit
www. tiff.com.
For Social Scene coverage, call Sylvia Rochin Selby at (7~0) 740-
',~,54, or fax information to (760) 745-3769.
pLoducers~of 'Ll~at sum~me_ r in LA.' with Mike Kerri-
gan, festival program (flrector.
April Bouchard, from TVIFF presenting sponsor
Pechaoga Entertainment Center, with Tom and
Mona Strong of Potamus Press, Lee Tussing, and
more volunteers.
From left, Walter and Pat Josten of Blue Rider Pic-
tures, with some cast members from 'Shergar,'
The Californian
RON LYNN / FOR TIlE CALIFORNI.\N
Filmmaker Julia Stemock, who produced 'Foreign Correspondents' discusses her film at the Temecu-
la Valley International Film Festival on Sunday.
Visiting filmmakers prize
atmosphere in Temecula
LISA WEISS
Temecula is hip.
At least that's what filmmakers in town
for the Temecula Vallev International Film
Festival thought of a city some of them did-
n't knuw existed until th~v arrived here with
their films this weekend. '
They praised the city's relaxed atmos-
phere and friendly peepl~, as welI as how ef-
ficiently the festival was run.
"I didn't know where Temecula was. but
I've now gone to the Wine Counto,, to ~ome
antique shops and to some good restau-
rants,'' said producer Steve Stapinski, who
came from Boston with his short film,
"Sporting Dog," about a gambling attorney
who makes a wager with serious conse--
quences to get out of debt.
He said if he had another film bv this
time next year, he would definitely co'ne to
the festival again.
Y. II the films and workshops were in {me
'1 didn't know where
Temecula was, but I've now
gone to the Wine Country, to
some antique shops and to
some good restaurants.'
-- STEVE STAPINSKI
Producer
fihnmakers could relax and chat between
screenings.
"At some festivals, the films are shown in
a gymnasium or a town hall and thev just
hm;e a folding table set up for the fi]n~mak-
ers," said Los Angeles-based film producer
Julia Stemock. who brought her feature film
Rancho News
q 'zooo
Film festival dtaws ' a cro va
..... Photo by Heather Carawan / Community Publications Group
Writer and director Javier Grillo-Marxuach attends the opening night ceremonies with his fiancee Darra. His
short film "Cops on the Edge" was featured at the festival. · ....... : ....... ' · - -~
By Tony Ault
Cornmunitv Publications Group
TEMECULA -- Record-
breaking attendance, rave com-
ments from film producers,
actors and even praise from the
mayor may have quenched the
fires of doubt that the annual
Temecula Valley International
Film Festival didn't bring
enough acclaim to the city.
At least that is what
Temecula Mayor Jeff Stone is
going to report to his colleagues
on the city council who ques-
tioned the festival's v/~lue in
attracting film production com-
panies and tourists to the-com-
munity.
Stone, who attended the
four-.day festival's opening cere-
momes last Thursday, the sold-
out Black Tie Lifetime
Achievement Award banquet
for actor Michael York on
· Saturday night and viewed a
half-dozen films, praised the
'efforts of the festival promoters.
He said the film festival has
gone '"over the hump," by
· becoming a world-class event.
What surprised the festival
promoters -- including its
founder Jo Moulton and Mike
Kerrigan -- was the attendance
at the opening night cere-
See FESTIVAL, A-8
Photo by Heather Carawan / Community Publications Group
Jay C. Resar, associate producer and actor for
"That Summer in LA," attended opening
night, which attracted about 375 people.
FESTIVAL
monies. Numerous'fil~ pr~)~lu~em, ~t~;s'and
directors from as far away hs France were in
attendance. ' · ...
"I never expected we would see this many
filmmakers here tonight," said
Thursc~ay just before th~ first
screemngs at the Movie Experience in the
Tower Plaza.
Kerrigan said several producers, despite a
foul-up in airline reservations and accommo-
dations, flew in from France and London to be
in attendance. "It's amazing. But, here they
are," he said. ·
Ticket sales figures released Monday
showed festival organizers that attendance
was up more than 300 percent from last Year.
Early figures indicated that about 3,00(J tick-
ets were sold Friday through Sunday for the
more than 80 films premiering at the festival,
festival officials reported. Last year the total
was only 825. The 3,000 tickets sold do not
include the 328 people on hand at the Temeku
Country Club Black Tie dinner where Michael
York was presented his Lifetime Achievement
Award·
The opening night ceremonies drew approx-
imately 375, while closing ceremonies brought
about 275 to the theater comp!ex Sunday.
Stone, who before this year s festival joined
his fellow councilmen in criticizing the event
for poor attendance and the lack of interest by
filmmakers looking for new location sites. This
year the city provided $30,000 to the festival to
help defray their expenses in' hopes it would
bring more business to the community. The
:ouncil told promoters that unless they could
;how the benefit the event brings to the area,
'hey may withhold their support in 2001.
"I thir~k the festival has gone over the hump
Film festival names
'best'award winners
The following is a list of
the Temecula Valley
International Film
Festival's best feature, for-
eign, student and docu-
mentary films as selected
by judges and those
attending the premieres
Sept. 14-18 at the Movie
Experience in the
Temecula Tower Plaza:
"Sporting Dog," second
place
~Best Student Film:
"Clara"
· Best Documentarv:
"My American
Grandmother"
Jury Award Winners:
Audience Choice
Award Winnem:
Best Feature Film:
"Seven Girffriends," first
place
"Rave," second place
Best Foreien Film:
"My Mother Frank," first
place
"The Wedding Cow," sec-
ond place
Best Short Film:
"The Ladies Room L.A.,'
first place
Best Feature Film:
"Bread and Roses"
"'Best Foreign Film:
"Best"
Best Short Film:
"Odessa"
Best Student Film:
"Thursday Afternoon"
Best Documental_:
"Up Syndrome"
Outstandin~ Community
Service Award
"Every 15 Minutes"
this year," Stone told reporters. "I've been
impressed with the turnout and I'm looking
forward to next year. They made a believer out
of me."
Adding to Stone's observations Was an
announcement immediately after' the festival
that Cinema Entertainment Alliance and Film
Artists Network (FAN), an international .coop-
erative of Independent Filmmakers were to
host a Mini Film Market Monday (Sept. 18)
through Thursday (Sept. 21) at the Movie
Experience.
Filmmakers' had an opportunity to show
their 35mm features to potential film buyers
and distributors, like HBO and Showtime.
~GHLAf~I~' to hype cause
as much as movies. See Page 3.
Southwest Riverside Cc
I~I~EI~IWT filmmakers
Iommm for risks, see Page e.
The sJxlh
annual
Temecuia galley International Rim Festival plays through Sunda:
Festival is
a veritable
British
Invasion
The Californian
[] Organizer finds
English influence a
pleasant surprise
BARBARA MC LEAN
FOR THE CALIFORNIAN
Accidents aren't supposed
to be something to get excited
about, but Jo Moulton was
pleasantly surprised when she
took a look at finished plans
for the sixth annual Temecula
Valley International Film Festi-
v'al.
Moulton, the event organiz-
er, said she is excited about
this year's "accidental" British
theme.
"Several of our films are
British and our Lifetime
Achievement Award goes to
MichaelYork, plus we have sew
emi films by British directors
and some that feature British
actors," Moulton said. "In fact,
Virgin Atlantic Airways was so
interested that they joined as
last-m/nute sponsors."
Mouhon, who is the founder
of the festival and has been in-
volved in each one, has im-
proved it to where major stu-
dios have noticed.
"Last year, we had 15 fi/ms
from MGM when they were
celebrating their 75th anmver-
sary," she said.
"This year, we have three
films from Miramar, so we are
definitely attracting the atten-
tion of some of the larger
movie companies."
The obvious question that
arises from such attention is
"What is the impact for South-
west County?"
Moukon believes the acci-
dental British Invasion in cine-
· FESTIVAL
Continued fi*om 3
Organizers notice
a distinct British
feel in the films,
invited guests
ma has increased tourism. She
recently received a phone call
from the Tourism Board from
the Isle of Man.
"They were so excited that
we showed a movie here that
was filmed on the Isle of Man,"
she said with a giggle.
Kelly Daniels of Timmy D
Productions has helped Moul-
ton this event. Daniels shares
the excitement for the week-
end.
"There is definitely an in-
ternational approach, because
the people that are making
the films are also marketing
the films, so in a roundabout
way, they are also marketing
the Temecula Valley," Daniels
said.
Film crews have also been
known to come to town.
Daniels, who worked for 10
years with the Temecula VaUey
Chamber of Commerce, credits
the festival for that.
"The film companies eat
l~ere. ~r °~ur..~e~n~,.~he
· ' said. "They stay in our hotels, cept B:
use our copy shops and shop in an Ind
our stores. It's great for busi. the ir
ness." movie.
The festival will utilize The Son
Movie Experience theaters at tries r,
Tower Plaza on Ynez Road in val, art
Tem.ecula. An advantage of that Philipl
setnng will be stadium-style Canad~
seating. ' Swit~e:
"This is definitely a plus," In a
Moulton said. "To have our noted
films shown in a nice theater have s
will certainly be enjoyed by the cludin~
public and screeners alike." and Te
The festival will feature 17 versit3
world premieres -- which in- School
eludes seven features, two doc- FiLm S~
umentaries and eight "shorts" of Texa
-- and 12 U.S. premieres. The
Although Moulton has pre- shops t
viewed many more films than niques.
what will run at the festival, role of
she has picked a personal fa- Aisc
vorite, will ge~
· The movie is based on a wid. Worksk
ow who wants to attend college a.m. to
with her son. Sunda.~
"I just loved 'My Mother shop is
Frank.' It is a drama-comedy so The
typical of today's society," she schedu~
said. sion is
Major stars are included in Wrap a
the films. Pierce Brosnan of the Awards
James Bond film series stars in day. Ad
"Grey Fox." $10.
The movie is based on the As fl
true story of Archie Grey Owl. missim
Moulton thinks what kept the films m
film out of mainstream release be purc
.wa_s_..t...h_.a.t p~e o p. l_e. _w. oul~n_ ~.t..: ~ :. Call
AC
JAMES CURRAN
STAFF WRIT~P,
Hard to believe the hands
that hold swords and break
boards can also be the ones to
offer help.
But when Adrian Paul --
the actor who stars in the
"Highlander" television show
and movie series -- comes to
Southwest County for the
Temecula Valley International
Film Festival, he will be offer-
ing advice on the entertain.
ment business and seeking in-
put for a charitable organiza-
tion he created.
Paul, who reprised his role
as Duncan MacLeod in the
currently released movie
"Highlander: Endgame," will
appear at t~vo events for the
festival. Paul will hobnob with
people who attend the Satur-
day evening gala. He will fol-
low chat at 10 a.m. Sunday at
Scarcella's Italian Grill in
Temecula with an informal
discussion about film and on
Protect, Educate and Aid Chil-
dren Everywhere.
PEACE schedules celebri-
ties to appear at schools
around Southern California.
Once at the schools, these
"guest stars" participate in
things from stay-in-class dis-
cussions to interactive story-
telling.
Unlike other celebrities
who simply lend a name to a
project, Paul said he created
PEACE from scratch.
"I've been in charities be-
fore," Paul said. "The success
of the ('Highlander') series --
with what kids saw in me as a
role model -- I would like to
see if I could get others to
teach kids the way they teach
me. A lot of celebrities never
The Californian
the high road
Adrian Paul comes to festival
to talk films, charity
q ~%, 2.0GO
HIGHLANDER
Continued from
Paul thinks that
'Endgame' could
be his swan song
as an 'immortal'
'One word -- determination .... There's a
lot of good actors who didn't make it
because the didn't have the
determination.'
-- ADRIAN PAUL
On how to make it in the entertainment industry
had really gone to events where
kids would learn a life lesson."
Paul is an exponent of hung
kar kung fu and was an accom-
plished dancer before he started
acting. He played MacLeod for
six years on the TV show, in
which a ~l~t society of people
called "immortals" walked the
earth with only one way to die --
decapitation at the hands of an-
other. MacLeod and other im-
mortals would live for centuries,
elirrfnadng each other for sport
while gaining sU'ength.
The movie earned mom than
$6 migion in its flint week in the-
aters and is still in the Top 10
box office releases.
In "Endgame," Paul's Duncan
is teamed with his brother --
played by Christopher Lambert
-- to take on an immortal with
far superior strength. But al-
though "Highlander" has a vio-
lent prermse, Paul said b_is char-
acter had grown sick of swords
toward the end of theTV show.
"It's interesdning," Paul said.
"In a sense, he became much
more laid back. It was like he
was saying 'I want to live in a
peaceful existence. I don't want
to do this: He does thJn~ out of
necessity and to me, that's who
heroes are."
Paul said he thinks that as
the character grew, as did he.
"I think always when you
play a character, it becomes a
part of you -- especially in a se-
ties," Paul said. "Everything I do
is a bit of yin and yang. Over
time, you realize you don't have
to be that aggressive. It leaves
you lopsided as a human."
Still, "Endgame" holds a bit
of truth in the rifle.
"I think this will possibly be
my last 'Highlander' project,"
Paul said. "I do not want to be pi.
geonholed as Duncan
MacLeod."
Paul said he is currently
working on a number of other
projects -- as a writer and divec.
tor as well as an actor. He is par-
ticularly fascinated with a con-
cept based on the life of Giovan-
ni Giacomo Casanova.
"He's a 17th century James
Bond, if you will," Paul said. "It's
a script we're shopping around,
finding out if they'd be interest-
ed in it as a movie, a mini-se-
ties." '~
Originally, Paul was sched-
uled to'appear in Temecula for
an informal talk about what it
takes to make it in Hollywood.
Although his itinerary has
changed, he said his counsel
would be simple.
"One word -- determina.
rion," Paul said. "You beat your
head on the wall enough times
and either your head splits or
the wall splits. There's a lot of
good actors who didn't make it
because they didn't have the
termination. You have to have
· talenr~ but you have to keep do-
ing it."
If the tip is worth something
to local people, Paul is also hop-
ing it ~arrants a donation.
"We basically mn it on a
shoestring," he said. "There are
a lot of donations from fans ....
but the kids get so excited. (rye
heard) a teacher say '~est results
went up after you guys came in:
That made me very happy.
"It's a slow process, but I'm
very passionate about it:'
Local Businesses, Or,qanizations and Resident Professionals that TVlFF hired,
bought goods/services from or donated money to, YR 2000:
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
g.
10.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27.
28.
29.
30.
31.
32.
33.
34.
35.
36.
37.
38.
39.
40.
41.
42.
43.
Scarcella's Italian Grill
Califomia T's
The Califomia.n
Temeku Grill
Mexicana Restaurant
American Fence Co.
Potamus Press
Stacy Sievek -Indie Grip & Lighting
Starway Productions
Timmy d. Productions, Inc.
The Movie Experience
Sign For Success
Motel 6
Millenium Limousines, Inc.
Temecula Trophy
A Grape Escape Balloon Adventure-Rusty Manning
Strachota Insurance
Katie Crisp of Chaparral HS
Laurin Kendrick of Murrieta Valley High School
Office Depot
Staples
Kinko's
Local US Post Office
Local Federal Express
Stater Bros.
Von's
Aiberston's
Rite-Aid
Lowe's
The Theater Foundation
Kelly Daniels
Ellen Watkins
Michael Filanc
Jo Mou]ton
Temecula Valley Chamber of Commerce
Teresa Kolbes
Circuit City
Interiors for Today
Baskets & Balloons Too
Arden Realty/Tower Plaza
Joann Fabdcs
FireRose Communications
Rower CorraJ
CINEMA ENTERTAINMENT ALLIANCE · 27740 JEFFERSON AVE. ° SUITE ~00 · TEMECULA, CALIFORNIA 92590
909,699.6267 · 909.506.4193 fax
CINEMA ENTERTAINMENT ALLIANCE
27740 JEFFERSON AVE · SUITE 100 · TEMECULA, CALIFORNIA 92590
9096996267 · 9095064193 fax
www. tviff corn
YR 2000 Temecula Valley International Film Festival
Income Report
CASH SPONSORS
1. City of Temecula $30,000
2. Pechanga Entertainment Center $20,000
3. Paradise Chevmlnt Cadillac Oldsmobile $10,000
4. Rancon Real Estate $ 5,000
5. Bob Baker Subam-Carlsbed $ 5,000
6. Fallbrook National Bank $1,000
7. Union Bank of California $1,000
8. Eve Craig $1,000
SUB TOTAL: CASH $73,000
TRADE/IN-KIND SPONSORS
VALUE
1. The Press Enterprise $I 0,000
2. Potamus Press $ 7,500
3. Arden Rea~, Inc. $ 5,000
4. Sanbom Theaters, Inc. $ 5,000
5. The Californian $ 5,000
6. Entmtainment Roundup $ 5,000
7. KATY. 101.3 FM $ 5,000
8. K-FROG 92.9 $ 5,000
9. Indiespane.com $ 5,000
10. Barder& Barder Advmtising $ 5,000
11. Community PublicalJons Group $ 2,500
12. Neighbors $ 2,500
13. Inland Empire Magazine $ 2,500
14. FedEx $ 2,500
15. C~ystal Geyser $ 2,500
16. Timmy d. Productions $ 2,500
17. Isle of Man Tourism Board $ 2,500
18. Prasto's Gourmet Express $ 2,500
19. Indie Grip & Ughting $ 2,500
20. The Promenade Mall $ 2,500
21. PT Iversen.com $ 2,500
22. Big Screen City $ 2,500
23. T 94.5 KTMK-FM $ 2,500
1. Scarcella's Italian Grill $1,500
25. Temeku Hills Golf & Counf~y Club $1,500
26. Embassy Suites $1,500
27. Temecula Creek Inn $1,000
28. Stadium Pizza $1,000
SUB TOTAL IN-KIND/TRADE: $96,500
Page 2, YR 2000 Temecula Valley International Film Festival Income Report
TICKET SALES/CALL FOR ENTRY FEES
Box Office Cash & Check Transactions
Credit Card Transactions
Call for Entry Fees
$9,052.51
$1,394.76
$1,510.00
SUBCASH TOTAL: $11,957.27
TOTAL CASH INCOME FOR YR 2000:
$84,957.27
TOTAL TRADE / IN-KIND INCOME FOR YR 2000:
$96,500.00
CINEMA ENTERTAINMENT ALLIANCE
27740 JEFFERSON AVE · SUITE 100 · TEMECULA, CALIFORNIA 92590
909.6996267 · 9095064~93 fax
www tviff corn
2000 Temecula Valley International Film Festival
Expense Report
Staff/Consultants/Commissions
Jo Moulton
Mike Kenigan
Kevin Haaesrud
Nova Pictures/Pster Bamstt
Ellen Watkins
Teresa Kolbas
Kefly Daniels
Exec. In-Charge of Production
Film Program DirectorfCo-Writer
Celebrity Relations/Consultant
Programming Consultant
Sponsor Development-commies/on
Sponsor Development-commiesion
Sponsor Development-commission
SUB TOTAL:
Marketing/Advertising/Promotional Expenses
Calpix Int'l/Mike Ken'igan
Timmy D. ProdsJKelly Daniels
North County Times/Californian
Sign for Success
Barder & Barder Advertising
California T's
Timmy D. Productions
Bernard Yin
Uike Stephens
$10, 000.00
$ 3, 000.00
$ 2, 500.00
$ 2, O50.00
$ 2, 250.00
$1,000.00
$ 3,000.00
Film Projection/Expenses
The Movie Expedenco
Stacy Sievek
MPG-Multi. Media P~s. Group
Planet Post
$23~750.00
PR/Media Relations Se~fcos-LA $ 3, 00O.00
PR/Media/Ad Sondess-Temecula $ 2, 750.00
P~nt Advertising $1,515.52
Banners and Street Signage $ 821.89
Markedng Collaterals-Posters/Flyers, etc. $ 4, 820.16
Fes~dval T-Shirts $1,497.00
Magician/Face PaJntJngtClowns $ 500.00
Hospitality Suite Promo (Band) $ 200.00
Hoepitali~ Suite Promo (Bend) $ 250.00
Prinfin,cl Expenses
Potatoes Press
SUB TOTAL: $15,354.57
Theater Rental
Print/Traffic/Projection Se~icos
VideslData Projection Rental
Sony Betaesm SP Rental
Special Events Expenses
Cate~ng Expenses
Starway Productions
American Fence Co.
Sunny Thomas
$ 6, 000.00
$1,200.00
$1,500.00
$ 700.00
SUB TOTAL: ~ 8~400.00
Pfin'dng So, ices $ 3, 000.00
SUB TOTAL: $ 3,000.00
Temeku Grill
Mexicana
Soarcella's Italian Gdll
Sound System Rental
Fencing Expenses
Uquor/Beverage Expenses
$ 9,336.00
$ 119.90
$1, 20920
$ 5O0.00
$ 311.00
$ 879.29
SUB TOTAL: $12,355.39
Pa.qe 2, YR 2000 Temecula Valley International Film Festival Expense Report
Special Guests/Filmmaker Expenses
Hotel Room Accomrceda'dons $ 933.23
Miflenium Umousines Inc. UmolShuPJe service $1,149.50
Sovereign Exec. Se~ices Security $ 700.00
Temecula Trophy Michael York's Trophy $ 531.81
A Grape Escape Balloon Advent. Hot AJr Balloon Ride for filmmakers $ 500.50
SUB TOTAL: $ 3,814.54
Office/Misc. Expenses
Office Supplies/Copying/Hospitality Suite/Operational Expenses
Telephone
Postage/Freight
Sb'achota Insurance
PSTSPS. Inc
Richard Spencer
Scholarship
Dona'den
Bank Charges
Insurance Coverage
Accounting Sen, ices
Legal Services
Katie Crisp-Chaparral HS
Laudn Kendfick - Muninta Valley HS
Theater Foundation
SUB TOTAL:
$2,504.4~
$1,340.62
$ 815.00
$1,811.75
$1,000.00
$1,050.00
$1,000.00
$1,000,00
$1,000.00
$ 99.34
11,571.19
TOTAL EXPENSES FOR YR 2000
$78,245.69
TOTAL CASH INCOME for YR 2000
$84,957.27
NET PROFIT (LOSS}
$6,711.58
Submitted b~
/_.~ Moulton
TVIFF Founder/Director
Independently Audited for
Cinema Entertainment Alliance by:
Terri' Sl~afor, Enr~led Agent #55664
PSTSPS, Inc., a Professional Business Management Corp.
P.O. Box 641097, Los Angelen, CA 90064
Account Type:
Account Title:
ACCOUNT BALANCE
DDA Account Number: 07238-06649
CINEMA ENTERTAINMENT ALLIANCE
DBA TEMECULA VALLEY INTL FILM FEST
DBA SAN DIEGO WORLD FILM FESTIVAL
Date Open: 3/99
Activity:10/24/00
Statement:10/18/00
[nfo Restrict: N
FIT withhold:
ACCOUlVT BALANCE: /h6%~7~I.~5~y Average Balance: 20,297.66
Available Balance: c-~67~g~1~'~'~ Minimum Balance: .00
Start Balance: 6,711.58 Interest
Hold: .00 .00
Debit: .00 .00
Ver Credit: .00 .00
Unver Credit: .00 .00
NSF Days: 0 Maint Fee: .00 .00
No. of WD: 0 Ex WD Fee: .00 .00
BAL DUE BANK: .00 .00
Flags:
Yr to date:
Prior year:
Unpd Interest:
Terminal. Id: W0072638 User Id: ~ Thursday, Nov. 2,2000 11:22:44
NOTE: THE NOVEMBER BANK STATEMENT SHOUED INCLUDE THE FOLLOWING:
Beginning Balance, 10/18/00
Wtihdrawals:
Check No.
Check No.
Check No.
$9,072.38
310 Theater Foundation (Donation) $1,000.00
329 Airborne Express (for Miramax Flints) $52.50
330 Donald Moulton (Phone reimbursements) $1,308.30
Ending Balance, 11/18/00
$6,711.S8'
* R/, 711 .SB - Amount ihat will be reflected as ending balance for ~e November bank
ATTACHMENT E - FESTIVAL MANAGEMENT & OPERATIONS TEAM
R:\Wolnickg~Agendareports~Film Festival 2001 Staff Report,doc
Management & Operations Team
The Temecula Valley International Film Festival core management & event
operations team are composed of independent film industry professionals and
local community film festival advocates:
· Jo Moulton & Eve Craig, Founder & Co-Founder of the Temecula Valley Film Council and
Temecula Valley Int'l Festival. Both will serve as this year's Festival Director and Festival
Advisor, respectively.
· Steve Montal, FestivaIProgram Director
· Kevin Haasarud, Talent Relations & Film Programmer
· Maggi Allen, Event Operations Director
· Kelly Daniels, Marketing & Sponsor Development
· Timmy D. Daniels, Music Competition Coordinator
· Ellen Watkins, Marketplace / Presenters Coordinator
· Stacy Sievek, Technical Director (Print/Traffic & Projection)
· Pat Martinez, Black Tie Awards Gala Chairperson
· Sunny Thomas & Joanne Flowers, Opening Night Chair & Co-Chair
· Steve Phelps - Festival Workshop Series Chairperson
· Patty Slaton & Pat Martinez- Closing Night Chair & Co-Chair
· Sylvia Bula - Volunteers Coordinator
· Shari Kuwahara - Sponsor Dev. Associate & Hospitality Chairperson
· Darrell Connerton - Theater Operations/Presenters Coordinator
· Mollie Mathes, Karen Connerton & Mary Williams, Guest Relations
· Mark Jones and the Chaparral HS Video Class, Videographers
· Lincoln King Cliby, Audience Choice Ballot Coordinator
Together, the above group make a formidable team of talented and committed
group of individuals with combined experiences in motion picture, television,
public relations, event management and non-profit fundraising activities.
CINEMA ENTERTAINMENT ALLIANCE · 27740 JEFFERSON AVE. · SUITE ioo · TEMECULA, CALIFORNIA 92590
909.699.6267 · 909.506.4193 fax
ITEM 12
TO:
FROM:
DATE:
SUBJECT:
CITY OFTEMECULA
AGENDA REPORT
City ManagedCity Council
APPROVAL
CITY ATTORNEY
DIRECTOR OF FINANCE~
II
C,TY,,ANAOE
/~,~'Villiam G. Hughes, Director of Public Works/City Engineer
April 24, 2001
1-15/Rancho California Road Interchange Improvements (Project No.
PW95-12) Southern California Gas Company (SCG) Work Authorization
Agreement to Relocate an existing 6" High Pressure Gas Main
PREPARED BY:
Amer Attar, Senior Engineer
Steven W. Beswick, Associate Engineer
RECOMMENDATION: That the City Council authorize payment to the Southern California
Gas Company (SCG) for construction fees in the amount of $27,409.40.
BACKGROUND: On November 12, 1996, the City Council approved the Work
Authorization Agreement with SCG and authorized payment to SCG in the amount of $23,234.00.
The City received a revised invoice from SCG on March 22, 2001, which represents a fair
representation of what additional costs the City is responsible to pay. The Work Authorization
Agreement sets forth the terms and conditions associated with the relocation of the gas main. The
requirements of the Work Authorization Agreement state that the City is responsible to pay for 50%
of the actual cost of the relocation and any deviations from the proposed description of work made
by SCG to meet practical requirements when required.
Approximately 1989 feet of an existing 6" high-pressure gas main south of the Rancho California
Road will be abandoned. The gas main is located about 400 feet south of the Rancho California
Bridge within an existing gas easement in the State right of way, and also within an existing gas
easement on the Union 76 gas station and Dennys properties.
SCG constructed 1548 feet of new gas main from intersection of Old Town Front Street to the
Caltrans traffic signal located on the east side of I-15 on Rancho California Road. About 1000 feet
of new gas main was constructed within the new bridge section over 1-15 and 548 feet in the
widened section on the south side of Rancho California Road.
SCG decided to relocate 548 of new gas main along the widened portion of Rancho California Road
between Old Town Front Street and the Caltrans traffic signal located on the west side of 1-15 on
Rancho California Road and they were allowed to make that decision per the terms and conditions
of the Work Authorization Agreement.
1
r:~agdrpt~2001~0424\pw95-12,SCG
The total cost of the SCG gas main relocation with credits for depreciation on replaced gas
properties was $169,847.56. One half of the costs the Citywould have been responsible for was
$84,923.78, however, SCG provided a credit of $34,280.38 for SCG's convenience (Realigning the
gas main within the widened section on the south side of Rancho California Road between Old
Town Front Street and the Caltrans traffic signal located on the west side of I-15) and eliminated a
previously included cost of $7,181.19 for AFUDC (Allowance Funds Use During Construction) costs.
In the original agreement, the City's share of $23,234.00 represented the cost of what the City would
have been responsible for, if the gas main was realigned to avoid the new northbound loop ramp
and exit ramp. SCG decided to use the City's share of $23,234.00 to construct a new gas main
through the widened section on the south side of Rancho California Road and the new bridge
section over I-15. The benefit of this decision is to prevent future closures of freeway exit ramps to
repair gas line breaks.
FISCAL IMPACT: The Rancho California Road Interchange Improvements Project was funded
with Measure "A' and Capital Project Reserves. Adequate funds are available in account number
210-165-601-5804 for the required payment to SCG.
ATTACHMENTS:
SCG Work Authorization Agreement
approved by City Council on November 12, 1996
2
r:~agdrpt~2001~0424~pw95-12.SCG
DATE:
TO:
Mi~I~ING OF:
AGENDA 1TEM
No.:
SUBJECT:
MINUTE ACTION OF THE REDEV~JOPMENT AGENCY OF ~
CITY OF TEMECULA, CALIFORNIA
November 14, 1996
'Don Spagnolo - Principal Engineer
November 12, 1996
Item 4
1-15 RANCHO CALIFORNIA ROAD INTERCHANGE
IMPROVEMENTS, GAS COMPANY WORK AUTHORIZATION
AGI~k'~'~H~]T WITH SOUTm~ CALIFORNIA GAS COMPANY
FOR ~ RF~IOCATION OF A 6" HIGH PRF~qSURE GAS MAIN -
PROJECT NO. PW95-12
The motion was made by Agency Member Ford, seconded by Agency Member Roberts
to approve staff recommendation with the amendment that a 10% contingency will be
included.
4.1
4.2
Approve ~he Inl~agency Agreement and authorize the Chairperson to execute the
documents.
Authorize payment to the Southern California Gas Company for construction fees
in the amount of $23,234.00
The motion carried by the following vote:
AYES: 4 AGENCY MFMBERS:
NOES: 0
ABSENT: 0
ABSTAINED: I
AGENCY MEMBERS:
AGENCY MF_RdBERS:
AGENCY MEMBERS:
B'mtsall, Ford,
Umdemans
None
None
Stone
Roberts,
SOUTHERN CAL1]tORNIA GAS COMPANY - COLLECTIBLE WORK AUTHORIZATION
To: Southern California Gas Company Serial No. P
P.O. Box 3003
Rediands, CA 92373 File No.:GWO 72732
The Southern California Gas Company (hereafter "Company"), is authorized to alter its facilities, and City
of Temectda, (hereafter "Purchaser") agrees to reimburse the Company for fifty percent (50%) of the cost
of the work in connection with the relocation of 6" HP Gas main to clear bridge improvement work at
Rancho California and the 1-15 freeway interchange.
In Rancho California Road, install 1000' of 6" HP Steel Main & 300' of 12" Casing
Estimated Cost $46,468.00
50°,{, of Es'dmatod Cost $23,23~-00
IT IS UNDERSTOOD AND AGREED that the above description is general in nature, that this
authorization covers all work necessitated by the proposed project, and that deviation from the proposed
description may be made by the Company to meet the practical requirements of installation such as safety,
avoidance of structures, government authority, and Environmental Impact Reports when required.
Requests for changes in the above described work for the convenience of the Purchaser may be rejected by
the Company. If such changes are accepted, the Pumhaser agrees to reimburse the Company for the
actual cost of such work unless otherwise agreed to in writing.
THE ABOVE ESTIMATE IS FURNISHED ONLY FOR THE CONVENIENCE OF THE PARTIES
IIER~,TO. IT IS INTENDED TO REFLECT THE COMPANY'S GENERAL PAST EXPERIENCE OF
THE COST OF SIMILAR WORK LrtqDER FAVORABLE CONDITIONS. BECAUSE OF
UNFORESEEN CONTINGENCIES AND OTHER FACTORS, THE ACTUAL COST MAY BE
CONSIDERABLY HIGHER OR LOWER THAN THE ESTI1VIATE. THEREFORE, TH~ ESTIMATE IS
NOT TO BE CONSIDERED A WARRANTY BY THE COMPANY OF THE ACTUAL COST.
The actual cost, any agreed unit cost, or any firm estimate shall include overhead costs contained in the
Company's appropriate billing formula.
Payment is due and payable upon presentation of a bill to City of Teruecula, 43174 Business Park Drive,
Temecula, CA 92590.
In the case of defanlt or delay in payment, City of Temecula, shall pay to the Company all costs and
expenses incurred in the collection of any sum due, including attorney's fees and court costs. A deposit of
$23,234.00 will be made by the Purchaser as payment toward all costs for which the City of Temecula is
responsible, to be incurred by the Company for work performed pursuant to this agreement. Purchaser
agrees to pay, upon presentation, each billing issued for work completed and to make additional advance
deposits whenever the Company determines the cost of the work completed has substantially equaled twice
the amount of the deposit. If actual costs for which the City of Temecula is responsible exceed the
deposit(s), the Pumhaser shall pay the Company the difference; if the total cost for which the City of'
Temecula is responsible is less that the deposit(s), then the Company shall refund the difference.
Company shall perform, or cause to be performed, all of the work described in this Agreement and shall
assume all responsibility for said work being installed in accordance with all applicable laws and
regulations and standards of the Company.
The Purchaser shall indemnify and defend the Company against and save and hold it harmless from, any
and all liability, claims, demands, damages, and costs of every kind and nature for injury to or death of
any and all persons, including, without limitation, employees or representatives of the Company or of the
Pumhaser, or any other person or persons, and for damage, destruction, or loss, consequential or
otherwise, to or of any and all property, real or personal, including without limitation, property of the
CompanY or of the Purchaser, or of any other person or persons, resulting from or in any manner arising
out of or in connection with the performance of the work under this contract. Excluded from this
paragraph are only those injuries to or deaths of persens and damage, destruction, or loss to or of property
to the extent that such injury, death, or damages arises from the negligence or willful misconduct of the ·
Company or its employees or representatives.
The Company shall indemnify and defend the Purchaser against and save and hold it harmless from, any
and all liability, claims, demands, damages, and costs of every kind and nature for injury to or death of
any and all persons, including, without limitation, employees or representatives of the Company or of the
Purchaser, or any other person or persons, and for damage, destruction, or loss, consequential or
otherwise, to or of any and all property, real or personal, including without limitation, property of the
Company or of the Purchaser, or of any other person or persons, to the extent that any such injury, death,
loss, or damage results from or in any manner arises out of or in connection with Company's negligence in
the performance of the work under this contract..
~n~,e undersigned hereby represent th. at ~e)' ~e authorized to execute this agreement on behalf of a-ny
corporation, partnership, or other association hereinabove named.
Agreed to and accepted this 12th dayofNavernbo, r ,19 ,90 .
Southern California Gas Company Ci~I11~'~'~-' ~) ~
By:~ By: /~
~dernans
ATTEST:
~. Greek, CMC,, City Clerk
TEMECULA COMMUNITY
SERVICES DISTRICT
ITEM 1
A P PRO ~'/~/, ~'-"
CITY ATTORNEY
FINANCE DIRECTOI~~
CITY MANAGER
TO:
FROM:
DATE:
SUBJECT:
CITY OF TEMECULA
AGENDA REPORT
Board of Directors
Herman D. Parker, Director of Community Services -d~"~/.
April 24, 2001
4TM of July Fireworks Presentation
PREPARED BY:
Julie Crowe-Pelletier, Recreation Superintendent
RECOMMENDATION: That the Board of Directors award a contract to Pyro Spectaculars
for the preparation and display for the 2001 and 2002 4th of July Extravaganza fireworks show
presentations for an amount not to exceed $25,000 annually.
DISCUSSION: A Request for Qualifications (RFQ) was released by the City of
Temecula to solicit qualified vendors to provide professional services for the preparation and
display of the 4~ of July Extravaganza fireworks show presentations for 2001 and 2002 with
a third year option to renew. Robert Caran Productions and Pyro Spectaculars responded to
the Request for Qualifications (RFQ) and were interviewed by a panel comprised of
representatives from the Community Services Department, the City Manager's Department,
the Finance Department and the Fire Department.
Based upon the vendors' overall interview presentation, reference list and past experience, the
panel agreed unanimously that Pyro Spectaculars was the most qualified vendor to provide
such specialized services for the City of Temecula. Services provided will include a licensed
pyrotechnic operator, full electronic firing custom designed and choreographed twenty-three
minute "Sky Concert", insurance coverage, sales tax and delivery, as well as a simulcast of
the choreographed music via Temecula's local KATY 103.5 FM radio station.
FISCAL IMPACT: Cost to produce one (1) 4'h of July Extravaganza fireworks show annually
will not exceed $25,000. Unencumbered funds exist in account #190-183-999-5370.
R:\CROWEJ\AGENDAS\4th of July.01.doc
PYRO SPECTACULARS, INC.
Display Agreement (Special)
1) THIS AGREEMENT, entered into this__ day of 2001, by
and between PYRO SPECTACULARS, INC., a California corporation hereinafter
referred to as "PYRO" and City of Temecula, hereinafter referred to as "PURCHASER".
2) PYRO agrees to furnish PURCHASER, in accordance with the terms and conditions
hereinafter set forth, one fireworks display as per Program C, submitted, accepted and
made part hereof, including the services of a licensed pyrotechnic operator to take
charge of and, along with sufficient helpers, safely discharge the display.
The said display is scheduled to be performed on July 4, 2001 at Rancho California
Sports Park, on the Hilltop next to the Fire Station #84 - Pauba St.
3) PURCHASER, at its own expense, agrees to provide to PYRO:
A) A suitable DISPLAY SITE in which to stage the fireworks display, including a firing
and fallout zone reasonably acceptable to PYRO in which the fireworks and
fireworks debris may be exhibited, rise and fall safely. PYRO affirms that it has
physically inspected the site and validate that it was acceptable as configured on the
date of inspection.
B) Adequate policing, guard protection, roping, fencing and/or other crowd control
measures to prevent the access of the public or its property or any other people or
property not authorized by PYRO into the DISPLAY SITE.
C) The services and cost of standby firemen and/or any applicable permit fees as
required' by state and local statutes, ordinances or regulations.
D) Access by PYRO, at all times, to the DISPLAY SITE to set up the display.
If PURCHASER fails to fully comply with requirements A, B, C and/or D set forth above,
PYRO shall have no obligation to perform and PURCHASER agrees to pay to PYRO
the entire contract price plus any additional expenses incurred because of said failure.
If, in its sole discretion, PURCHASER designates an area for members of the public to
view the Display ("Spectator Area") and/or an area for vehicular parking ("Parking
Area"), the PURCHASER shall:
E) Ensure that the Spectator Area does not infringe on the Display Area;
F) Have sole responsibility for ensuring that the terrain of the Spectator Area and any
structures thereon, including, but not limited to grandstands and bleachers are safe
for use by spectators;
G) Have sole responsibility for ensuring that the Parking Area is safe for use;
H) Have sole responsibility to police, monitor and appropriately control spectator
access to the Spectator Area and the Parking Area and police, monitor and
appropriately control the behavior of persons in these areas.
It is expressly agreed that PYRO, (including its operators and helpers) shall not inspect,
police, monitor or otherwise supervise any area of the site other than the Display Area,
except to ensure:
I) That any Spectator or Parking Areas are outside the Display Area; and
PYRO SPECTACULARS, INC,
Display Agreement (Special)
Page 2
J) After completion of the Display, that the Display Area is cleared of any live fireworks
debris originating from the program.
4) PURCHASER shall pay to PYRO the sum of TWENTY FIVE THOUSAND Dollars
($ 25,000.00). A deposit of $12,500.00 must be paid by May 4, 2001. Full final
payment is due the first regular business day after the date set for the display. A
finance charge at a periodic rate of 1.5% per month, 18% annual percentage rate, or
the maximum rate permitted by law, whichever is less, will be charged on the unpaid
balance after 10 days from the date of the display. PURCHASER, by signing this
Agreement, authorizes PYRO to receive and verify financial information concerning
PURCHASER from any person or entity.
5) PURCHASER agrees to assume the risk of weather, or other causes beyond
PYRO's control, which may prevent the display from being safely discharged on the
scheduled date, which may cause the cancellation of any event for which PURCHASER
has purchased the display, or which may affect or damage such portion of the exhibits
as must be placed and exposed a necessary time before the display. It shall be within
PYRO's sole discretion to determine whether or not the display may be safely
discharged on the scheduled date and at the scheduled time. If, for any reason beyond
PYRO's control, including, without limitation, inclement weather, PYRO is unable to
safely discharge the display on the scheduled date or should any event for which
PURCHASER has purchased the display be canceled, the parties shall attempt to
negotiate a new display date, which shall be within 60 days of the original display date.
PURCHASER further agrees to pay PYRO for any additional expenses made
necessary by this postponement. If they are unable to agree on a new display date,
PYRO shall be entitled to liquidated damages from PURCHASER as if PURCHASER
had canceled the display on the date set for the display, as provided in the following
paragraph.
6) PURCHASER shall have the option to unilaterally cancel this display prior to the
date of the display. If PURCHASER exercises this option, PURCHASER agrees to pay
to PYRO, as liquidated damages, the following percentages of the agreed contract
price. 1) 25% if cancellation three (3) or more days prior to the scheduled day of the
display, 2) 50% if cancellation occurs within two (2) days of the actual date set for the
display, 3) 75% if cancellation occurs on the date set for the display but prior to the time
physical set-up of the display actually begins, 4) prior to the time physical set-up of the
display 100% thereafter. If cancellation occurs prior to the date set for the display and
prior to the time set-up has occurred, PURCHASER agrees to pay PYRO in addition to
the above percentages, the value associated with any specific custom work performed
by PYRO or its agents including but not limited to music/narration tape production
and/or sponsors Iogos.
7) In the event PURCHASER cancels the display, it will be impractical or extremely
difficult to fix the actual amount of PYRO's damages. The foregoing represents a
reasonable estimate of the damages PYRO will suffer if PURCHASER cancels the
display.
PYRO SPECTACULARS, INC,
Display Agreement (Special)
Page 3
8) PYRO reserves the ownership rights and trade names that are used in or are a
product of the pyrotechnic display to be performed herein. Any reproduction by sound,
video or other duplication or recording process without the express written permission
of PYRO is prohibited.
9) PYRO agrees to furnish insurance coverage in connection with the Display only, for
the following risks and amounts: bodily injury and property damage, including products
liability FIVE MILLION DOLLARS ($5,000,000) combined single limits. Such insurance
shall be in accordance with Exhibit "A," and shall include PURCHASER as an additional
insured regarding claims made against PURCHASER for bodily injury or property
damage arising from the operations of PYRO in performing the Display provided for in
this Agreement. Such insurance afforded by PYRO shall not include claims made
against PURCHASER for bodily injury or property damage arising from A) Failure of
PURCHASER, including through or by its employees, agents and/or independent
contractors, to perform its obligations under this Agreement, including, without
limitation, those contained in Paragraph 3 of this Agreement; B) Failure of the
PURCHASER to provide discretionary Spectator and Parking Areas referred to in
Paragraph 3 of this Agreement. PURCHASER shall indemnify and hold PYRO
harmless from all claims and suits made against PYRO for bodily injury or property
damage arising from A) and B) of this Paragraph.
10) If any legal action is brought to enforce or interpret the terms or provisions of this
Agreement, the prevailing party shall be entitled to reasonable attorney fees and costs
in addition to any other relief to which they may be entitled.
11) In the event PYRO breaches this agreement, or is otherwise negligent in
performing the fireworks display provided for herein, PURCHASER shall, under no
circumstances, be entitled to recover monetary damages from PYRO beyond the
amount PURCHASER agreed to pay PYRO under this Agreement. PURCHASER shall
not, under any circumstances, be entitled to recover any consequential damages from
PYRO including, without limitation, for loss of income, business or profits. Nothing in
this paragraph shall be construed as a modification or limitation on the insurance
coverage afforded in Paragraph 9 above, or upon PYRO's indemnification if
PURCHASER for third party claims in the event PYRO fails to provide such insurance
coverage.
12) It is agreed, nothing in this AgCeement or in PYRO's performance of the display
provided for herein, shall be construed as forming a partnership or joint venture
between PURCHASER and PYRO. The parties hereto shall be severally responsible
for their own separate debts and obligations and neither party shall be held responsible
for any agreements or obligations not expressly provided for herein.
13) This Agreement shall be governed and interpreted under the laws of the State of
California. It is further agreed that the couds of the State of California shall have
exclusive jurisdiction to adjudicate any disputes arising out of this contract or
performance of the display provided for herein. It is further agreed that the Central
PYRO SPECTACULARS, INC,
Display Agreement (Special)
Page 4
Judicial District of San Bernardino County, California, shall be proper venue for any
such action.
14) Any Notice to the parties permitted or required under this Agreement may be given
by mailing such Notice in the United States Mail, postage prepaid, first class, addressed
as follows: PYRO - Pyro Spectaculars, Inc., P. O. Box 2329, Rialto, California 92377.
PURCHASER - City of Temecula - 43200 Business Park Drive, Temecula, CA 92589-
9033, July 4, 2001
15) All terms of this Agreement are in writing and may only be modified by written
agreement of both parties hereto. Both parties acknowledge they have received a copy
of said written Agreement and agree to be bound by said terms of written Agreement
only.
16) If there is more than one PURCHASER, they shall be jointly and severally
responsible to perform PURCHASER's obligations under this Agreement. This
Agreement shall become effective after it is executed and accepted by PURCHASER
and after it is executed by PYRO at PYRO's offices in Rialto, California. This
Agreement may be executed in several counter parts, including faxed copies, each one
of which shall be deemed an original against the party executing same. This
Agreement shall be binding upon the parties hereto and upon their heirs, successors,
executors, administrators and assigns. PURCHASER recognizes that because of the
nature of fireworks, an industry accepted level of 3% of the product used in any display
may not function as designed and this level of nonperformance is acceptable as full
performance. Price firm through May 4, 2001. Price includes full electronic firing.
PURCHASER to provide firing site, communications, and security. PURCHASER
responsible for payment of fire department permit and standby fees, if applicable.
In Witness Whereof the parties hereto, by and through their duly authorized agents,
have set their hands and seals this __ day of ., 2001.
PYRO SPECTACULARS, INC.:
JAMES R. SOUZA, President
PURCHASER:
., Title
EXHIBIT "A"
INSURANCE PROVISIONS
Consultant shall maintain in full force, during the term of the service contract, limits of
insurance, no less than:
General Liability: $5,000,000 combined single limit per occurrence for bodily injury
and property damage.
Automobile Liability: $1,000,000 combined single limit per accident for bodily injury
and property damage.
Worker's Compensation and Employer's Liability: Worker's Compensation as required
by the Labor Code of the State of California and Employer's Liability limits of
$1,000,000 per accident.
It is the Consultant's responsibility to notify the City if there are any changes in
insurance provisions that would impact the above requirements.
Insurance carrier(s) shall be approved to do business in the State of California and shall
have a Best rating of no less than A:VII.
Consultant shall furnish verification of the insurances required by this Exhibit A prior to
performance of the work specified in the contract.
ITEM 2
APPROVALS,/,
CITY ATTORNEY
DIRECTOR OF FINAI~E.._~j~,~_
CITY MANAGER
TO:
FROM:
DATE:
SUBJECT:
CITY OF TEMECULA
AGENDA REPORT
Board of Directors
Herman D. Parker, Director of Community Services
April 24, 2001
TCSD Proposed Rates and Charges for FY 2001-2002
PREPARED BY:
RECOMMENDATION:
Adopt a resolution entitled:
Barbara Smith, Management Analyst
That the Board of Directors:
RESOLUTION NO. CSD 2001-
A RESOLUTION OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE
TEMECULA COMMUNITY SERVICES DISTRICT
ACKNOWLEDGING THE FILING OF A REPORT WITH RESPECT
TO THE PROPOSED RATES AND CHARGES FOR FISCAL YEAR
2001-2002 AND SETrING A TIME AND PLACE FOR A PUBLIC
HEARING IN CONNECTION THEREWITH
BACKGROUND: The Temecula Community Services District (TCSD) operates under the authority
of Community Services District Law and provides residential street lighting, perimeter landscaping
and slope maintenance, recycling and refuse collection, and street and road maintenance services
in the City of Temecula. The boundaries of the TCSD are coterminous with the City, and the City
Council also serves as the Board of Directors of the TCSD.
The four current service levels of the TCSD include:
1. Service Level B - Residential Street Lighting.
2. Service Level C - Perimeter Landscaping and Slope Maintenance.
Service Level D - Recycling, Refuse Collection and Street Sweeping.
Service Level R - Streets and Roads.
The TCSD Rates and Charges for Service Levels B, C, D and R have not increased from last year.
The TCSD is required to complete an annual levy process which includes adopting a resolution
accepting the filing of a report on the proposed rates and charges necessary to provide the
aforementioned services; noticing each affected property owner in the City; and conducting a public
hearing to consider approving the proposed rates and charges.
Staff recommends that the Board of Directors adopt the resolution to accept the filing of the report
on the proposed rates and charges for FY 2001-2002 and schedule a public hearing concerning
these issues for June 12, 2001. Staff will then proceed with noticing each affected property owner in
the City regarding the proposed rates and charges and the June 12th public hearing.
FISCAL IMPACT: The revenue generated from the TCSD FY 2000-2001 Rates and Charges will
fund residential street lighting; perimeter landscaping and slope maintenance; recycling and refuse
collection; and street and road maintenance services in the City of Temecula. The proposed TCSD
levy budget for FY 2001-2002 is $4,447,937.
A'I-rACHMENTS:
Resolution of Intention for FY 2001-2002 TCSD Rates and Charges.
Preliminary Levy Report for FY 2001-2002.
RESOLUTION NO. CSD 2001-
A RESOLUTION OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE
TEMECULA COMMUNITY SERVICES DISTRICT
ACKNOWLEDGING THE FILING OF A REPORT WITH RESPECT
TO THE PROPOSED RATES AND CHARGES FOR FISCAL YEAR
2001-2002 AND SETTING A TIME AND PLACE FOR A PUBLIC
HEARING IN CONNECTION THEREWITH
THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE TEMECULA COMMUNITY SERVICES DISTRICT
HEREBY FINDS, RESOLVES, DECLARES, DETERMINES AND ORDERS AS FOLLOWS:
Section 1. Upon incorporation of the City of Temecula, effective December 1,1989,
votem approved the formation of the Temecula Community Services District ('q'CSD"), to provide
specified services to properties within its jurisdiction.
Section 2. Pursuant to Government Code Sections 61621 and 61621.2, the TCSD
has prescribed, revised and collected rates and charges for the services furnished by it, and has
elected to have these rates and charges collected on the tax roll in the same manner, by the same
persons, and at the same time as, together with and not separately from, property taxes collected
within the TCSD in the same manner prescribed by Government Code Sections 61765.2 to 61765.6,
inclusive. The TCSD proposes to continue such rates and charges for the operation, maintenance,
servicing and administration of street lighting, perimeter landscaping and slope maintenance, refuse
collection, and street and road improvements for the 2001-2002 fiscal year. All laws applicable to
the levy, collection, and enforcement of property taxes, including, but not limited to, those pertaining
to the matters of delinquency, correction, cancellation, refund and redemption, shall be applicable to
these rates and charges, except for California Revenue and Taxation Code Section 4831.
Section 3. Pursuant to Government Code Section 61621.2, the TCSD has caused a
written ("Report") to be prepared and filed with the Secretary of the TCSD, this Report contains a
description of each parcel of real property and the proposed amount of the rates and charges for
Fiscal Year 2001-2002. The Report is based upon a budget adopted by the Board of Directors for
the proposed services for specific areas where such services are provided including necessary staff
and administrative expenses. A summary of the Report containing the proposed rates and charges
is attached hereto as Exhibit A, entitled "Project Summary", and incorporated herein by this
reference. A copy of the Report is on file in the office of the Secretary of the TCSD, and is available
for public inspection.
Section 4. The Board of Directors hereby acknowledges the filing of the Report, and
appoints the 12th day of June, 2001, at the hour of 7:00 p.m., or as soon thereafter as feasible, in
the City Council Chambers at City Hall, 43200 Business Park Drive, Temecula, California, 92590, as
the time and place for the public hearing on the Report and the proposed rates and charges. At the
public hearing, the Board of Directors will hear and consider all objections or protests, if any to the
Report. The Board may continue the hearing from time to time.
Section 5. The District Secretary is hereby directed to give notice of the filing of the
Report and of the time and place of the hearing on the Report pursuant to the requirements of
Government Code Section 61765.2.
Section 6. The District Secretary shall certify to the adoption of this Resolution.
PASSED, APPROVED AND ADOPTED by the Board of Directors of the Temecula
Community Services District this 24th day of April, 2001.
Jeffrey E. Stone, President
ATTEST:
Susan W. Jones, CMC
City Clerk/District Secretary
[SEAL]
STATE OF CALIFORNIA )
COUNTY OF RIVERSIDE )
CITY OF TEMECULA )
SS
I HEREBY CERTIFY that the foregoing Resolution No. CSD 2001 - was duly adopted
by the Board of Directors of the Temecula Community Services District at the regular meeting
thereof, held on the 24th day of May, 2001, by the following vote of the Board of Directors
AYES: DIRECTORS:
NOES: DIRECTORS:
ABSENT: DIRECTORS:
EXHIBIT A
PROJECT SUMMARY
TEMECULA COMMUNITY SERVICES DISTRICT
On July 1,2000, Muni Financial, Inc. was retained by the City of Temecula to prepare the
Annual Levy Report for the Temecula Community Services District (TCSD) for the Fiscal Year 2001 -
2002. Pursuant to the Community Services District ~_aw, Division 3 of Title 6 of the Government
Code of the State of California, commencing with Section 61000 et seq., the TCSD has the power to
levy and collect rates and charges in order to carry on its operations and to provide the services and
facilities furnished by it.
The levy and collection of the rates and charges is accomplished by the identification and
description of each parcel within a specific service level. A Service Level is a defined area that
provides a specific service, operation and maintenance and/or program to only those parcels
contained within that service level.
The TCSD is currently composed of four (4) service levels. The descriptions of the service
levels are as follows:
Service Level B - Residential Street Lights. Operations, maintenance, utility costs
and administration of all residential street lights.
Service Level C - Perimeter Landscapinq and Slope Maintenance. Operations,
maintenance, utility costs, improvements, and administration for all perimeter
landscaping and slope maintenance areas maintained by the TCSD.
Service Level D - Recyclinq, Refuse Collection, and Street Sweepinq. Operations
and administration of the recycling and refuse program, and street sweeping
services for all single-family residential homes.
Service Level R - Street and Roads. Construction, installation, and maintenance of
unpaved streets and roads.
The Financial Analysis contained herein contains each Service Level including with their totals for
Fiscal Year 2001-2002 to be as follows:
SERVICE LEVEL/LEVY BUDGET
Service Level B $ 420,228
Service Level C $ 984,496
Service Level D $ 3,030,326
Service Level R $ 12,687
$/SFR
$ 25.68
Variable
$172.56
Variable
TOTAL TCSD LEVY FY 2001-2002
$ 4.447.937
The Levy and Collection amounts for all non-exempt parcels within the TCSD for the Fiscal Year
2001-2002 are as shown on the Levy Roll on file with the City Clerk/District Secretary.
TCSD
DEPARTMENTAL
REPORT
APPROVAL
CITY ATTORNEY
DIRECTOR OF FINAI~CE.
CITY MANAGER
TO:
FROM:
DATE:
SUBJECT:
CITY OFTEMECULA
AGENDA REPORT
Board of Directors
Herman D. Parker, Director of Community Service~
April 24, 2001
Departmental Report
PREPARED BY: Gall L. Zigler, Administrative Secretary
On December 1, 1999, staff released a Request for Qualifications (RFQ) for a Citywide Multi-Trail
System. Interviews were held on February 14, 2000 and the committee selected KTU& Associates
as the top ranked firm. The Board of Directors awarded a contract to KTU&A on March 28, 2000. A
trails questionnaire was mailed out to the residents in mid-September with approximately 450
responses returned. The consultant is currently researching use of existing easements and
connections within the City.
Staff released a Request for Qualifications (RFQ) for the design of an aquatic facility to be
constructed at Chaparral High School. The Board of Directors approved a Scope of Services
Agreement on December 7, 1999, with the number one ranked firm, RJM Design Group. The
architect and project design committee has completed the schematic design of the project. The
Board of Directors approved the Master Plan on June 27, 2000, and awarded a contract to RJM
Design Group on July 11, 2000, for the Phase II of the Design Contract. The construction
documents have been submitted to DSA. Staff is finalizing their comments on the plans and specs
and the Board of Directors have given authorization to release for public bid.
Staff released a Request for Qualifications (RFQ) for the design of a sports complex to be
constructed in the City. Statements of Qualifications were received on February 16, 2000, and
interviews were held of the four top ranked firms on March 28, 2000. A design contract was
awarded to RJM Design Group at the May 23, 2000, Board of Directors meeting. The first sub-
committee was held on November 7, 2000. With the adoption of the Wolf Creek Specific Plan at the
January 23, 2001 City Council meeting, it has been determined the 40 acre sports park will be
located in the Wolf Creek development. The architect is currently reviewing the sports league
questionnaires submitted by the Focal sports leagues and reviewing the plans and specifications for
the proposed site. A community workshop was held on Saturday, April 7, 2001, and the architect is
preparing a draft master plan based on the information received from the workshop and staff.
R:~ZIGLERG~XDEPTRPT~0301 .doc
April 19, 200l
The Master Plan for the Temecula Public Library was adopted at the September 26, 2000 City
Council Meeting. Staff has negotiated a contract with LPA for the final construction documents and
specifications for the Temecula Public Library. LPA is currently working on construction documents
for submittal for first plan check.
On June 15, 2000, staff released an RFQ requesting a Statement of Qualifications to prepare a
feasibility study for the development of a Water Park. A contract was awarded to the Natelson
Company at the September 27, 2000 City Council Meeting, for the preparation of the Water Park
Feasibility Study. A community workshop was held and the consultant completed the intercept
surveys. The consultant has compiled the information received from the community workshop and
intercept surveys and a committee meeting was held on March 7, 2001 to review the draft feasibility
study. The consultant has modified the draft feasibility study based on comments from the sub-
committee. A sub-committee meeting will be scheduled in the next 45 days to review the revised
draft.
Staff released an RFQ for the children's museum interior space planning, exhibit design, fabrication,
construction and installation. Interviews were held of the four top ranked firms on October 17, 2000.
Staff began negotiations with the top ranked firm, Sparks Exhibits and Environments. The
Agreement and Scope of Services was approved by the City Council on December 12, 2000. A
committee meeting was held on Monday, March 19, 2001. The committee discussed naming the
facility, space planning, and exhibit design and museum concepts. A community workshop is
scheduled for Monday, April 23, 2001.
The Development Services Division continues to participate in the development review for projects
within the City, as well as overseeing the development of parks and recreation facilities.
The Maintenance Division continues to oversee the maintenance of parks and recreation facilities,
as well as all other City owned public buildings and facilities. In addition, the Maintenance Division
assists in all aspects of Citywide special events.
The Recreation Division recently held their annual Spring Egg Hunt event on April 14, 2001. The
event included a hunt for Easter Eggs, party jumps, DJ's, and prize drawings, and held at Temeku
Hills Park, Rancho California Sports Park, Paloma Del Sol Park and Rotary Park.
The Recreation Division is currently in the planning stages for several citywide special events
including the July 1, 2001 Vail Ranch Annexation Celebration, 4th of July Parade and Fireworks
Program, and the Summer Concert Series. The Recreation Division continues to program classes,
activities and excursions at all City recreation facilities. Staff is currently finalizing the 2001
Summer/Fall edition of the Recreation brochure, which will be mailed out to the local residents the
first week of June.
R:~ZIGLE RGLY. DEPTRPT~0301 .doc
April 19, 2001
REDEVELOPMENT
AGENCY
ITEM 1
TO:
FROM:
DATE:
SUBJECT:
APP ROVA~'-~/,. ~'""
City Attorney
Director of Finance,' ~.
City Manager
CITY OF TEMECULA
AGENDA REPORT
City Council/Redevelopment Agency
City Manager/Executive Director Shawn D. Nelson
April 24. 2001
Formation of Joint Exercise of Powers Authority; Approval of
Deposit/Reimbursement Agreement
RECOMMENDATION:
1. That the City Council adopt a resolution entitled:
RESOLUTION NO. 01-
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF TEMECULA
AUTHORIZING FORMATION OF A JOINT EXERCISE OF POWERS
AUTHORITY WITH THE REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY OF THE CITY OF
TEMECULA
2. That the Redevelopment Agency adopt a resolution entitled:
RESOLUTION NO. RDA 01-
A RESOLUTION OF THE REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY OF THE CITY OF
TEMECULA AUTHORIZING FORMATION OF A JOINT EXERCISE OF
POWERS AUTHORITY WITH THE CITY OF TEMECULA
That the City and the Redevelopment Agency execute the joint exercise of powers
agreement creating the Temecula Public Financing Authority.
BACKGROUND: Ashby Development Company, Inc., Calloway 220, LLC (collectively, the
"Developers"), have requested that a community facilities district be formed to assist in the
financing of public improvements in the Roripaugh Ranch area by means of the formation of a
community facilities district under the provisions of the Mello-Roos Community Facilities Act of
1982. The Developers have agreed to pay all City out of pocket expenses in connection with
the proposed financing. City Staff, with the advice of the City's consultants, have
recommended that various actions be taken in order to allow formal consideration of the
Developers' request.
R:~Caravelli Denlse',AGENDAS~Agendas Butterlield Stage~StaffRptClty.doc
CITY OF TEMECULA AGENDA REPORT
Formation of Joint Exercise of Powem Authority
Page 2
The City Attorney has recommended that the City and the Redevelopment Agency form a joint
exercise of powers authority in order to conduct the proceedings related to the proposed
financing. Under California law, a joint exercise of powers authority is a separate legal entity
from the public agencies that create it, and its debts and liabilities are not those of the public
agencies that create it.
it is proposed that the City and the Redevelopment Agency form the Temecula Public Financing
Authority (the "Authority"), which would then consider the formation of a community facilities
district and the issuance of bonds necessary to finance the public improvements.
Because the Authority will be a separate legal entity from the City and the Redevelopment
Agency, no funds or assets of the City or the Redevelopment Agency will be liable for the
payment of debt service on any bonds issued by the Authority. The bonds will be secured
solely by the proceeds of special taxes levied on land included within the boundaries of the
community facilities district. The City Council members will act as the Board of Directors of the
Authority, so that they can control all aspects of any Authority bond issue.
It is expected that the Authority will form a community facilities district in connection with the
proposed financing. The proposed financing structure will ensure that only properties included
within the proposed community facilities district will be taxed to pay for the bonds, and the
bonds will be payable solely from the proceeds of those special taxes. The bonds will not be
general obligations of the City or the Redevelopment Agency, but only limited obligations of the
Authority, payable from special taxes levied on land included within the boundaries of the
community facilities district.
The Authority may establish other community facilities districts in the future in connection with
the financing of public improvements in the City other than in the Roripaugh Ranch area and
could also be used in connection with other City and Agency financings.
SPECIFIC ACTIONS: In order to begin the process to consider the formation of the community
facilities district and the issuance of the bonds, the following actions must occur:
The City and the Redevelopment Agency each must consider the adoption of a
resolution authorizing them to enter into a joint exercise of powers agreement to
create the Temecula Public Financing Authority. The City resolution also
approves a deposit/reimbursement agreement with the Developers and makes a
finding that the formation of the Authority, and the contemplated formation of a
community facilities district and issuance of special tax bonds by the Authority
are not a "Project" under the California Environmental Quality Act.
Following the adoption of their respective resolutions, the appropriate officers of
the City and the Redevelopment Agency must execute the joint exercise of
powers agreement.
CITY OF TEMECULA AGENDA REPORT
Formation of Joint Exercise of Powers Authority
Page 3
The Temecula Public Financing Authority will then, by minute order, appoint a
Chairperson, and consider adoption of a resolution with respect to meetings and
other administrative matters. The Authority will also consider adoption of a
resolution adopting local goals and policies for its Mello-Roos districts. Under
applicable State law, a new community facilities district cannot be formed unless
the entity which forms it has first adopted local goals and policies which satisfy
certain requirements of law. The suggested local goals and policies only pertain
to the specific financing contemplated by the Authority, and would not apply to
any community facilities district that may be created in the future by the City.
The Temecula Public Financing Authority will then consider adoption of a
resolution of intention acknowledging receipt of a petition to form a community
facilities district, and authorizing and directing the engagement of consulting
firms and other actions related to the proposed community facilities district.
FISCAL IMPACT: The Developers have agreed to pay all out of pocket expenses incurred
relative to the proposed financing. Costs of issuance of the proposed bond issue will be paid
from the proceeds of the bonds to be issued by the joint exercise of powers authority. All
annual costs of administering the bond issued will be paid by special taxes levied on the
properties in the community facilities district.
Neither the City nor the Redevelopment Agency will have any responsibility for the payment of
debt service on any bonds issued by the Temecula Public Financing Authority.
Attachments: Resolutions (2)
Joint Exercise of Powers Agreement
RESOLUTION NO. 01-
A RESOLUTION OF THE CiTY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF TEMECULA
AUTHORIZING FORMATION OF A JOINT EXERCISE OF POWERS
AUTHORITY WITH THE REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY OF THE CITY OF
TEMECULA, MAKING CEQA DETERMINATIONS AND APPROVING
DEPOSIT/REIMBURSEMENT AGREEMENT
WHEREAS, the City of Temecula (the "City") and the Redevelopment Agency of the City
of Temecula (the "Agency") desire to assist in the financing and refinancing of public capital
improvements in the City; and
WHEREAS, in connection with such assistance, the City and the Agency propose to
form a joint exercise of powers authorities pursuant to Article 1 (commencing with Section
6500) of Chapter 5 of Division 7 of Title 1 of the California Government Code, to exercise the
powers of the City and the Agency, and to enable the use of financing techniques that may
reduce local borrowing costs, and to otherwise promote the greater use of existing and new
financial instruments and mechanisms, all in accordance with the financing and refinancing of
public improvements by and through community facilities districts to be formed by such joint
powers authority; and
WHEREAS, a form of joint exercise of powers agreement (the "Joint Powers
Agreement") between the City and the Agency creating the Temecula Public Financing
Authority (the "Authority"), has been filed with the City Clerk, and the City Council, with the aid
of City staff, have reviewed the Joint Powers Agreement; and
WHEREAS, the City Council now desires to approve the Joint Powers Agreement, and
to authorize its execution and delivery; and
WHEREAS, Ashby Development Company, Inc. and Calloway 220, LLC (collectively,
the "Developers") have requested that the Authority form a community facilities district and have
advanced funds to pay costs of the City and the Authority related thereto; and
WHEREAS, the City desires to enter into a Deposit/Reimbursement Agreement with the
Authority and the Developers (the "Deposit Agreement"), regarding the disposition of funds
advanced by the Developers.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED by the City Council of the City of Temecula as
follows:
Section 1. Formation of Joint Powers Authority. The City Council hereby authorizes
the officers and staff members of the City to assist in the organization of a joint exercise of
powers authority between the City and the Agency to be known as the "Temecula Public
Financing Authority." The City Council hereby approves and authorizes the Mayor to execute
and deliver and the City Clerk to attest the Joint Powers Agreement forming said joint exercise
of powers authority, in the form on file with the City Clerk together with any changes therein
deemed advisable by the City Attorney, the approval of such changes to be conclusively
evidenced by. the execution and delivery by the City of the Joint Powers Agreement.
Section 2. Deposit A,qreement. The City Council hereby approves and authorizes the
City Manager to execute and deliver the Deposit Agreement, in the form on file with the City
Clerk together with any changes therein deemed advisable by the City Attorney, the approval of
such changes to be conclusively evidenced by the execution and delivery by the City of the
Deposit Agreement.
Section 3. No CEQA Proiect. The City Council hereby determines that the formation of
the Authority, and the contemplated formation of a community facilities district and issuance of
community facilities district special tax bonds involving the Authority, in accordance with Section
15061(b) of the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) Guidelines are not a "Project," as
defined in Section 15378 of the CEQA Guidelines, and are therefore exempt from the
requirements of CEQA. Pursuant to CEQA Guidelines Sections 15061(d) and 15062, the City
Clerk is hereby directed to cause a Notice of Exemption to be prepared, executed and filed in
regard to the foregoing determination.
Section 4. Official Actions. The Mayor, City Manager, City Clerk and all other officers
of the City are hereby authorized and directed to take all actions and do all things necessary or
desirable hereunder with respect to the formation of said joint exercise of powers authority and
the implementation of the Deposit Agreement, including but not limited to the execution and
delivery of any and all agreements, certificates, instruments and other documents, which they,
or any of them, may deem necessary or desirable and not inconsistent with the purposes of this
Resolution.
PASSED, APPROVED AND ADOPTED, by the City Council of the City of Temecula, at
a regular meeting held on the 24th day of April, 2001.
ATTEST:
Jeff Comerchero, Mayor
Susan W. Jones, CMC
City Clerk/Authority Secretary
STATE OF CALIFORNIA )
COUNTY OF RIVERSIDE ) ss
CITY OF TEMECULA )
I, Susan Jones, City Clerk of the City of Temecula, HEREBY DO CERTIFY that the
foregoing Resolution No. 01- was duly adopted at a regular meeting of the City Council of
the City of Temecula on the 24th day of April, 2001, by the following roll call vote:
AYES:
COUNCILMEMBERS:
NAYS:
COUNCILMEMBERS:
ABSENT:
COUNCILMEMBERS:
ABSTAINED:
COUNCILMEMBERS:
Susan W. Jones, CMC
City Cler~Authority Secretary
RESOLUTION NO. RDA 01-
A RESOLUTION OF THE REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY OF THE CITY OF
TEMECULA AUTHORIZING FORMATION OF A JOINT EXERCISE OF
POWERS AUTHORITY WITH THE CITY OF TEMECULA
WHEREAS, the Redevelopment Agency of the City of Temecula (the "Agency") and the
City of Temecula (the "City") desire to assist in the financing and refinancing of public capital
improvements in the City; and
WHEREAS, in connection with such assistance, the Agency and the City propose to
form a joint exercise of powers authority pursuant to Article 1 (commencing with Section 6500)
of Chapter 5 of Division 7 of Title 1 of the California Government Code, to exercise the powers
of the Agency and the City, and to enable the use of financing techniques that may reduce local
borrowing costs, and to otherwise promote the greater use of existing and new financial
instruments and mechanisms, all in connection with the financing and refinancing of public
improvements by and through community facilities districts to be formed by such joint powers
authority; and
WHEREAS, a form of joint exercise of powers agreement between the Agency and the
City creating the Temecula Public Financing Authority (the "Joint Powers Agreement"), has
been filed with the Secretary of the Agency, and the members of the Governing Board of the
Agency, with the aid of Agency staff, have reviewed the Joint Powers Agreement and now
desire to approve it and authorize its execution and delivery.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED by the Governing Board of the Redevelopment
Agency of the City of Temecula as follows:
Section 1. Formation of Joint Powers Authority. The Governing Board of the Agency
hereby authorizes the officers and staff members of the Agency to assist in the organization of
a joint exercise of powers authority between the Agency and the City, to be known as the
"Temecula Public Financing Authority." The Governing Board of the Agency hereby approves
and authorizes the Chairperson to execute and deliver and the Secretary to attest the Joint
Powers Agreement forming said joint exercise of powers authority, in the form on file with the
Secretary together with any changes therein deemed advisable by counsel to the Agency, the
approval of such changes to be conclusively evidenced by the execution and delivery by the
Agency of the Joint Powers Agreement.
Section 2. Official Actions. The Chairperson, Executive Director, Secretary and all
other officers of the Agency, are hereby authorized and directed to take all actions and do all
things necessary or desirable hereunder with respect to the formation of said joint exercise of
powers authority, including but not limited to the execution and delivery of any and all
agreements, certificates, instruments and other documents, which they, or any of them, may
deem necessary or desirable and not inconsistent with the purposes of this Resolution.
PASSED, APPROVED AND ADOPTED, by the Governing Board of the Redevelopment
Agency of the City of Temecula at a regular meeting held on the 24th day of April, 2001.
AFl'EST:
Chairperson
Susan W. Jones, CMC
City Clerk/Authority Secretary
[SEAL]
STATE OF CALIFORNIA )
COUNTY OF RIVERSIDE ) ss
CITY OF TEMECULA )
I, Susan Jones, Secretary of the Redevelopment Agency of the City of Temecula,
HEREBY DO CERTIFY that the foregoing Resolution No. RDA 01- was duly adopted at a
regular meeting of the Governing Board of the Redevelopment Agency of the City of Temecula
on the 24th day of April, 2001, by the following roll call vote:
AYES:
AGENCYMEMBERS:
NAYS:
AGENCYMEMBERS:
ABSENT:
AGENCYMEMBERS:
ABSTAINED:
AGENCYMEMBERS:
Susan W. Jones, CMC
City Clerk/Authority Secretary
TEMECULA PUBLIC FINANCING AUTHORITY
JOINT EXERCISE OF POWERS AGREEMENT
This Joint Exercise of Powers Agreement (the "Agreement"), dated April 10, 2001, is by
and between the City of Temecula, a municipal corporation and public body, corporate and
politic duly organized and existing under the laws of the State of California (the "City"), and the
Redevelopment Agency of the City of Temecula, a public body corporate and politic duly
organized and existing under the laws of the State of California (the "Agency").
WITNESSETH:
WHEREAS, agencies formed under Adicles 1-4 (commencing with Section 6500) of
Chapter 5, Division 7, Title 1 of the Government Code of the State of California (the "Act") are
permitted to provide financing for any of their members or other local public agencies in the
State of California in connection with the acquisition, construction and improvement of public
capital improvements, working capital requirements or insurance programs of such members or
other local agencies; and
WHEREAS, the City and the Agency wish to form an agency under the Act for the
purpose of providing an entity which can assist in providing financing and refinancing for public
capital improvements in the City and for other purposes which are authorized under the Act.
NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the above premises and of the mutual
premises herein contained, the City and the Agency do hereby agree as follows:
ARTICLE I
DEFINITIONS
Section 1.0t. Definitions. Unless the context otherwise requires, the words and terms
defined in this Article shall, for the purpose hereof, have the meanings herein specified.
"Act" means Articles 1 through 4 (commencing with Section 6500) of Chapter 5, Division
7, Title 1 of the Government Code of the State of California.
"Agency" means the Redevelopment Agency of the City of Temecula.
"Agreement" means this Joint Exercise of Powers Agreement, as originally entered into
or as amended from time to time.
"Associate Member" means a Public Agency which is a party to an Associate
Membership Agreement entered into by the Authority and such Public Agency pursuant to
Article VII hereof.
"Associate Membership Agreement" means an agreement between the Authority and an
Associate Member as described in Article VII hereof.
"Authority" means the Temecula Public Financing Authority established pursuant to
Section 2.02 of this Agreement.
R:\Caravelli Denise~AGENDAS~Agendas Buttedield Stage~JPAAgreement.doc
"Board" means the Board of Directors of the Authority referred to in Section 2.03.
"Bond Law" means the Marks-Roos Local Bond Pooling Act of 1985, being Article 4 of
the Act (commencing with Section 6584), as now in effect or hereafter amended, Article 2 of the
Act as now in effect or hereafter amended, or any other law available for use by the Authority in
the authorization and issuance of bonds to provide for the financing of Obligations, Working
Capital Requirements, Public improvements and/or liability or insurance needs of any Public
Agency.
"Bond Purchase Agreement" means an agreement between the Authority and the City,
the Agency or any Public Agency, pursuant to which the Authority agrees to purchase
Obligations from the City, the Agency or such Public Agency, as the case may be.
"Bonds" means bonds, notes or other obligations of the Authority issued pursuant to the
Bond Law or pursuant to any other provision of law which may be used by the Authority for the
authorization and issuance of bonds, notes or other obligations.
"City" means the City of Temecula, California.
"Directors" means the representatives of the City appointed to the Board pursuant to
Section 2.03.
"Fiscal Year~' means the period from July 1 in any calendar year to and including June
30 in the succeeding calendar year.
"Members" means the City and the Agency.
"Obligations" has the meaning given to the term "Bonds" in Section 6585(c) of the Bond
Law.
"Public Agency" means any public agency authorized by the Act to enter into a joint
exercise of powers agreement with the City and the Agency.
' "Public Improvements" has the meaning given such term in Section 6585(g) of the Bond
Law.
"Secretary" means the Secretary of the Authority appointed pursuant to Section 3.01.
"Treasurer" means the Treasurer of the Authority appointed pursuant to Section 3.02.
"Working Capital Requirements" means the requirements of any Public Agency for
funds to be used by, or on behalf of, such Public Agency for any purpose for which such Public
Agency may borrow money pursuant to Section 53852 of the Government Code of the State of
California.
-2-
ARTICLE II
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Section 2.0'1. Purpose. This Agreement is made pursuant to the Act providing for the
joint exercise of powers common to the City and the Agency, and for other purposes as
permitted under the Act, the Bond Law and as agreed by one or more of the parties hereto. A
primary purpose of this Agreement is to provide for the financing and refinancing of Public
Improvements or Obligations through the formation by the Authority of one or more community
facilities districts, the acquisition by the Authority of such Public Improvements, and/or the
purchase by the Authority of Obligations of the City, the Agency or any Public Agency pursuant
to Bond Purchase Agreements and/or the lending of funds by the Authority to the City, the
Agency or any Public Agency. Another primary purpose of the Authority is to assist the City in
connection with City lease and installment sale financings and refinancings.
Section 2.02. Creation of Authority. Pursuant to the Act, there is hereby created a
public entity to be known as the "Temecula Public Financing Authority". The Authority shall be
a public entity separate and apart from the City, the Agency, any Associate Member and any
other Public Agency, and shall administer this Agreement.
Section 2.03. Board of Directors. The Authority shall be administered by a Board of
Directors consisting of five (5) Directors, unless and until such number is changed by
amendment of this Agreement. The Directors of the Authority shall be comprised of the
members of the City Council of the City. The Board shall be called the "Board of Directors of
the Temecula Public Financing Authority". All voting power of the Authority shall reside in the
Board.
Section 2.04. Meetin,qs of the Board.
(a) Regular Meetings. The Board shall provide for its regular meetings;
provided, however, that at least one regular meeting shall be held each year. The date,
hour and place of the holding of regular meetings shall be fixed by resolution of the
Board and a copy of such resolution shall be filed with the City and the Agency.
(b) Special Meetings. Special meetings of the Board may be called in
accordance with the provisions of Section 54956 of the Government Code of the State
of California.
(c) Call, Notice and Conduct of Meetings. All meetings of the Board,
including without limitation, regular, adjourned regular and special meetings, shall be
called, noticed, held and conducted in accordance with the provisions of the Ralph M.
Brown Act of the Government Code of the State of California.
Section 2.05. Actions Taken. The Secretary shall cause to be kept records, consistent
with City policy, of all actions taken by the Board at all meetings of the Board and shall, as soon
as possible after each meeting, make such records available for inspection by each Director
and the Members.
Section 2.06. Voting. Each Director shall have one vote.
-3-
Section 2.07. Quorum; Required Votes; Approvals. Directors holding a majority of the
votes shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business, except that less than a quorum
may adjourn from time to time. The affirmative votes of at least a majority of the Directors
present at any meeting at which a quorum is present shall be required to take any action by the
Board.
Section 2.08. Bylaws. The Board may adopt, from time to time, such bylaws, rules and
regulations for the conduct of its meetings as the Board may deem necessary or advisable for
the purposes hereof.
ARTICLE III
OFFICERS AND EMPLOYEES
Section 3.01. Chairperson, Executive Director and Secretary. The City Manager and
the City Clerk are hereby designated as the Executive Director and Secretary, respectively, of
the Authority. The Board shall select a Chairperson from among its members who shall serve
as Chairperson until such person is no longer a.City Councilmember or a new Chairperson is
appointed by the Board. The officers shall perform the duties normal to said offices. The
Chairperson or the Executive Director (or any other person authorized by resolution of the
Board) shall sign contracts on behalf of the Authority, and the Chairperson shall perform such
other duties as may be imposed by the Board. The Executive Director shall administer the day-
to-day affairs of the Authority and shall execute the policies and directives of the Board. The
Secretary shall countersign all contracts signed by the Chairperson or the Executive Director on
behalf of the Authority (unless otherwise specified by resolution of the Board), perform such
other duties as may be imposed by the Board and cause a notice of this Agreement to be filed
with the Secretary of State pursuant to the Act.
Section 3.02. Treasurer and Auditor. Pursuant to Section 6505.6 of the Act, the City
Treasurer is hereby designated as the Treasurer of the Authority and the City Finance Director
is hereby designated as the Auditor of the Authority. The Treasurer shall be the depositary,
shall have custody of all of the accounts, funds and money of the Authority from whatever
source, shall have the duties and obligations set forth in Sections 6505 and 6505.5 of the Act
and shall assure that there shall be strict accountability of all funds and reporting of all receipts
and disbursements of the Authority. As provided in Section 6505 and Section 6505.6 of the
Act, the Auditor shall make arrangements with a certified public accountant or firm of certified
public accountants for the annual audit of accounts and records of the Authority, which audit
may be combined with any audit of the accounts and records of the City, the Agency and/or any
Public Agency.
The Treasurer is hereby authorized and directed to prepare or cause to be prepared
such audits and reports as required pursuant to Section 6505 of the Act and by order of the
Board.
Section 3.03. Officers in Charge of Records, Funds and Accounts. Pursuant to
Section 6505.1 of the Act, the Treasurer shall have charge of, handle and have access to all
accounts, funds and money of the Authority and all records of the Authority relating thereto; and
the Secretary shall have charge of, handle and have access to all other records of the Authority.
Section 3.04. Bondin.q Persons Havin.q Access to Authority Records. From time to
time, the Board may designate persons, in addition to the Executive Director, the Secretary, the
Treasurer and the Auditor, having charge of, handling or having access to any records, funds or
accounts or any Public Improvement of the Authority, and the respective amounts of the official
bonds of the Executive Director, the Secretary, the Treasurer and the Auditor and such other
persons pursuant to Section 6505.1 of the Act.
Section 3.06. Le.qal Advisor. The City Attorney shall act as the legal advisor of the
Authority, and shall perform such duties as may be prescribed by the Board.
Section 3.06. Other Employees. The Board shall have the power by resolution to
appoint and employ such other consultants and independent contractors as may be necessary
for the purposes of this Agreement.
All of the privileges and immunities from liability, exemption from laws, ordinances and
rules, all pension, relief, disability, workers' compensation and other benefits which apply to the
activities of officers, agents, or employees of a public agency when performing their respective
functions shall apply to the officers, agents or employees of the Authority to the same degree
and extent while engaged in the performance of any of the functions and other duties of such
officers, agents or employees under this Agreement.
None of the officers, agents, or employees directly employed by the Board shall be
deemed, by reason of their employment by the Board to be employed by the City or the Agency
or, by reason of their employment by the Board, to be subject to any of the requirements of the
City or the Agency.
Section 3.07. Assistant Officers. The Board may by resolution appoint such assistants
to act in the place of the Secretary or other officers of the Authority (other than any Director),
and may by resolution provide for the appointment of additional officers of the Authority who
may or may not be Directors, as the Board shall from time to time deem appropriate.
ARTICLE IV
POWERS
Section 4.01. General Powers. The Authority shall exercise the powers granted to it
under the Act, including but not limited to the powers set forth in the Bond Law and the powers
of each of the Members as may be necessary to the accomplishment of the purposes of this
Agreement, subject to the restrictions set forth in Section 4.04. As provided in the Act, the
Authority shall be a public entity separate from the City, the Agency, any Associate Member and
any other Public Agency.
Section 4.02. Power to Issue Bonds. The Authority shall have all of the powers
provided in the Act and in the Bond Law, including the power to issue Bonds thereunder.
Section 4.03. Specific Powers. The Authority is hereby authorized, in its own name, to
do all acts necessary for the exercise of the foregoing powers, including but not limited to, any
or all of the following:
-5-
(a) to make and enter into contracts;
(b) to employ agents or employees;
(c) to acquire, construct, manage, maintain or operate any Public
Improvement, including the common power of the City, the Agency and any Associate
Member to acquire any Public Improvement by the power of eminent domain or any
other lawful means;
(d) to sue and be sued in its own name;
(e) to issue Bonds and otherwise to incur debts, liabilities or obligations;
provided, however, that no such Bond, debt, liability or obligation shall constitute a debt,
liability or obligation of the City, the Agency, any Associate Member or any other Public
Agency;
(f) to apply for, accept, receive and disburse grants, loans and other
assistance from any agency of the United States of America or of the State of California;
(g) to invest any money in the treasury pursuant to Section 6505.5 of the Act
which is not required for the immediate necessities of the Authority, as the Authority
determines is advisable, in the same manner and upon the same conditions as local
agencies, pursuant to Section 53601 of the Government Code of the State of California;
(h) to apply for letters of credit or other form of financial guarantees in order
to secure the repayment of Bonds and enter into agreements in connection therewith;
(i) to carry out and enforce all the provisions of this Agreement;
(j) to make and enter into Bond Purchase Agreements and any other
agreements, assignments and documents of any nature whatsoever as may be
necessary or convenient in the exercise of its powers hereunder or under the Act;
(k) to purchase Obligations of or to make loans to the City, the Agency, any
Associate Member or any other Public Agency for the purposes hereof, or to refinance
indebtedness incurred by the City, the Agency, any Associate Member or any other
Public Agency in connection with any of the purposes hereof;
(I) to establish community facilities districts under the Mello-Roos
Community Facilities Act of 1982, as amended; and
(m) to exercise any and all other powers as may be provided in the Act or in
the Bond Law.
Section 4.04. Restrictions on Exercise of Powers. The powers of the Authority shall be
exercised in the manner provided in the Act and in the Bond Law, and, except for those powers
set forth in the Bond Law, shall be subject (in accordance with Section 6509 of the Act) to the
restrictions upon the manner of exercising such powers that are imposed upon the Agency in
the exercise of similar powers.
-6-
Section 4.05. Obli.qations of Authority. The debts, liabilities and obligations of the
Authority shall not be the debts, liabilities and obligations of the City, the Agency, any Associate
Member or any other Public Agency.
Section 4.06. Non-Liability for Obli,qations of Authority. No Member, Associate
Member, Director, officer, agent or employee of the Authority shall be individually or personally
liable for the payment of the principal of or premium or interest on any obligations of the
Authority or be subject to any personal liability or accountability by reason of any obligations of
the Authority; but nothing herein contained shall relieve any such Member, Associate Member,
Director, officer, agent or employee from the performance of any official duty provided by law or
by the instruments authorizing the issuance of any obligations of the Authority.
ARTICLE V
CONTRIBUTIONS; ACCOUNTS AND REPORTS; FUNDS
Section 5.0t. Contributions. The Members may in the appropriate circumstance when
required hereunder: (a) make contributions from their treasuries for the purposes set forth
herein, (b) make payments of public funds to defray the cost of such purposes, (c) make
advances of public funds for such purposes, such advances to be repaid as provided herein, or
(d) use its personnel, equipment or property in lieu of other contributions or advances. The
provisions of Government Code Section 6513 are hereby incorporated into this Agreement by
reference.
Section 5.02. Accounts and Reports. To the extent not covered by the duties assigned
to a trustee chosen by the Authority, the Treasurer shall establish and maintain such funds and
accounts as may be required by good accounting practice or by any provision of any trust
agreement entered into with respect to the proceeds of any Bonds issued by the Authority. The
books and records of the Authority in the hands of a trustee or the Treasurer shall be open to
inspection at all reasonable times by representatives of the Members. Within 180 days after
the close of each Fiscal Year an annual report of all financial activities for such Fiscal Year shall
be presented to the Members, to the extent such activities are not covered by the report of such
trustee. The trustee appointed under any indenture or trust agreement shall establish suitable
funds, furnish financial reports and provide suitable accounting procedures to carry out the
provisions of said trust agreement. Said trustee may be given such duties in said indenture or
trust agreement as may be desirable to carry out this Agreement.
Section 5.03. Funds. Subject to the applicable provisions of any instrument or
agreement which the Authority may enter into, which may provide for a trustee to receive, have
custody of and disburse Authority funds, the Treasurer of the Authority shall receive, have
custody of and disburse Authority funds as nearly as possible in accordance with generally
accepted accounting practices, and shall make the disbursements required by this Agreement
or to carry out any of the provisions or purposes of this Agreement.
Section 5.04. Annual Budget and Administrative Expenses. The Board may adopt a
budget for administrative expenses, which shall include all expenses not included in any
financing issue of the Authority, on or about July 1st of each year. The estimated annual
administrative expenses of the Authority shall be allocated in such budget by the Authority to
the Members in such proportion as the Board shall determine.
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ARTICLE VI
TERM
Section 6.01. Term. This Agreement shall become effective, and the Authority shall
come into existence, on the date of execution and delivery hereof, and this Agreement and the
Authority shall thereafter continue in full force and effect for at least forty (40) years (unless
earlier terminated by the Members and any then Associate Members), but in any event so long
as either (a) any Bonds remaining outstanding or any material contracts to which the Authority
is a party remain in effect, or (b) the Authority shall own any interest in any Public
Improvements or land.
Section 6.02. Disposition of Assets. Upon termination of this Agreement, all property
of the Authority, both real and personal, shall be conveyed to the City; provided that any surplus
money on hand shall be returned to the Members and any Associate Members in proportion to
the contributions, if any, that they have made (or, if none of them have made any contributions,
to the City.
ARTICLE VII
ASSOCIATE MEMBERSHIP AGREEMENTS
Section 7.01. Power to Enter Into Associate Membership Agreements. In addition to
those powers specified in this Agreement, the Authority shall have the power to enter into
Associate Membership Agreements with any city, county or city and county located in California
upon the approval thereof by the Board.
Section 7.02. Contents of Associate Membership Agreements. Each Associate
Membership Agreement shall:
(a) State that the prospective Associate Member is an associate member of
the Authority;
(b) Specify that the purpose of the Associate Membership Agreement is to
facilitate the financing or refinancing of public improvements located within the
jurisdiction of the applicable Associate Member;
(c) Restrict the powers of the prospective Associate Member with respect to
the Authority to those enumerated in this Article VII;
(d) Specify that the prospective Associate Member shall not have the power
vote on any action to be taken by the Authority and no officer, councilmember,
boardmember or employee of the Associate Member shall become an officer of the
Authority or a Director; and
(e) Specify the fees, if any, to be charged the prospective Associate Member
for its participation in financings of the Authority.
-8-
Section 7.03. Approval of Associate Membership Agreements. In determining whether
to approve an Associate Membership Agreement with a prospective Associate Member, the
Directors may take into account any criteria deemed appropriate to the Directors, including but
not limited to the financial viability of the project within the jurisdiction of the Associate Member
proposed to be served by the public improvements to be financed.
ARTICLE VIII
MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS
Section 8.0'1. Notices. Notices hereunder shall be in writing and shall be sufficient if
delivered to the notice address of each party hereto for legal notices or as otherwise provided
by a party hereto in writing to each of the other parties hereto.
Section 8.02. Section Headings. All section headings in this Agreement are for
convenience of reference only and are not to be construed as modifying or governing the
language in the section referred to or to define or limit the scope of any provision of this
Agreement.
Section 8.03. Consent. Whenever in this Agreement any consent or approval is
required, the same shall not be unreasonably withheld.
Section 8.04. Law Governin.q. This Agreement is made in the State of California under
the Constitution and laws of the State of California, and is to be so construed.
Section 8.05. Amendments. This Agreement may be amended at any time, or from
time to time, except as limited by contract with the owners of Bonds issued by the Authority or
by applicable regulations or laws of any jurisdiction having authority, by one or more
supplemental agreements executed by both of the parties to this Agreement either as required
in order to carry out any of the provisions of this Agreement or for any other purpose, including
without limitation addition of new parties (including any legal entities or taxing areas heretofore
or hereafter created) in pursuance of the purposes of this Agreement.
Section 8.06. Enforcement by Authority. The Authority is hereby authorized to take
any or all legal or equitable actions, including but not limited to injunction and specific
performance, necessary or permitted by law to enforce this Agreement.
Section 8.07. Severabilit¥. Should any part, term or provision of this Agreement be
decided by any court of competent jurisdiction to be illegal or in conflict with any law of the State
of California, or otherwise be rendered unenforceable or ineffectual, the validity of the
remaining portions or provisions shall not be affected thereby.
Section 8.08. Successors. This Agreement shall be binding upon and shall inure to the
benefit of the successors of the City or the Agency, respectively. Neither the City nor the
Agency may assign any right or obligation hereunder without the written consent of the other.
-9-
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have caused this Agreement to be
executed and attested by their proper officers thereunto duly authorized and their official seals
to be hereto affixed, on the day and year set opposite the name of each of the parties.
CITY OF TEMECULA
Date: April 24, 2001
By:
Jeff Comerchero, Mayor
ATTEST:
By:
Susan W. Jones, CMC
City Clerk/Authority Secretary
REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY OF THE
CITY OF TEMECULA
Date: April 24, 2001
By:
Chairperson
ATTEST:
By:
Susan W. Jones, CMC
City Clerk/Authority Secretary
-10-
ITEM 2
CITY A'I-rORNEY
FINANCE DIRECTOR~
CITY MANAGER
CITY OF TEMECULA REDVELOPMENT AGENCY
AGENDA REPORT
TO:
FROM:
DATE:
SUBJECT:
Agency Board/Executive Director
John Meyer, Redevelopment Director.~/-~[
April 24, 2001
Old Town Community Theater Schematic Design and Master Site Plan
RECOMMENDATION:
That the Redevelopment Agency Board:
l. Approve the Old Town Community Theater Schematic Design and Master Site Plan.
2. Adopt the Mitigated Negative Declaration.
3. Provide direction to proceed with design development and construction drawings.
BACKGROUND: On June 13, 2000, the Redevelopment Agency entered into a professional
service agreement with, Fisher Merfiman Sehgal Yanez, Inc. (the architects) for design services of
the Old Town Community Theater. The architects have worked diligently with the Agency's Ad Hoc
Theater Committee comprised of Mayor Comerchero and Council Member Pratt, as well as, the
Theater Advisory Committee, which is made up of representatives from the Old Town Local Review
Board, Mount San Jacinto Community College, The Theater Foundation and City Staff.
ANALYSIS: The architects have conducted in-depth stakeholder interviews and community
workshops to determine the needs of the potential users of the theater. Upon conclusion of the
interviews, the architects presented the programming results to the Ad Hoc Theater committee.
W~th direction from that committee, the architects completed the schematic design and master site
planning for the Theater.
The Master Plan provides for approximately 18,000 square feet of theater and auxiliary space. The
facility offers a 316-seat theater, a full 80' x 35' stage, with a 40' wide proscenium (stage opening), a
20-musician orchestra pit, private and group dressing rooms, a scene shop and dance studio.
Restroom facilities and a concession stand ara located in an adjacent courtyard. The Mercantile
building is being retrofitted and is proposed to include the box office and gallery/performance space.
A solid overhang/canopy is proposed along the west side of the Mercantile building and around the
R:\Oldtown\Temecula Playhouse~heatermasterplan final.cc.dec
courtyard to provide covered access between the Mercantile Building and the Theater. The final
determination of the Mercantile and the location of the restrooms will be resolved during the design
development stage of the project.
The architects have done an excellent job on the schematic building designs. The facility's massing
has been broken up into smaller components. This has created proportions with a human scale that
allows the large facility to blend into its Old Town setting. The architectural style of the facility can
be described as Old West, relying on bam and silo-style elements, with wood siding and a metal roof
to meet the design requirements of the Old Town Specific Plan. The schematic design and master
site plan have been reviewed and recommended for approval by the Theater Advisory Committee,
the Old Town Local Review Board and the Community Services Commission.
The Community Theater, as proposed, is a very comprehensive facility that will meet the various
needs of local live performance groups. The Ad Hoc Committee acknowledged the breadth of the
proposed facility when determining the direction of the schematic diagrams. The theater, as
proposed, will exceed the $2.5 million dollar budget included in the current CIP budget.
Staff and the Ad Hoc Committee asked the architect to analyze what elements of the theater would
need to be scaled back to remain within the $2.5 million dollar budget. The architect believes to
remain within the current budget they would have to eliminate the orchestra pit, dance studio, scene
shop and reduce the size of the dressing rooms.
During the Theater Advisory Committee's review of the master plan, two additional features have
been proposed. First is the addition of two classrooms over the dressing rooms. Mount San Jacinto
Community College has demonstrated a strong interest in using the facility for its drama and
performing arts curriculum. The 1,200 sq. f. of classrooms would facilitate not only the community
college, but also allow several existing and future Community Service Department programs.
The second item to be added was the inclusion of the four private balconies. Although the balconies
add only 16-24 additional seats, they are seen as an opportunity to provide an added sense of
intimacy. They can also be a significant source of both capital and on-going revenue through
sponsorships. The Ad Hoc committee supports the inclusion of both these items. It is
recommended they be included in the construction drawings, but considered an additive bid item.
The Theater Foundation has raised approximately $500,000 to date. The Foundation has already
contributed $37,500 for half of the cost of the architectural services and has retained the services of
a grant writer to pursue the centdbution of grant dollars to the theater. The Community Theater has
also been included on the list of projects forwarded to our representatives for consideration of federal
funding.
ENVIRONMENTAL ASSESSMENT: The Planning Department conducted an environmental review
of the project as Environmental Assessment No. 79. A copy of the Initial Environmental Study is
contained in Attachment A. To mitigate potential impacts, Staff has identified a number of mitigation
measures that if implemented, are expected to mitigate the impacts of this project to a level of
insignificance. A copy of the draft Mitigation Monitoring Program is contained in Attachment A.
The Proposed Notice of the City's Intent to Adopt a Mitigated Negative Declaration was distributed
for public review and comment from March 7, 2001 to March 27, 2001. Comments ware received
from the Army Corp of Engineers and the Federal Fish and Wildlife Service. Both Agencies provided
boilerplate comments which will be addressed through design and development phase of the project.
As a result, staff recommends that the attached Mitigation Monitoring Program be adopted and
implemented as part of this approval.
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FISCAL IMPACT: The estimated cost to complete the design and construct the "base"
option of the project is $4.75 million dollars. The base option includes administrative and
contingency costs, f'Lxtures, flooring and equipment costs and the design of the balconies and
classrooms. The addition of the balconies and classroom space will raise the budget another
$750,000, for a total of $5.5 million. This project is included in the Capital Improvement Program in
fund 210-190-167-5800. The project is cunrently funded with approximately $1.15 million from RDA
funds and $1 million in contributions from the Theater Foundation. Therefore, an additional
contribution of $2.6 to $3.35 million will need to be identified during the upcoming ClP process.
ATTACHMENTS:
A. Environmental Study
Mitigation Monitoring Program
B. Schematic Architectural Drawings
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ATTACHMENT A
1. Environmental Study
2. Mitigation Monitoring Program
City of Temecula
Planning Department
Notice of Proposed Negative Declaration
PROJECT:
APPLICANT:
LOCATION:
DESCRIPTION:
Old Town Community Theater (Environmental Assessment No. 79)
Temecula Redevelopment Agency
North of Main Street, West of Old Town Front Street in the Old Town area, in the
City of Temecula
The conceptual design and eventual construction ofa 19,600 sq. fi. performing arts
theatre consisting of a 300+ seat dance hall, classrooms, workshop, storage
classrooms and restrooms on a parcel containing .97 acres. An existing building of
2,173 sq. fi. historic structure is will be incorporated as part of the proposed
performing arts theatre complex
The City of Temecula intends to adopt a Negative Declaration for the project described above. Based
upon the information contained in the attached Initial Environmental Study and pursuant to the
requirements of the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA); it has been determined that this
project as proposed, revised or mitigated will not have a significant impact upon the environment. As a
result, the City Council intends to adopt a Negative Declaration for this project on March 27, 2001. The
mitigation measures required to reduce or mitigate the impacts of this project on the environment are
included in the project design and/or the Mitigation Monitoring Program which is attached to this Notice
and will be included as part of the Negative Declaration for this project.
The Comment Period for this proposed Negative Declaration is March 7, 2001 to March 27, 2001.
Written comments and responses to this notice should be addressed to the contact person listed below at
the following address: City of Temecula, P.O. Box 9033, Temecula, CA 92589-9033. City Hall is
located at 43200 Business Park Drive.
The public notice of the intent to adopt this Negative Declaration is provided through:
_ The Local Newspaper.
~X Posting the Site. __ Notice to Adjacent Property Owners.
If you need additional information or have any questions concerning this project, please contact David
Hogan, Senior Planner at (909) 694-6400.
Prepared by:(Signamre)'~L"~e'-~ ~~ ~>~VID I~c~:~
(Name and Title) '
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1
City of Temecula
Planning Department
Agency Distribution List
PROJECT: Old Town Community Theater (Environmental Assessment No. 79)
DISTRIBUTION DATE: March 7, 2001 CASE PLANNER: Patty Anders
CITY OF TEMECULA:
Building & Safety ................................ ( )
Fire Department .................................. ( )
Police Department ................................ ( )
Parks & Recreation (TCSD) .................... ( )
Planning, Advance ............................... ( )
Public Works ...................................... ( )
STATE:
Caltrans ............................................ ( )
Fish & Game ..................................... (X)
Mines & Geology ................................ ( )
Regional Water Quality Control Bd .......... (X)
State Clearinghouse .............................. ( )
State Clearinghouse (10 Copies) ............... ( )
Water Resources .................................. ( )
........... ()
FEDERAL:
Army Corps of Engineers ...................... (X)
Fish and Wildlife Service ...................... (X)
Federal Emergency Management Agency... (X)
............ ()
REGIONAL:
Air Quality Management District .............. ( )
Western Riverside COG ........................ ( )
R:\EA\EA79\NOTICE OF PROPOSED NEGATIVE DECLARATION.doc
2
CITY OF MURRIETA:
Planning ............................................
RIVERSIDE COUNTY:
Airport Land Use Commission ................ )
Engineer ........................................... )
Flood Control ..................................... (X)
Health Department ............................... (X)
Parks and Recreation ............................ ( )
Planning Department ............................ ( )
Habitat Conservation Agency (RCHCA) .... ( )
Riverside Transit Agency ....................... ( )
.......... ()
UTILITY:
Eastern Municipal Water District ............. (X)
Inland Valley Cablevision ...................... (X)
Rancho CA Water District, Will Serve ...... (X)
Southern California Gas ........................ (X)
Southern California Edison ..................... (X)
Temecula Valley School District .............. ( )
Metropolitan Water District .................... ( )
OTHER:
Pechanga Indian Reservation ...................( )
Eastern Information Center ..................... ( )
Local Agency Formation Corem .............. ( )
RCTC ............................................. ( )
Homeowners' Association ...................... ( )
City of Temecula
P.O. Box 9033, Temecula, CA 92589-9033
Environmental Checklist
Project Title Old Town Community Theater
(Environmental Assessment No. 79)
Lead Agency Name and Address City of Temecula
P.O. Box 9033, Temecula, CA 92589-9033
Contact Person and Phone Number David Hogan, Senior Planner
909) 694-6400
Project Location North of Main Street, West of Old Town Front Street in
the Old Town area
Project Sponsor's Name and Address City of Temecula Redevelopment Agency
General Plan Designation Community Commercial
Zoning Specific Plan No. 5 (Old Town) - Tourist Retail Core
Planning Area
Description of Project The conceptual design and eventual construction of a
19,600 sq. ft. performing arts theatre consisting of a
300+ seat dance hall, classrooms, workshop, storage
classrooms and restrooms on a parcel containing .97
acres. An existing building of 2,173 sq. ft. historic
structure is will be incorporated as part of the proposed
performing arts theatre complex.
Surrounding Land Uses and Setting The property is within the heart of Old Town Temecula
which is made up of a variety of antique and retail
business, restaurants and some office professional
uses. A portion of the property is adjacent to the
Murrieta Creek.
Other public agencies whose approval County Department of Environmental Health, County
is required Flood Control and Water Conservation District
Regional Water Quality Control Board, Eastern
Municipal and Rancho California Water Districts,
Southern California Gas Company, Southern California
Edison Company, General Telephone Company, and
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The project could be
located within a floodway and/or floodplain for Murrieta
Creek and will require FEMA review and approval.
R:\EA',EA79\EA.doc
1
Environmental Factors Potentially Affected
The environmental factors checked below would be potentially affected by this project, involving.
at least one impact that is a "Potentially Significant Impact" as indicated by the checklist on the
following pages.
X Aesthetics Mineral Resources
Agricultural Resources Population and Housing X Noise
Air Quality Population and Housing
X Biological Resources, Water Public Services
Cultural Resources Recreation
X Geologic Problems X Transportation/Traffic
Hazards and Hazardous Materials Utilities and Service Systems
X Hydrology and Water Quality
X Land Use Planning None
Determination
(To be completed by the lead agency)
On the basis of this initial evaluation:
I find that the proposed project COULD NOT have a significant impact on the
environment, and a NEGATIVE DECLARATION will be prepared
× find that although the proposed project could have a significant effect on the
environment, there will not be a significant effect in this case because revisions in the
project have been made by or agreed to by the project proponent. A MITIGATED
NEGATIVE DECLARATION will be prepared.
I find that the proposed project MAY have a significant effect on the environment, and an
ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT REPORT is required
I find that the proposed project MAY have a "potentially significant impact" or "potentially
significant unless mitigated" impact on the environment, but at least one effect 1) has
been adequately analyzed in an earlier document pursuant to applicable legal standards,
and 2) has been addressed by mitigation measures based on the earlier analysis as
described on attached sheets, if the effect is a "potentially significant impact" or
"potentially significant unless mitigated." An ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT REPORT is
required, but it must analyze only the effects that remain to be addressed.
i find that although the proposed project could have a significant effect on the
environment, because all potentially significant effects (a) have been analyzed adequately
in an earlier EIR or NEGATIVE DECLARATION pursuant to applicable standards, and (b)
have been avoided or mitigated pursuant to that earlier EIR or NEGATIVE
DECLARATION, including revisions or mitigation measures that are imposed upon the
proposed project, nothing further is required.
Signature
Debbie Ubnoske, Director of Planning
Printed name
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2
March 1, 2001
Date
City of Temecula
1. AESTHETICS. Would the project:
Less Than
Potentially Significant With Less Than
Significant Mitigation Significant No Impact
Issues and Supp~ang inf~,,,,=,:o,~ Sources Impact Incorporated Impact
a. Have a substantial adverse effect on a X
scenic vista?
b. Substantially damage scenic resources, X
including, but not limited to, trees, rock
outcropping, and historic building within a
state scenic highway?
c. Substantially degrade the existing visual X
character or quality of the site and its
surroundings?
d. Create a new source of substantial light or
glare which would adversely affect day or X
nighttime views in the area?
Comments:
Less Than Significant Impact With Mitigation Incorporated. The project will not affect a
scenic vista. The project is not located in an area where there is a scenic vista. A portion
of the site is adjacent to the Murrieta Creek and will be designed in accordance with the Old
Town Specific Plan design guidelines. The proposed project will be conditioned to submit a
detailed site plan, grading plan, floor plans, elevations, color and material boards and
landscape plans to ensure architectural compatibility with the Old Town Specific Plan.
Therefore, with mitigation measures, no impacts are anticipated as a result of this project.
No Impact. There is an existing historic building on site. Minor, if any, modification will be
done to the existing historic building. The performing arts theatre has been designed to
incorporate this structure, with its historic significance, into the overall design of the project.
As a consequence, no significant impact to scenic resources will result from the proposed
project, but will preserve the historic building on site.
Less Than Significant Impact With Mitigation Incorporated. The majority of the subject
site is vacant. The proposed conceptual project has been designed to comply with the Old
Town Temecula Specific Plan design standards and will enhance the visual character and
quality of the surrounding area. The project will be conditioned to submit a detailed site
plan, grading plan, elevations, color and material board and landscape plans prior to final
design approval and issuance of a building permit to ensure visual quality and compliance
with the Old Town Specific Plan. The conceptual design also appears to require City
Council approval to allow an increase to the maximum height requirement of the Old Town
Specific Plan. Pursuant to Chapter III, section 8. (b.) Height Limitations, the City Council
may approve an increase to a building height. The increased height is requested to
accommodate the "fly tower" portion of the theatre which is needed to accommodate the
props and performances. The fly tower, as proposed in the conceptual design, has been
integrated so that the increase in height is appropriately integrated into the overall
conceptual design. Therefore, with mitigation measures, the project will not have a
significant adverse impact.
1.d. Less Than Significant Impact With Mitigation Incorporated. The project will produce
and result in light/glare, as all development of this nature results in new light sources. All
R:\EA~A79\EA.doc
3
light and glare has the potential to impact the Mount Palomar Observatory. The project will
be conditioned to be consistent with City Ordinance No. 655 (Ordinance Regulating Light
Pollution). With this mitigation measure in place, less than significant impacts are
anticipated.
2. Agricultural Resources. In determining whether impacts to agricultural resources are
significant environmental effects, lead agencies may refer to the California Agricultural Land
Evaluation and Site Assessment Model ('1997) prepared by the California Department of
Conservation as an optional model to use in assessing impacts on agriculture and farmland.
Would the project:
Less Than
Potentially Significant WithLess Than
Significant Impact Mitigation Significant No Impact
issues and Supporting Information Sources Incorporated impact
a. Convert Prime Farmland, Unique Farmland, X
or Farmland of Statewide Importance
(Farmland), as shown on the maps prepared
pursuant to the Farmland Mapping and
Monitoring Program of the California
Resources Agency, to non-agricultural use?
b. Conflict with the existing zoning for X
agricultural use, or a Williamson Act
contract?
c. Involve other changes in the existing X
environment which, due to their location or
nature, could result in conversion of
farmland, to non-agricultural use?
Comments:
28.-c.
No Impact. The project site is not currently in agricultural production and in the historic past
has not been used for agricultural purposes. The site is not under a Williamson Act contract
nor is it zoned for agricultural uses. This property is not considered prime or unique
farmland of statewide or local importance as identified by the State Department of
Conservation and the City of Temecula General Plan. In addition, the project will not
involve changes in the existing environment which would result in the conversion of
farmland to non-agricultural uses. Therefore, there is no significant impact related to this
issue.
3. AiR QUALITY. Where available, the significance criteria established by the applicable quality
management or air pollution control district may be relied upon to make the following
determinations. Would the project:
Less Than
Potentially Significant WithLess Than
Significant Impact Mitigation Significant No Impact
Issues and Supporting Information Sources Incorporated Impact
a. Conflict with or obstruct implementation of X
the applicable air quality plan?
b. Violate any air quality standard or contribute X
substantially to an existing or projected air
quality violation?
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4
3. AIR QUALITY. Where available, the significance criteria established by the applicable quality
management or air pollution control district may be relied upon to make the following
determinations. Would the project:
Less Than
Potentially Significant WithLess Than
Significant Impact Mitigation Significant No Iml3act
Issues and Supporting Information Sources' Incorporated Impact
C. Result in a cumulatively considerable net X
increase of any criteria pollutant for which
the project region is non-attainment under
an applicable federal or state ambient air
quality standard (including releasing
emissions which exceed quantitative
thresholds for ozone precursors?
d. Expose sensitive receptors to substantial X
pollutant concentrations?
e. Create objectionable odors affecting a X
sub~tnntial number of people?
Comments:
Less Than Significant Impact. The proposed project will comply with State and National
ambient air quality standards and will comply with the air quality management policies in the
current Air Quality Management Plan (AQMP) and emissions thresholds established in
South Coast Air Quality Management District's (SCAQMD) CEQA Air Quality Handbook
(April 1993). The City of Temecula's General Plan EIR has addressed development of Old
Town and proposed adequate mitigation for any impacts. Therefore, no significant impacts
related to conflicts with air quality plans will result from the proposed project
3.b-c.
Less Than Significant Impact. The proposed project will be consistent with the South
Coast Air Quality Management District's (SCAQMD) CEQA Air Quality Handbook (April
1993) and does not violate any air quality standard or contribute substantially to an existing
or projected air quality violation. Moreover, the proposed project does not result in a
cumulatively considerable net increase of any criteria pollutant for which the project region
is non-attainment under an applicable federal or state ambient air quality standard. The
City of Temecula General Plan EIR that addresses the impacts to air quality and pollutants
and has provided mitigation measures for any potential impacts. Therefore, because this
project is consistent with the General Plan, a less than significant impact is anticipated as a
result of this project.
No Impact. The proposed project will not expose sensitive receptom to pollutants. There
are no significant pollutants in proximity to the project nor is it anticipated that the project
will generate pollutants due to the proposed use. The project shall comply with the
environmental and development standards as detailed in the Old Town Specific Plan for
civic development. No significant impacts are anticipated as a result of this project.
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5
3.e. Less Than Significant Impact. The proposed project may create objectionable odors
during the construction phase of the project. These impacts will be or short duration and
are not considered significant over the long term. The project shall comply with the
mitigation measures while construction; therefore, no significant impacts are anticipated as
a result of the project.
4. BIOLOGICAL RESOURCES: Would the project:
Less Than
Potentially Significant With Less Than
Significant impact Mitigation Significant No Impact
Issues and Supporting Information Sources incorporated impact
a. Have a substantial adverse effect, either X
directly or through habitat modifications, on
any species identified as a candidate,
sensitive, or special status species in local or
regional plans, policies, or regulations, or by
the California Department of Fish and Game
or U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service?
b. Have a substantial adverse effect on any X
riparian habitat or other sensitive natural
community identified in local or regional
~lans, policies, regulations or by the
California Department of Fish and Game or
US Fish and Wildlife Service?
c. Have a substantial adverse effect of federally X
~rotected wetlands as defined by Section 404
of the Clean Water Act (including, but not
limited to, marsh, vernal pool, coastal, etc.)
through direct removal, filing, hydrological
interruption, or other means?
d. interfere substantially with the movement of X
any native resident or migratory fish or wildlife
species or with established native resident or
migratory wildlife corridors, or impede the use
of native wildlife nursery sites?
e. Conflict with any local policies or ordinances X
protecting biological resources, such as a
tree preservation policy or ordinance?
f. Conflict with the provisions of an adopted
habitat Conservation Plan, Natural X
Community Conservation Plan, or other
approved local, regional, or state habitat
conservation plan?
Comments:
4.a-e
Less Than Significant Impact With Mitigation Incorporated. The General Plan indicated
that a portion of the project site may be proposed for an area containing a Riparian Forest
which is considered a sensitive habitat site. A detailed site plan, grading plan, elevations
and landscape plan will be submitted and reviewed by all appropriate City and outside
environmental agencies prior to project approval and issuance of any permits. No
development or disturbance will be permitted to any portion of Murrieta Creek. With
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appropriate mitigation measures, and conditions of approval, the proposed project is
anticipated to have a less than significant impact,
Less Than Significant Impact with Mitigation Incorporated. The proposed project is
located within the fee area for the Stephen's Kangaroo Rat (SKR) Long-Term Habitat
Conservation Plan. However, being a governmental agency, the City is exempt from
payment of the SKR fee. The City does, however, coordinate and contribute with the
County of Riverside with the ongoing mitigation of the SKR by the collection of fees that are
sent to the County. Therefore, the project with have a less than significant impact is
anticipated.
5. CULTURAL RESOURCES. Would the project:
Less Than
Potectially Significant WithLess Than
Significant Mitigation Significant No Impact
Issues and Supporting Information Sources Impact incorporated Impact
a. Cause a substantial adverse change in the X
significance of a historical resource as
defined in Section 1506.57
b. Cause a substantial adverse change in the X
significance of an archaeological resource
pursuant to Section 1506.57
c. Directly or indirectly destroy a unique X
paleontological resource or site or unique
geologic feature?
d. Disturb any human remains, including X
those interred outside of formal
cemeteries?
Comments:
5.a-d. Less Than Significant Impact. The General Plan EIR diagram of Areas of Sensitivity for
Archaeological Resources (Figure 5-6) and Paleontological area (Figure 5-7) does identify
the property as a sensitive archaeological and paleontological site, although the text of the
General Plan EIR recognizes that the survey leading the identification of sensitive sites may
not accurately portray all cultural resources in the study area. Therefore, the project will be
required to have a cultural resource specialist on site during grading. With mitigation
measures is place, less than significant impact is anticipated.
6. GEOLOGY AND SOILS. Would the project?
Less Than
Potentially Significant With Less Than
Significant Impact Mitigation Significant NO Impact
Issues and Supporting Information Sources Incorporated impact
a. Expose people or structures to potential substantial adverse effects, including the risk of loss,
injury, or death involving:
i) Rupture of a known earthquake fault, as
delineated on the most recent Alquist-Priolo X
Earthquake Fault Zoning Map issued by the
State Geologist for the.area or based on
other substantial evidence of a known fault?
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7
6. GEOLOGY AND SOILS. Would the project?
Less Than
Poten'~ial~¥ Signific~! With Less Than
Significant impactMitigation Significant No impact
Issues and Supporting Information Sources Incorporated Impact
Refer to Division of Mines and Geology
Special Publication 42.
ii) Strong seismic ground shaking? X
iii)Seismic-related ground failure, including X
liquefaction?
iv) Landslides? X
b. Result in substantial soil erosion or the loss X
of topsoil?
c. Be located on a geologic unit or soil that is X
unstable, or that would become unstable as
a result of the project, and potentially result
in on- or off-site landslide, lateral spreading,
subsidence, liquefaction or collapse?
d. Be located on expansive soil, as defined in X
Table 1801-B of the Uniform Building Code
(1994), creating substantial risks to life or
properly?
e. Have soil incapable of adequately X
supporting the use of septic tanks or
alternative waste water disposal systems
where sewers are not available for the
disposal of waste water?
Comments:
6.a-d.
Less Than Significant Impact With Mitigation Incorporated. The proposed project is
located in Southern California, an area that is seismically active. There may be a potentially
significant impact from seismic ground shaking, ground failure, soil erosion, liquefaction,
subsidence or unstable or expansive soil conditions. According to Figure 7-2 of the
General Plan, the subject site is located in the Subsidence/Liquefaction Harzards Area.
The General Plan indicates that this area is in Groundshaking Zone II. The proposed
project will be required to submit detailed, site plan, grading plan, elevations, etc., prior to
the approval and issuance of any permits. In addition, a soils/geologic report wilt be
required to determine if expansive soils or fault hazards exists and provide appropriate
mitigation measures. Any potential significant impacts will be mitigated through building
construction, consistent with the California Building Code standards.
Further, the proposed project will be conditioned to provide soil reports prior to grading and
require that all recommendations contained in this report are complied with during
construction. The soil reports will also contain recommendations for the compaction of the
soil, which will serve to mitigate any potentially significant impacts from seismic ground
shaking, seismic ground failure, liquefaction, subsidence and expansive soils. Moreover,
erosion control techniques will be included as a condition of approval for the proposed
project at the site. Potential unstable soil conditions from excavation, grading or fill will be
mitigated through the use of proper compaction of the soils and landscaping. With
appropriate mitigation measures, and conditions of approval, the proposed project is
anticipated to have a less than significant impact.
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8
No Impact. Septic sewage disposal systems are not proposed for this project. The ultimate
development of the site will be required to hook up to the existing public sewer system;
therefore, no impacts are anticipated as a result of this project.
7. HAZARDS AND HAZARDOUS MATERIALS. Would the project:
Less Than
Potentially Significant Less Than
Significant With Significant No impact
Issues and Supporting Information Sources ~.~.ct Mitigation Impact
a. Create a significant hazard to the public or X
the environment through the routine
transportation, use, or disposal of hazardous
materials?
b. Create a significant hazard to the public or X
the environment through reasonably
foreseeable upset and accident conditions
involving the release of hazardous materials
into the environment?
c. Emit hazardous emissions or handle
hazardous or acutely hazardous materials, X
substances, or acutely hazardous materials,
substances, or waste within one-quarter mile
of an existing or proposed school?
d. Be located on a site which is included on a X
list of hazardous materials sites compiled
pursuant to Government Code Section
65962.5 and, as a result, would it create a
significant hazard to the public or the
environment?
e. For a project located within an airport land X
use plan or, where such a plan has not been
adopted, within two miles or a public airport
or public use airport, would the project result
in a safety hazard for people residing or
working in the project area?
f. For a project within the vicinity of a private X
airstrip, would the project result in a safety
hazard for people residing or working in the
project area?
g. Impair implementation of or physically X
interfere with an adopted emergency
response plan or emergency evacuation
plan?
h. Expose people or structures to a significant X
risk or loss, injury or death involving wildland
fires, including where wildlands are adjacent
to urbanized areas or where residences are
intermixed with wildlands?
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9
Comments:
7.a.,b.
No Impact. The proposed project does not propose to utilize and store hazardous
materials. The project will be required to submit a detailed site plan, grading, floor plan,
elevations, etc. Prior to the project being approved and any permits issued, the project will
be reviewed by the Riverside County Department of Environmental Health and the Fire
Department. Any recommendations or requirements will be incorporated into the conditions
of approval for the project. Therefore, with appropriate review and approval of the project,
not significant impact is anticipated as a result of this project.
No Impact. The proposed project site is not located within ¼ of an existing or proposed
school. The nearest school site is over two miles away. No impact is anticipated.
No Impact. The proposed project site is not nor is it located near a site which is included
on a list of hazardous materials sites compiled pursuant to Government Code Section
65962.5 that would create a significant hazard to the public or the environment. Therefore,
no impacts are anticipated as a result of this project.
7.e.,[.
No Impact. The proposed project site is not located within an airport land use plan or
within two miles of a public or private airstrip. The nearest airport is French Valley, whose
runway is approximately 5 miles to the east. No impact upon airport uses will result from
this proposal.
No Impact. The project will take access from maintained public streets and will therefore
not impede emergency response or evacuation plans. No impacts are anticipated as a
result of this project.
No Impact. The project will not result in an ~ncrease to fire hazard in an area with
flammable brush, grass, or trees. The project is on a partially developed lot with an existing
historic structure with surrounding retail and commercial uses. The project is not located
within or proximate to a fire hazard area. No impacts are anticipated.
8. HYDROLOGY AND WATER QUALITY. Would the project:
Less Than
Potentially Significant With Less Than
Significant Mitigation Significant NO Impact
Issues and Supporting Information Sources ~act Irlcorporated Impact
a. Violate any water quality standards or waste X
discharge requirements?
b. Substantially deplete groundwater supplies or X
interfere substantially with groundwater
recharge such that there would be a net deficit
in aquifer volume or a lowering of the local
groundwater table level (e.g., the production
rate of pre-existing nearby wells would drop to
a level which would not support existing land
uses or planned uses for which permits have
been granted)?
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10
8. HYDROLOGY AND WATER QUALITY. Would the project:
Less Than
Potentially Significant With Less Than
Signi fic~t Mitigation Significant No Impact
Issues and Supporting Information Sources Impact Incorporated Impact
C. Substantially alter the existing drainage pattern X
of the site or area, including through the
alteration of the course of a stream or river, in a
manner which would result in substantial
erosion or siltation on- or off-site?
d. Substantially alter the existing drainage pattern X
of the site or area, including through the
alteration of the course of a stream or river, or
substantially increase the rate or amount of
surface runoff in a manner that would result in
flooding on- or off-site?
e. Create or contribute runoff water, which would X
exceed the capacity of existing or planned
storm water drainage systems or provide
substantial additional sources of polluted
runoff?
f. Otherwise substantially degrade water quality? X
g. Place housing within a 100-year flood hazard X
area as mapped on a federal Flood Hazard
Boundary or Flood Insurance Rate Map or
other flood hazard delineation map?
h. Place structures within a 100-year flood hazard X
area which would impede or redirect flood
flows?
i. Expose people or structures to a significant risk X
of loss, injury or death involving flooding,
including flooding as a result of the failure of a
levee or dam?
j. Inundation by seiche, tsunami, or mudflow? X
Comments:
Less Than Significant Impact With Mitigation Incorporated. The proposed project will
not violate any water quality standards or waste discharge requirements. The project is
required to comply with the requirements of the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination
System (NPDES) permit from the State Water Resources Control Board. No grading shall
be permitted until an NPDES Notice of Intent has been filed or the project is shown to be
exempt. By. complying with the NPDES requirements, any. potential impacts can be
mitigated to a level less than significant. With mitigation, a less than significant impact is
anticipated as a result of this project.
8.b.f.
Less Than Significant Impact. The proposed project will not substantially deplete
groundwater supplies or interfere substantially with groundwater recharge such that there
would be a net deficit in aquifer volume or a lowering of the local groundwater table level.
The project will not have an affect on the quantity and quality of ground waters, either
through direct additions or withdrawals or through interception of an aquifer by cuts or
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11
8.c.d.
8.g-h.
excavations or through substantial loss of groundwater recharge capability. Further,
construction on the site will not be at depths sufficient to have a significant impact on
ground waters or aquifer volume. No impacts are anticipated as a result of this project.
Less Than Significant Impact. The proposed project will not substantially alter the
existing drainage pattern of the site or area in a manner which would result in substantial
erosion or siltation and/or flooding on- or off-site. Some changes to absorption rates,
drainage patterns and the rate and amount of surface runoff is expected whenever
development occurs on previously permeable ground. Previously permeable ground will
be rendered impervious by construction of buildings, accompanying hardscape and
driveways. While absorption rates and surface runoff will change, potential impacts shall be
mitigated through site design. Drainage conveyances will be required for the project to
safely and adequately handle runoff that is created. The proposed project would have no
impact on the existing storm drain facilities. Any drainage into Murrieta Creek will have to
be approved by the Riverside County Flood Control District. With conditions of approval
placed on the project, a less than significant impact is associated with this project.
Less Than Significant Impact. The proposed project is not anticipated to create or
contribute runoff water which would exceed the capacity of existing or planned storm water
drainage systems or provide substantial additional sources of polluted runoff. A detailed
site plan and grading plan will be submitted and reviewed to ensure that the capacity and
storm water drainage systems will not be adversely effected. The proposed project will be
conditioned to accommodate the drainage created as a result of the development of the
subject site and not impact surrounding properties. With conditions of approval placed on
the project, a less than significant impact is associated with this project.
Less Than Significant Impact With Mitigation Incorporated. The proposed project may
expose people or property to water related hazards such as flooding. According to the
Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), the project site is located within the
limits of the 100-year (Zone AE) floodplain/floodway as delineated on Panel No. 060742
000lB (dated November 26, 1996) of the FEMA FiRMaps, and as a result, is subject to
severe flood hazard from Murrieta Creek. The project is also located partially within the
dam inundation area identified in the City of Temecula General Plan Final Environmental
Impact Report. Potential flood impacts will be mitigated by requiring the followiNG
hydrology study; a grading plan that plots floodway and floodplain with elevations called
out; require the finished floor to be at least 1' above the FEMA Base Flood Elevation;
require the project to obtain a Foodplain Development Permit or if it is determined that the
property is located within the FEMA floodway, require a FEMA letter of map revision
(LOMR) prior to issuance of a grading permit and condition the project to pay area drainage
plan fees to the Riverside County Flood Control and Water Conservation District. With
mitigation measures and conditions of approval, a less than significant impact is anticipated
as a result of this project.
No Impact. The proposed project site will not expose people or structures to a significant
risk of loss, injury or death involving flooding, including flooding as a result of the failure of a
levee or dam. There is no dam or levee near the surrounding subject site that would result
in such damage. The project site is not subject to inundation by sieche, tsunami, or
mudflow as these events are not known to happen in this region. No impacts are
anticipated as a result of this project.
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12
9. Land Use and Planning. Would the project:
Less Than
Potentially Significant With Less Than
Significant Mitigation Significant No impact
Issues and Supporting Information Sources Impact Incorporated Impact
a. Physically divide an established X
community?
b. Conflict with applicable land use plan, X
policy, or regulation of an agency with
jurisdiction over the project (including, but
not limited to the general plan, specific
plan, local coastal program, or zoning
ordinance) adopted for the purpose of
avoiding or mitigation an environmental
effect?
c. Conflict with any applicable habitat X
conservation plan or natural community
conservation plan?
Comments:
No Impact. The proposed project is the conceptual design and construction of a 19,600
sq. ft. performing arts theatre consisting of a 300+ seat dance hall, classrooms, workshop,
storage classrooms and restrooms on a parcel containing .97 acres. The existing building
of 2,173 sq. ft. will be incorporated as part of the proposed performing arts theatre. There is
no established residential community on the site nor in the vicinity. Therefore, no impacts
as a result of this project are anticipated.
No Impact, The proposed project will probably be consistent with the Old Town Specific
Plan, Development Code and City's General Plan Land Use Designation of CC (Community
Commercial) and the zoning designation of TRC (Tourist Retail Core) which allows for the
development of a performing art theatre. Typical uses include retail, commercial and
limited professional offices uses. The proposed project will be conditioned to submit a
detailed site plan, grading plan, floor plans, elevations, color and material boards and
landscape plans. The proposed conceptual design is consistent with the design intent of
the Old Town Specific Plan. All impacts from all General Plan Land Use Designations were
analyzed in the Environmental Impact Report (EIR) for the General Plan. Agencies with
jurisdiction within the City commented on the scope of the analysis contained in the EIR
and how the land uses would impact their particular agency. The adopted land uses did not
have an adverse environmental impact. As a result, the project is not anticipated to conflict
with existing land uses.
Less Than Significant Impact With Mitigation Incorporated. The proposed project is
located within the fee area for the Stephen's Kangaroo Rat (SKR) Long-Term Habitat
Conservation Plan. All development within this fee area is required to pay a mitigation fee.
This project will be required to pay a mitigation fee for the SKR. With this measure in place,
the project is anticipated to have less than significant impacts.
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13
10. MINERAL RESOURCES. Would the project:
Less Than
Potentially Significant Less Than
Sigr~ ficant With Significant NO impact
Issues and Supporting Information Sources ~t Mitigation Impact
Incorporated
a. Result in the loss of availability of a known X
mineral resource that would be of value to the
region and the residents of the state?
b. Result in the loss of availability of a locally- X
important mineral resource recovery site
delineated on a local general plan, specific
plan or other land use plan?
Comments:
10.a.b. No Impact. The proposed project will not result in the loss of available, known mineral
resources or in the loss of an available, locally important mineral resource recovery site.
The State Geologist has classified the City of Temecula a classification of MRZ-3a,
containing areas of sedimentary deposits, which have the potential for supplying sand and
gravel for concrete and crushed stone for aggregate. However, it has been determined that
this area contains no deposits of significant economic value based upon available data in a
report entitled Mineral Land Classification of the Temescal Valley Area, Riverside County,
California, Special Report 165, prepared in accordance with the Surface Mining and
Reclamation Act (SMARA) of 1975. No impacts are anticipated as a result of this project.
11. NOISE. Would the project result in:
Less Than
PotentiallySignificant With Less Than
SignificantMitigation Significant No Impact
Issues and Supporting Information Sources ~r,pact Incorporated Impact
a. Exposure of people to severe noise levels in X
excess of standards established in the local
general plan or noise ordinance, or applicable
standards of other agencies?
b. Exposure of persons to or generation of X
excessive groundborne vibration or
groundborne noise levels?
c. A substantial permanent increase in ambient X
noise levels in the project vicinity above levels
existing without the project?
d. A substantial temporary or periodic increase in X
ambient noise levels in the project vicinity
above levels existing without the project?
e. For a project located within an airport land use X
plan or, where such a plan has not been
adopted, within two miles of a public airport or
public use airport, would the project expose
people residing or working in the project area to
excessive noise levels?
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14
11. NOISE. Would the project result in:
Less Than
Potentially Significant With Less Than
Significant Mitigation Significant No Impact
Issues and Supporting Information Sources ~mp~o~ Inco,porated imp,ct
f. For a project within the vicinity of a private X
airstrip, would the project expose people
residing or working in the project area to
excessive noise levels?
Comments:
11 .a., d. Less Than Significant Impact With Mitigation Incorporated. The proposed
project may expose people to severe noise levels during the developmentJconstruction
phase (short term). Construction machinery is capable of producing noise in the range of
100+ DBA at 100 feet, which is considered very annoying and can cause hearing damage
from steady 8-hour exposure. This source of noise will be of short duration and not long-
term. Construction hours are regulated by the City Development Code, to which the
applicant shall comply. Therefore noise as a result of construction will not be considered
significant. With appropriate mitigation measures, and conditions of approval, the proposed
project is anticipated to have a less than significant impact.
11 .b,c. Less Than Significant Impact With Mitigation Incorporated. The proposed performing
arts theatre will not have activities that would expose persons to or generate excessive
groundbome vibration or groundbome noise levels due to the required construction
techniques that the project will be conditioned to have. It is anticipated that the theatre will
attract small musical groups and local plays and the noise will be mitigated by the required
method of construction. The proposed theatre will be conditioned to have a Sound
Transmission Control (STC) rating of 55-60 decibels to comply with the noise standards of
the General Plan and ensure that there will not be an increase in the ambient noise level in
the project vicinity. The exterior wall and roof ceiling assembly will be conditioned to have
an STC rating of 55-60 decibels to mitigate any potential impact to noise. Therefore, with
standard construction requirements as mitigation measures, and conditions of approval, the
proposed project is anticipated to have a less than significant impact.
11 .e.f.
No Impact. The proposed project is not within two miles of a public airport or public use
airport, therefore, future performers, employees and guests of the theatre will not be
exposed to excessive noise levels generated by an airport. Consequently no impact is
anticipated as a result of this project.
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15
12. POPULATION AND HOUSING. Would the project:
Less Than
Potentially Significant Less Than
Significant With Significant No )mpac[
Issues and Supporting information Sources impact Mitigation Impact
Incorporated
a. Induce substantial population growth in an area, X
either directly (for example, by proposing new
homes and businesses) or indirectly (for
example, through extension of roads or other
infrastructure)?
b. Displace substantial numbers of existing X
housing, necessitating the construction of
replacement housing elsewhere?
c. Displace substantial numbers of people, X
necessitating the construction of replacement
housing elsewhere?
Comments:
12.a.
Less Than Significant Impact. The proposed project will not induce substantial growth in
the area either directly or indirectly. The project is consistent with the General Plan Land
Use designation of CC (Community Commercial) and Zoning Designation of TRC (Tourist
Retail Core). The proposed performing arts theatre is not likely to cause people to relocate
to, or within the Temecula area, but is anticipated to serve the local cultural and musical
needs of the existing and surrounding communities. No impacts are anticipated as a result
of this project.
12.b.c. No Impact. The project will not displace substantial numbers of people or existing housing
as the site is vacant property zoned TRC (Tourist Retail Core) which does not permit
residential development. The project will neither displace housing or people, necessitating
the construction of replacement housing. No impacts are anticipated as a result of this
project.
13. PUBLIC SERVICES: Would the proposal have an effect upon, or result in a need for new
or altered Government services in any of the following areas:
Less Than
Potentially Significant Less Than
Significant With Significant No Impact
Issues and Supporting Information Sources Impact Mitigation Impact
Incorporated
a. Would the project result in substantial adverse X
physical impacts associates with the provisions
of new or physically altered governmental
facilities, need for new or physically altered
governmental facilities, the construction of which
could cause significant environmental impacts,
in order to maintain acceptable service ratios,
response times or other performance objectives
for any of the public services?
b. Fire protection? X
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16
13. PUBLIC SERVICES: Would the proposal have an effect upon, or result in a need for new
or altered Government services in any of the following areas:
Less Than
Potentially Significant Less Than
Significant With Significant No
Issues and Supporting Information Sources Impact Mitigation Impact
C. Police protection? Incorporated
X
d. Schools? X
e. Parks? X
f. Other public facilities? X
Comments:
13.a.,b.,c.,e.
Less Than Significant Impact. The proposed project will have a less than significant
impact upon, or result in a need for new or altered fire, police, recreation or other public
facilities. The project will incrementally increase the need for some services. However, the
City has an ongoing comprehensive parks and recreation program that mitigates any
incremental affect this project may create.
13.d.
Less Than Significant Impact. The proposed project will have a less than significant
impact upon, or result in a need for new or altered school facilities. The project will not
cause significant numbers of people to relocate within or to the City. The cumulative effect
from the project will be mitigated through the payment of applicable School Fees. Less
than significant impacts are anticipated.
13.f.
Less Than Significant Impact. The proposed project will have a less than significant
impact upon, or result in a need for new or altered public facilities. When a formal
application is submitted, the project will be routed to all applicable outside agencies for their
review and conditioning. It is anticipated that the outside agencies will have no objections,
and will provide "Will Serve" letters indicating services will be provided to this project.
Therefore, with standard routing and review of the project to outside agencies, a less than
significant impact is anticipated.
14. RECREATION. Would the project:
Less Than
Potentially Significant WithLess Than
Significant Mitigation Significant No Impact
Issues and Supporting Information Sources ~,.p.ct Incorporated Impact
a. Would the project increase the use of X
existing neighborhood and regional parks or
other recreational facilities such that
substantial physical deterioration of the
facility would occur or be accelerated?
b. Does the project include recreational X
facilities or require the construction or
expansion of recreational facilities which
might have an adverse physical effect on the
environment?
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17
Comments:
14.a.b. Less Than Significant Impact. The project may have a slight impact on the use of
existing neighborhood and regional parks in that people attending the theatre may in
Town may be more inclined to use the existing recreational facilities once they are in Old
Town. The proposed performing arts theatre would also meet local demand for this type of
facility. As a result, no significant impacts are expected to occur.
15. TRANSPORTATION/TRAFFIC. Would the project:
Less Than
Potentially Significant With Less Than
Significant Mitigation Significant No impact
Issues and Supporting Information Sources ~mpac~ incorporated impact
a. Cause an increase in traffic, which is X
substantial in relation to the existing traffic
load and capacity of the street system (i.e.,
result in a substantial increase in either the
number of vehicle trips, the volume to
capacity ratio on roads, or congestion at
intersections?
b. Exceed, either individually or cumulatively, a X
level of service standard established by the
county congestion management agency for
designated roads or highways?
c. Result in a change in air traffic patterns, X
including either an increase in traffic levels or
a change in location that results in substantial
safety risks?
d. Substantially increase hazards due to a X
design feature (e.g., sharp curves or
dangerous intersections) or incompatible
uses (e.g., farm equipment)?
e. Result in inadequate emergency access? X
f. Result in inadequate parking capacity? X
g. Conflict with adopted policies, plans, or X
programs supporting alternative
transportation (e.g., bus turnouts, bicycle
racks?
Comments:
15.a,b. Less Than Significant Impact With Mitigation Incorporated. The proposed project will
be conditioned to provide a traffic analysis prior to project approval to ensure Level of
Services are maintained at a General Plan acceptable level of service for traffic circulation
within the City of Temecula. In addition, the proposed project will be conditioned to provide
a statement of operations and a parking analysis so that an adequate analysis can be
conducted and any identified impacts mitigated. With mitigation measures in place as
necessary, a less than significant impact is anticipated as a result of the proposed project.
15.c.d. No Impact. The proposed development of this property will not result in a change in air
traffic patterns by increasing the traffic levels in the vicinity. The site is not within the French
Valley Airport's flight overlay district. The conceptual design of the project will not pose a
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18
threat to the health, safety, and welfare of the people utilizing the roads in the vicinity of the
project because there are no sharp curves or dangerous intersections proposed. No
impacts are anticipated as a result of this project.
15.e.
Less Than Significant Impact. The preposed project will not result in inadequate
emergency access or access to nearby uses. The preposed project will be required to
submit a detail site plan, grading plan, floor plan and landscape plan. The project will be
reviewed and conditioned to ensure compliance with current City standards and adequate
emergency access. No impacts are anticipated as a result of this project.
15.f.
Less Than Significant Impact With Mitigation Incorporated.. The preposed
development complies with the Old Town Specific Plan parking requirements for uses
within the Tourist Retail Core. However, the standard is no on-site parking requirement in
the Tourist Retail Core. The conceptual site design is providing approximately twenty four
(24) parking spaces on site and anticipates utilizing the two adjacent parking lots of an
office building and the future City's children museum, These parking spaces will be
available as the uses are primarily off-peak hours; therefore, it is anticipated that these
spaces will be available for the proposed theatre. In addition, there is street parking
throughout Old Town and existing parking lots that will be utilized. Therefore, with the
mitigation measures, no significant impacts are anticipated as a result of this project.
15.g.
No Impact. As conceptually designed, the preposed project does not conflict with adopted
policies, plans, or programs supporting alternative transportation. There are existing bus
routes servicing the Old Town area that patrons can utilize to access the theatre.
Therefore, no impact is anticipated as a result of this project.
16. UTILITIES AND SERVICE SYSTEMS: Would the project:
Less Than
Potentially Significant Less Than
Significant With Significant No Impact
Issues and Supporting Information Sources ~mpac~ Mitigation Impact
Incorporated
a. Exceed wastewater treatment requirements X
of the applicable Regional Water Quality
Control Board?
b. Require or result in the construction of new X
water or wastewater treatment facilities or
expansion of existing facilities, the
construction of which could cause
significant environmental effects?
c. Require or result in the construction of new
storm water drainage facilities or expansion X
of existing facilities, the construction of
which could cause significant envirenmental
effects?
d. Have sufficient water supplies available to X
serve the project from existing entitlements
and resources, or are new or expanded
entitlements needed?
R:\EA\EA79~.A.doc
19
16. UTILITIES AND SERVICE SYSTEMS: Would the project:
Less Than
Potentially Significant Less Than
Significant With Significant No impact
Issues and Supporting Information Sources ~.~p~ct Mitigation Impact
Incorporated
e. Result in a determination by the wastewater X
treatment provider which serves or may
serve the project that it has adequate
capacity to serve the project's projected
demand in addition to the provider's
existing commitments?
f. Be served by a landfill with sufficient X
permitted capacity to accommodate the
project's solid waste disposal needs?
g. Comply with federal, state, and local X
statutes and regulations related to solid
waste?
Comments:
16.a.,b., e. Less Than Significant Impact. The proposed project will not exceed wastewater
treatment requirements, require the construction of new treatment facilities, nor affect the
capacity of treatment providers. The proposed conceptual project will have an incremental
effect upon existing systems. However, the Final Environmental Impact Report (FEIR) for
the City's General Plan states: "implementation of the proposed General Plan would not
significantly impact wastewater services." Since the project is consistent with the City's
General Plan, less than significant impacts are anticipated as a result of this project.
16.c.
No Impact. The proposed project will not require or result in the construction of new storm
water drainage facilities or expansion of existing facilities, and will not cause significant
environmental effects. The existing facilities have capacity to handle the proposed project,
as the result will only be an incremental effect upon existing systems. All appropriate
environmental agencies and any necessary clearances will be required prior to the approval
or issuance of any permits. Consequently, construction of new storm water drainage
facilities or expansion of existing facilities are not anticipated.
16.d.
Less Than Significant Impact. The proposed project will not significantly impact existing
water supplies nor require expanded water entitlements. The project will have an
incremental effect upon existing systems. While the project will have an incremental impact
upon existing systems, the Final Environmental Impact Report (FEIR) for the City's General
Plan states: "both EMWD and RCWD have indicated an ability to supply as much water as
is required in their services areas (p. 39)." The FEIR further states: "implementation of the
proposed General Plan would not significantly impact wastewater services (p. 40)."
Moreover, it is anticipated that the outside agencies will have no objections, and will
provide "Will Serve" letters indicating services will be provided to this project. Since the
proposed project is consistent with the City's General Plan, no significant impacts are
anticipated as a result of this project. Less than significant impacts are anticipated as a
result of this project.
R:\EA\EA79\EA.doc
20
16.f.g. Less Than Significant Impact. The proposed project will not result in a need for new
landfill capacity. Any potential impacts from solid waster created by this future development
can be mitigated through participation in Source Reduction and Recycling Programs, which
are implemented by the City. Less than significant impacts are anticipated as a result of this
project.
17. MANDATORY FINDINGS OF SIGNIFICANCE.
Less Than T
Potentially Significant With Less Than
Significant Mitigation Significant NO Impact
Issues and Supporting Information Sources Impact Incorporated Impact
a. Does the project have the potential to
degrade the quality of the environment,
substantially reduce the habitat of a fish or
wildlife species, cause a fish or wildlife X
population to drop below self-sustaining
levels, threaten to eliminate a plant or animal
community, reduce the number of restrict the
range of a rare or endangered plant or
animal or eliminate important examples of
the major periods of California history or
prehistory?
b. Does the project have impacts that are
individually limited, but cumulatively X
considerable? ("Cumulatively considerable"
means that the incremental effects of a
project are considerable when viewed in
connection with the effects of past projects,
the effects of other current projects, and the
effects of probable future projects?
c. Does the project have environmental effects X
which will cause substantial adverse effects
on human beings, either directly or
indirectly?
Comments:
17.a.
Less Than Significant Impact With Mitigation Incorporated. A portion of the site is
adjacent to Murrieta Creek. The actual limits of the property line relative to the creek are
undetermined at this time. Therefore, the proposed project will be required to submit a
hydrology study and detailed plans (grading, site plan, elevations, floor plans, landscaping
and a color and material board). The project will be conditioned so that no development or
damage of any kind will occur to Murrieta Creek. As part of the review process (prior to
approval and permit issuances), all appropriate environmental agencies and all necessary
clearances will be required to ensure no adverse effects on the environment will occur.
With mitigation measures in place, the project does not have the potential to degrade the
quality of the environment on site or in the vicinity of the project or will not substantially
reduce the habitat of fish or wildlife with all the necessary environmental clearances
required. Therefore, with mitigation measures, a less than significant impact is anticipated
as a result of this project.
R:\EA\EA79\EA.doc
21
17.b.
Less Than Significant Impact. The proposed project will not have impacts that are
individually limited or cumulatively considerable. The potential cumulative impacts for the
proposed project with regards to drainage, traffic, air quality, noise, traffic, aesthetics and
service systems will be conditioned and mitigated to comply with the General Plan, Old
Town Specific Plan, Development Code and Uniform Building Code requirements. In all
aspects, the proposed development will be required to be consistent with the
aforementioned documents and requirements, and as such, impacts generated by the
future proposed development will be no greater than what was anticipated at build-out as
analyzed in the General Plan.
17.c.
Less Than Significant Impact With Mitigation Incorporated. The proposed project was
analyzed with regards to noise, hazards and geologic events. In all aspects, the proposed
project will be designed and conditioned to reduce impacts with specific mitigation
measures. With these measures in place, less than significant impacts are anticipated. A
Mitigation Monitoring Program has been prepared to incorporate all mitigation measures
imposed on this project. The Mitigation monitoring Program accompanies this document.
18. EARLIER ANALYSES. Earlier analyses may be used where, pursuant to the tiering,
program EIR, or other CEQA process, one or more effects have been adequately analyzed in
an earlier EIR or negative declaration. Section 15063(c)(3)(D). In this case a discussion
should identify the following on attached sheets.
a. Earlier analyses used. Identify earlier analyses and state where they ara available for
review.
b. Impacts adequately addressed. Identify which affects from the above check list were
within the scope of and adequately analyzed in an earlier document pursuant to applicable
legal standards, and state whether such effects were addressed by mitigation measures
based on the earlier analysis.
c. Mitigation measures. For effects that are "Less than Significant with Mitigation
Incorporated," describe the mitigation measures which were incorporated or refined from
the earlier document and the extent to which they address site-specific conditions for the
project.
18.a. The City's General Plan and Final Environment Impact Report were used as a referenced
source in preparing this Initial Study. The General Plan EIR was also referenced in the
adoption of the Old Town Specific Plan.
18.b.
18.c.
There were no earlier impacts which affected this project.
A Mitigation Monitoring Program has been prepared for this project and is attached to this
document.
2.
3.
4.
5.
SOURCES
City of Temecula General Plan.
City of Temecula General Plan Final Environmental Impact Report.
Old Town Temecula Specific Plan
South Coast Air Quality Management District CEQA Air Quality Handbook.
The City of Temecula Development Code.
R:\EA\EA79\EA.doc
22
Proposed Mitigation Monitoring Program
Planning Application No. EA-079
(Conceptual Community Theatre in Old Town)
AESTHETICS, LAND USE, AND PLANNING
General Impact:
Degrade the existing visual impact or quality of the site and the
surrounding area.
Mitigation Measure:
Specific Process:
Ensure architectural compliance with the Old Town Specific Plan.
Submit a detailed, dimensioned site plans, grading plans, elevations,
floor plans, color and material board, landscape plans and signage for
the proposed theatre to the Planning Department for review, analysis
and approval.
Mitigation Milestone:
Responsible Monitoring Party:
Receive detailed plan approval prior to the submittal of an application or
plans for a grading or building permit.
Planning Department.
General Impact:
Mitigation Measure:
Specific Process:
Mitigation Milestone:
Responsible Monitoring Party:
Degrade the existing visual impact or quality of the site and the
surrounding area by exceeding the Old Town Specific Plan height
limitations.
Ensure the fly tower which exceeds the height requirement is
appropriately integrated into the overall site design and is compatible
with the architectural guidelines of the Old Town Specific Plan.
Submit a detailed site plan, grading plan, elevations, floor plan, color and
material board for the proposed theatre to the Planning Department for
review. Once the application is complete, this item will be scheduled for
the Planning Commission and City Council's approval to increase the
height to the fly tower.
Prior to the submittal of an application for a grading or building permit.
Planning Department.
General Impact:
Mitigation Measure:
Specific Process:
Mitigation Milestone:
Responsible Monitoring Party:
The creation of new light sources will result in increased light and glare
which would affect Palomar Observatory and day or night time views.
Use lighting techniques that are consistent with Ordinance Ne. 655.
Submit lighting plan to the Building and Safety Department for approval.
Prior to the issuance of a building permit.
Building & Safety Department.
R:\EA\EA79\Draft Mitigation Monitoring Program,doc
1
BIOLOGICAL RESOURCES
General Impact:
Have a substantial adverse effect on any riparian habitat or other
sensitive natural community identified in local or regional plans,
policies, regulation or by the California Department of Fish and
Game or US Fish and Wildlife Service or federally protected
wetlands as defined by Section 404 of the Clean Water Act)
Mitigation Measure:
Receive written clearance from all applicable outside
environmental agencies (California Department of Fish and Game,
US Fish and Wildlife Service, Army Corps of Engineers, San
Diego Water Quality Control Board, etc.).
Specific Process:
Route project information to all applicable outside environmental
agencies.
Mitigation Milestone:
Prior to the submittal of an application for a grading or building
permit.
Responsible Monitoring Party:
Department of Public Works and Planning Department.
General Impact:
Mitigation Measure:
Specific Process:
Have a substantial adverse effect of federally protected wetlands
(as defined by Section 404 of the Clean Water Act)
Receive wdtten clearance from all applicable outside
environmental agencies (California Department of Fish and Game,
US Fish and Wildlife Service, Army Corps of Engineers, San
Diego Water Quality Control Board, etc.).
Route project information to all applicable outside environmental
agencies
Mitigation Milestone:
Prior to the submittal of an application for a grading or building
permit.
Responsible Monitoring Party: Department of Public Works and Planning Department.
CULTURAL RESOURCES
General Impact:
Directly or indirectly destroying any unique paleontological or
archaeological resources.
Mitigation Measure: Require a professional cultural resources specialist is present on
site during grading.
Specific Process: Condition the project for on site monitoring during grading.
Mitigation Milestone: Prior to the issuance of grading and building permits.
Responsible Monitoring Party: Planning Department
R:\EA\EA79\Draft Mitigation Monitoring Program.doc
2
GEOLOGY AND SOILS
General Impact:
Expose people or structures to potential substantial adverse
effects, including the risk of loss, injury, or death involving rupture
of a known earthquake fault, as delineated on the Alquist-Priolo
Earthquake Fault Zoning Map. Expose people or property to
seismic ground shaking, seismic ground failure, landslides or
mudflows, expansive soils or earthquake hazards.
Mitigation Measure:
Condition the proposed project to utilize construction techniques
that are consistent with the California Building Code.
Specific Process:
Submit construction plans to the Building & Safety Department for
approval.
Mitigation Milestone:
Prior to the issuance of grading and building permits.
Responsible Monitoring Party: Planning Department
General Impact:
General Impact:
Exposure of people or property to seismic ground shaking,
seismic ground failure, landslides or mudflows, expansive soils or
earthquake hazards.
Mitigation Measure:
Ensure that soil compaction is to City standards.
Specific Process:
A soils report prepared by a registered Civil Engineer shall be
submitted to the Department of Public Works with the initial
grading plan check. All building pads shall be certified by a
registered Civil Engineer.
Mitigation Milestone:
Prior to the issuance of a grading or building permit.
Responsible Monitoring Party:
Department of Public Works and Building & Safety
Department.
General Impact:
Mitigation Measure:
Specific Process:
Mitigation Milestone:
Responsible Monitoring Party:
Erosion, changes in topography or unstable soil conditions from
excavation, grading or fill.
Planting of slopes consistent with Development Code.
Submit erosion control plans to the Department of Public Works
for approval.
Prior to the issuance of a grading permit.
Department of Public Works.
R:\EA\EA79\Draft Mitigation Monitoring Program.doc
3
General Impact:
Mitigation Measure:
Specific Process:
Mitigation Milestone:
Responsible Monitoring Party:
Erosion, changes in topography or unstable soil conditions from
excavation, grading or fill.
Planting of on-site landscaping that is consistent with the
Development Cede.
Submit landscape plans that include planting of any slopes to the
Planning Department for approval.
Prior to the issuance of a building permit.
Planning Department.
HYDROLOGY AND WATER QUALITY
General Impact:
Violate any water quality standards or waste discharge
requirements or discharge into surface waters or other alteration
of surface water quality (e.g. temperature, dissolved oxygen or
turbidity).
Mitigation Measure:
An erosion control plan shall be prepared in accordance with City
requirements and a Storm Water Pollution Prevention Plan
(SWPPP) shall be prepared in accordance with the National
Pollution Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) requirements.
Specific Process:
Filing of a Notice of Intent from NPDES or the project is shown to
be exempt and submit a SWPPP to the San Diego Regional
Water Quality Control Board (SDRWQCB) for their review and
approval.
Mitigation Milestone:
Prior to the issuance of a grading permit.
Responsible Monitoring Party: Department of Public Works and SDRWQCB (for SWPPP)..
General Impact:
The project will result in changes to.absorption rates, drainage
patterns and the rate and amount of surface runoff.
Mitigation Measure:
Methods of controlling runoff, from site so that it will not negatively
impact adjacent properties, including drainage conveyances, have
been incorporated into site design and will be included on the
grading plans.
Specific Process:
Submit grading and drainage plan to the Department of Public
Works for approval.
Mitigation Milestone:
Prior to the issuance of a grading permit.
Responsible Monitoring Party:
Department of Public Works
R:\EA~EA79\Draft Mitigation Monitoring Program.doc
4
General Impact:
Alter the existing drainage pattern of the site that would result in
the erosion or siltation on- or off-site, or substantially increase the
rate or amount of surface runoff in a manner that would result in
flood on- or off-site or place structures within a 100-year flood
hazard area that would impede or redirect flood flows.
Mitigation Measure:
Determine if the project is within the floodplain or floodway and
obtain either a floodplain development permit, or If the property is
located within the floodway, obtain a FEMA letter of map revision
(LOMR). Ensure the proposed project does not adversely impact
surrounding properties and receive approval from Riverside
County Flood Control District prior to draining into Murrieta Creek.
Specific Process:
Submit a grading plan and hydrological study and a grading plan
that calls out elevations of the floodway and floodplain which has
been approved by FEMA, Riverside County Flood Control and
Public Works. Elevate the finished floor 1' above the FEMA Base
Flood Elevation.
Mitigation Milestone:
Prior to the issuance of a grading permit.
Responsible Monitoring Party:
Department of Public Works and Riverside County Flood
Control District.
General Impact:
Expose people or structures to a significant risk of loss, injury or
death involving flooding.
Mitigation Measure:
Make a fair share contribution toward regional flood control
facilities.
Specific Process:
Payment of area drainage plan fees to the Riverside County Flood
Control and Water Conservation District.
Mitigation Milestone:
Prior to the issuance of grading permits.
Responsible Monitoring Party: Department of Public Works
R:\EA~EA79\Draft Mitigation Monitoring Program.doc
5
NOISE
General Impact:
Exposure of people to severe noise levels in excess of the
General Plan standards or a substantial temporary or periodic
increase in ambient noise levels in the project vicinity above levels
existing without the project. Or, a substantial temporary or
periodic increase in ambient noise levels in the project vicinity
above levels existing without the project.
Mitigation Measure:
Construction only during approved days and hours of operation.
Specific Process:
Ensure construction only during approved days and hours of
operation through periodic monitoring and contractor's
commitment to comply with City standards.
Mitigation Milestone:
Prior to issuance of building permits.
Responsible Monitoring Party: Planning Department
General Impact:
Exposure of people to or generation of excessive groundborne
vibration or noise levels or a substantial permanent increase in
ambient noise levels in the project vicinity above levels existing
without the project.
Mitigation Measure:
The building shall have a Sound Transmission Control (STC)
rating of 55-60 decibels to comply with the General Plan noise
standards.
Specific Process:
Submit construction plans that have the exterior wall and roof
ceiling assembly that complies with the STC rating of 55-60
decibels.
Mitigation Milestone:
Prior to issuance of building permits.
Responsible Monitoring Party: Building Department
TRAFFIC
General Impact:
Cause an increase in traffic to the existing traffic load and capacity
of the street system.
Mitigation Measure:
Ensure levels of service are maintained at General Plan
acceptable levels.
Specific Process:
Prepare and submit a traffic and parking analysis.
Mitigation Milestone:
Prior to the submittal of an application for a grading or building
permit.
Responsible Monitoring Party:
Planning Department
R:\EA'~EA79\Draft Mitigation Monitoring Program.doc
6
Genera~ Impact:
Mitigation Measure:
Specific Process:
Mitigation Milestone:
Responsible Monitoring Party:
Result in inadequate parking capacity.
Ensure adequate parking is provided on-site and nearby within
reasonable walking distances.
Submit a parking analysis that includes a statement of operations
with days and hours of operation,
Prior to the submittal of an application for a grading or building
permit.
Planning Department
General Impact:
Result in inadequate parking capacity.
Mitigation Measure:
Ensure adequate parking is provided on-site and nearby within
reasonable walking distances.
Specific Process:
Mitigation Milestone:
Submit a joint use parking agreement with the two adjacent
existing parking lots to help mitigate off-site parking impacts,
Prior to the submittal of an application for a grading or building
permit.
Responsible Monitoring Party: Planning Department
R:\EA\EA79\Draff Mitigation Monitoring Program.doc
7
ATTACHMENT B
Schematic Architectural Drawings
1. Site Plan
2. Elevations
3. Sections
4. Perspectives
~-~
RDA
DEPARTMENTAL
REPORT
TO:
FROM:
DATE:
SUBJECT:
APPROVAL
CITY A']-FORNEY
DIRECTOR OF FINANCE
CITY MANAGER
TEMECULA REDEVELOPMENT AGENCY
AGENDA REPORT
Executive Director/Redevelopment Agency Members
John Meyer, Redevelopment Director
April 24, 2001
Monthly Departmental Report
Attached for your information is the monthly report as of April 24, 2001 for the Redevelopment
Department.
First Time Homebuyers Proflram
Funding in the amount of $200,000 is available for FY 00-01. One loan has closed for $24,000.
Residential Improvement Proflrams
The program budget for FY 00/01 is $250,000 and $181,576 has been funded.
Affordable HousinR
Two projects have been submitted for preliminary review. One project is from the Agency's
development partner, the other from a property owner who is also interested in developing
affordable housing. Staff is analyzing these proposals.
Senior HousinR
Agency staff is negotiating with a development partner to rehab 96 units for affordable senior
housing. A senior housing demand study is being conducted.
Old Town Community Theater
The architect, Fisher Merriman Sehgal and Yanez Inc., has conducted stakeholder and community
interviews and has completed the schematic phase of the project. The Community Theater Advisory
Committee reviewed preliminary floor plans and elevations on January 22, 2000. The Old Town
Local Review Board and Community Services Commission recommended approval of the master
plan for the Theater at their February 12, 2000 meetings. The City Council reviewed the conceptual
plan at its April 24 meeting.
R:~SYERSK~VJONTH LLY~report.apr01 .doc
Old Town Trading Post
Agency staff is handling the acquisition and relocation of tenants of the Trading Post property.
Escrow closed on August 25, 2000.
Facade Irnprovement/Non-Conformin.q Sign Pro.qram
The following facade improvement/sign projects have recently been completed:
· Rooster Creek Crossing
Signs
Rhythem & Brews
Signs
· The Health Insurance Agency
Signs
· The Old Tin Box
Signs
The following facade improvements are underway:
· M & M Art and Frame
Signs
· Waves of Beauty
Signs
· Y's & O's
Signs
Old Town Promotions/Marketing
Western Days was held on April 7 and 8 and featured 3 bands, trail horee packing
demonstrations, roping, western skits and gunfighter competitions, gold panning,
woodcarving exhibits, pony rides and a Civil War re-enactment. The Agency is also
sponsoring several other events over the next few months. The events include Dixieland
Jazz Festival scheduled for May 12 and 13 featuring 3-4 bands daily on two stages; and the
Street Painting Festival scheduled for June 2 & 3 featuring numerous artists displaying their
chalk art on the streets of Old Town.
R:~SYERSK~IONTHLLY~'eport.aprO 1 .doc
TEMECULA FINANCING
AUTHORITY
ITEM 1
TO:
FROM:
DATE:
SUBJECT:
APPROVA~,~. ~--~-
City Attorney ~7.¢_x~
Director of Fina~~
TEMECULA PUBLIC FINANCING AUTHORITY
AGENDA REPORT
Temecula Public Financing Authority
Executive Director, Shawn D. Nelson
April 24, 2001
Administrative Matters and Initial Actions Relating to Formation of Community Facilities
District
RECOMMENDATION:
1. That the Authority, by minute order, appoint a Chairperson from among its Board of Directors.
2. That the Authority adopt the resolutions entitled:
RESOLUTION NO. TPFA 01-
A RESOLUTION OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE TEMECULA
PUBLIC FINANCING AUTHORITY REGARDING MEETINGS,
ESTABLISHING A SEAL FOR THE AUTHORITY, DIRECTING THE FILING
OF A NOTICE OF FORMATION WITH THE SECRETARY OF STATE, AND
ESTABLISHING THE RULES FOR ITS PROCEEDINGS
RESOLUTION NO. TPFA 01-
A RESOLUTION OF THE TEMECULA PUBLIC FINANCING AUTHORITY
ADOPTING LOCAL GOALS AND POLICIES FOR COMMUNITY FACILITIES
DISTRICTS
RESOLUTION NO. TPFA 01-
A RESOLUTION OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE TEMECULA
PUBLIC FINANCING AUTHORITY ACKNOWLEDGING RECEIPT OF
PETITIONS TO FORM A COMMUNITY FACILITIES DISTRICT, AND
AUTHORIZING AND DIRECTING ACTIONS WITH RESPECT THERETO
BACKGROUND: Ashby Development Company, Inc. and Calloway 220, LLC (collectively, the
"Developers") have requested that a community facilities district be formed to assist in the financing
of public improvements in the Roripaugh Ranch area. The City and the Redevelopment Agency
created the Authority, by execution of a joint exercise of powers agreement, to provide an
independent governmental entity that could consider the proposed financing and act as the issuer of
any bonds.
The Authority, being newly created, must first appoint a Chairperson from among its members. The
Authority must then adopt a resolution as to certain administrative matters, such as meetings and
rules for proceedings of the Authority. The resolution provides for compensation to Boardmembers in
the amount of $100.00 for each meeting of the authority that they attend, with a maximum of $200.00
per month for each Boardmember.
The Authority will then consider the adoption of two resolutions related to the formation of a
community facilities district. The CFD will only include land owned or controlled by landowners who
desire to participate in the financing program. The Developers have requested that the CFD issue
bonds to finance the public improvements so that development of the land can proceed.
The Developers have agreed to pay all City and Authority costs related to the proposed CFD
formation and bond issue, and have submitted petitions and a deposit/reimbursement agreement with
respect thereto. The bonds would be payable solely from special taxes levied on land in the CFD and
collected by the Authority.
SPECIFIC ACTIONS: In order to continue the process, begun by the City and the Redevelopment
Agency by creating the Authority, to consider the formation of the community facilities district and the
issuance of the bonds, the following actions must occur:
The Authority, by minute order, should select a Chairperson from among its members.
The Authority will consider the adoption of a resolution regarding its meetings, a seal,
and establishing rules for its proceedings.
The Authority will then consider adoption of a resolution approving local goals and
policies for its Mello-Roos districts, which must be adopted under State law prior to the
formation of a community facilities district.
The Authority will then consider adoption of a resolution accepting the Developers'
deposits, approving a deposit/reimbursement agreement with the City and the
Developers and engaging professionals to assist the City and the Authority in forming
the CFD and issuing bonds of the Authority for the CFD.
FISCAL IMPACT: The Developers have agreed to pay all out of pocket expenses incurred relative to
the proposed financing. Costs of issuance of the proposed bond issue will be paid from the proceeds
of the bonds to be issued by the Authority. All annual costs of administering the bond issued will be
paid by special taxes levied on the properties in the community facilities district.
The bonds will not be obligations of the City or the Redevelopment Agency, but will be limited
obligations of the Authority, payable solely from special taxes levied on land in the community
facilities district.
The procedural resolution of the Authority provides for compensation to Authority Boardmembers in
the amount of $100.00 per Authority meeting that they attend, with a maximum of $200.00 in any
month. Said amounts are expected to be paid initially from administrative levies on land in the
community facilities district, and otherwise from monies derived by the Authority from its activities.
Attachments:
Resolutions (3)
Local Goals and Policies for Community Facilities Districts
Deposit/Reimbursement Agreement
RESOLUTION NO. TPFA 01-02
A RESOLUTION OF THE TEMECULA PUBLIC FINANCING
AUTHORITY ADOPTING LOCAL GOALS AND POLICIES FOR
COMMUNITY FACILITIES DISTRICTS
WHEREAS, Section 53312.7(a) of the California Government Code requires that the
Board of Directors of the Temecula Public Financing Authority (the "Authority") consider and
adopt local goals and policies for community facilities districts ("CFDs") prior to the initiation of
proceedings by the Authority to establish a CFD under the provisions of Chapter 2.5 of Part 1 of
Division 2 of Title 5 of the California Government Code (the "Act"); and
WHEREAS, this Board of Directors intends to consider the establishment of a CFD
related to the financing of public improvements in the Roripaugh Ranch area, and desires at
this time to adopt local goals and policies for CFDs so that it may commence proceedings for
establishing a community facilities district to finance public improvements in such area; and
WHEREAS, Authority staff has caused to be prepared a draft of goals and policies for
CFDs of the Authority (the "Goals and Policies"), the form of which is on file with the Secretary,
and this Board of Directors has duly considered said Goals and Policies.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, by the Board of Directors of the Temecula
Public Financing Authority that the Goals and Policies, in the form on file with the Secretary, are
hereby adopted as the local goals and policies of the Authority for CFDs, and are intended to
meet the requirements of Section 53312.7(a) of the Act.
PASSED, APPROVED AND ADOPTED, by the Board of Directors of the Ternecula
Public Financing Authority at a meeting held on the 24th day of April, 2001.
Jeff Comerchero, Chairperso~
ATTEST:
R:/ResosTP FA2001/Resos01-02 1
STATE OF CALIFORNIA )
COUNTY OF RIVERSIDE ) ss
CITY OF TEMECULA )
I, Susan Jones, Secretary of the Temecula Public Financing Authority, HEREBY DO
CERTIFY that the foregoing Resolution No. TPFA 01-02 was duly adopted at a regular meeting
of the Board of Directors of the Temecula Public Financing Authority on the 24th day of April,
2001, by the following vote:
AYES: 5 BOARDMEMBERS: Naggar, Pratt, Roberts, Stone, Comerchero
NOES: 0 BOARDMEMBERS: None
ABSENT: 0 BOARDMEMBERS: None
Susan ~. Jones, CML;
Auth~tary/City Clerk
R:/ResosTPFA2001/Resos01-02 2
RESOLUTION NO. TPFA 0t-
A RESOLUTION OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE TEMECULA
PUBLIC FINANCING AUTHORITY REGARDING MEETINGS, ESTABLISHING
A SEAL FOR THE AUTHORITY, DIRECTING THE FILING OF A NOTICE OF
FORMATION WITH THE SECRETARY OF STATE, AND ESTABLISHING THE
RULES FOR ITS PROCEEDINGS
WHEREAS, the City of Temecula (the "City") and the Redevelopment Agency of the City
of Temecula (the "Agency") have adopted resolutions authorizing the formation of a joint
powers authority under Articles 1-4 (commencing with Section 6500) of Chapter 5, Division 7,
Title 1 of the Government Code of the State of California to be known as the "Temecula Public
Financing Authority" (the "Authority"), and the execution of a joint exercise of powers agreement
in connection therewith; and
WHEREAS, the City and the Agency have executed said agreement and the Authority,
being duly formed, now desires to take certain actions relative to its administration as set forth
below.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED by the Board of Directors of the Temecula
Public Financing Authority as follows:
Section 1. Meetings.
A. Regular meetings of the Authority shall be held on the second and fourth
Tuesdays of the months at 7:00 p.m., and may be combined with meetings of the City
Council and Redevelopment Agency of the City of Temecula. The Authority shall be
required to hold at least one meeting annually on the second Tuesday of July on each
year, or the date of the first City Council meeting in the month of July each year,
whichever occurs latter.
B. Noticing of regular, special or adjourned meetings of the Authority, posting of
agendas, public comments to the Authority Board, closed sessions, and other
procedural matters affecting meetings of the Authority shall be governed by the
provisions of the Ralph M. Brown Act, Government Code Section 54950 et seq. ("Brown
Act").
Section 2. Meetinq Place. All meetings of the Board of Directors shall be held at the
regular meeting place of the City Council of the City, unless the Board of Directors shall adjourn
to or fix another place of meeting in a notice to be given thereof, or unless prevented by flood,
fire or other disaster. Said regular meeting place is hereby fixed and established at the City
Council Chambers, Temecula City Hall, 43200 Business Park Drive, Temecula, California.
Section 3. Rules of Proceedin,qs.
A. Public Meetings. All meetings of the Authority shall be open to the public,
unless a closed session is held as permitted by provisions of the Brown Act.
B. Meeting Procedures. Unless otherwise specified by this Resolution, all
proceedings of the meetings of the Authority shall be conducted in accordance with the
provisions of the Brown Act and the ordinances, resolutions or written policies governing
the conduct of meetings of the City Council of the City of Temecula.
C. Quorum. Three (3) of the members of the Board of Directors shall constitute
a quorum for the transaction of business.
Section 4. Contracts; A,qreements. All contracts or agreements on behalf of the
Authority shall be signed by the Chairperson or the Executive Director, and countersigned by
the Secretary, after having been authorized to do so by action of the Board of Directors, unless
otherwise specifically provided by resolution of the Board of Directors. Any contract or
agreement involving less than twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) may be executed by any
of such officers without the need for any approval by the Board of Directors.
Section 5. Seal. The Authority shall have an Official Seal consisting of two (2)
concentric circles with the words "Temecula Public Financing Authority" within the outer circle
and the date of formation of the Authority within the inner circle. The Secretary shall obtain the
Seal at the Authority's expense and shall have custody of the Seal.
Section 6. Secretary of State. Bond Counsel to the Authority is hereby directed to file a
notice of the formation of the Authority with the Secretary of State of the State of California, as
required by Sections 6503.5 and 53051 of the California Government Code.
Section 7. Office and Mailinq Address. The office of the Authority and its official
mailing address are hereby fixed and established at Temecula Public Financing Authority c/o
City of Temecula, 43200 Business Park Drive, Temecula, California 92589, Attention:
Executive Director.
Section 8. Conflict of Interest Code. The Conflict of Interest Code of the City is hereby
adopted as the Conflict of Interest Code for the Authority.
Section 9. Compensation to Boardmembers. Compensation for members of the Board
of Directors is hereby established at one hundred dollars ($100.00) for each meeting attended
by a member of the Board of Directors. The maximum compensation per month for each
member shall be two hundred dollars ($200.00). Compensation shall be paid as of the date of
the first meeting of the Authority.
PASSED, APPROVED AND ADOPTED, by the Board of Directors of the Temecula
Public Financing Authority at a meeting held on the 24th day of April, 2001.
ATTEST:
Chairperson
Susan W. Jones, CMC
City Clerk/Authority Secretary
[SEAL]
STATE OF CALIFORNIA )
COUNTY OF RIVERSIDE ) ss
CITY OF TEMECULA )
I, Susan Jones, Acting Secretary of the Temecula Public Financing Authority, HEREBY
DO CERTIFY that the foregoing Resolution No. TPFA 01- was duly adopted at a regular
meeting of the Board of Directors of the Temecula Public Financing Authority on the 24th day of
April, 2001, by the following vote:
AYES:
BOARDMEMBERS:
NOES:
BOARDMEMBERS:
ABSENT:
BOARDMEMBERS:
Susan W. Jones, CMC
Authority Secmta~/City Clerk
RESOLUTION NO. TPFA 01-
A RESOLUTION OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF THE TEMECULA
PUBLIC FINANCING AUTHORITY ACKNOWLEDGING RECEIPT OF
PETITIONS TO FORM A COMMUNITY FACILITIES DISTRICT, AND
AUTHORIZING AND DIRECTING ACTIONS WITH RESPECT THERETO
WHEREAS, Ashby Development Company, Inc. and Calloway 220, LLC (collectively,
the "Developers") have submitted to the Board of Directors of the Temecula Public Financing
Authority (the "Authority") Petitions (Including Waivers) (the "Petitions") requesting that the
Board of Directors conduct proceedings under Section 53311 et seq. of the California
Government Code (the "Act") to create a community facilities district to be designated
"Temecula Public Financing Authority Community Facilities District No. 01-1 (Butterfield Stage
Road)" (the "CFD"); and
WHEREAS, the Developers have also submitted checks in the amounts referred to in
the Petitions (the "Deposit") and a Deposit/Reimbursement Agreement (the "Agreement"),
among the Developers, the City of Temecula and the Authority, and this Board of Directors now
desires to accept the Petitions, authorize the execution and delivery by the Authority of the
Agreement, employ certain consultants necessary for the formation of the CFD and the sale of
bonds of the Authority for the CFD, and authorize and direct Authority staff to take actions
necessary to present to this Board of Directors for approval the documents necessary to form
the CFD and issue bonds of the Authority for the CFD.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED by the Board of Directors of the Temecula
Public Financing Authority as follows:
Section 1. Receipt by the Authority of the Petitions and the Deposit are hereby
acknowledged. The Director of Finance of the City of Temecula is hereby authorized and
directed to accept the Deposit, and to use the Deposit in the manner contemplated by the
Agreement. The Executive Director of the Authority is hereby authorized and directed to
execute the Agreement for and on behalf of the Authority, and to take all actions necessary, in
his discretion, to implement the Agreement.
Section 2. City staff, acting for and on behalf of the Authority, are hereby authorized
and directed to take all actions necessary or advisable to present to the Board of Directors for
its review and approval all proceedings necessary to create the CFD and issue bonds of the
Authority therefore. The passage of this Resolution shall in no way obligate this Board of
Directors to form the CFD or issue bonds of the Authority for the CFD.
Section 3. The firm of Stone & Youngberg LLC is hereby designated as underwriter to
the Authority for any bonds to be issued for the CFD.
Section 4. The firm of David Taussig and Associates, Inc. is hereby designated as
Special Tax Consultant to the Authority for the CFD, the firm of Fieldman Rolapp & Associates
is hereby designated as financial advisor to the Authority for the CFD, the firm of Quint &
Thimmig LLP, is hereby designated as Bond Counsel to the Authority for the CFD, and the firm
of McFarlin & Anderson is hereby designated as Disclosure Counsel to the Authority for the
CFD. The Executive Director is hereby authorized and directed to execute agreements with
said firms for their services in connection with the CFD, in form and substance acceptable to
the Executive Director. The fees and expenses of such consultants shall be payable solely
from the Deposit and/or the proceeds of bonds, if any, issued by the Authority for the CFD.
Section $. The Executive Director is hereby authorized and directed to engage an
appraiser to appraise the property subject to the special taxes to be levied within the CFD, and
a market absorption consultant to analyze the proposed development in the CFD, on such
terms as are acceptable to the Executive Director. The fees and expenses of such consultants
shall be payable solely from the Deposit and /or the proceeds of bonds, if any, issued by the
Authority for the CFD.
Section 6. The Executive Director, Treasurer, Secretary, legal counsel to the Authority
and all other officers and agents of the Authority are hereby authorized and directed to take all
actions necessary or advisable to give effect to the transactions contemplated by this
Resolution.
PASSED, APPROVED AND ADOPTED, by the Board of Directors of the Temecula
Public Financing Authority at a meeting held on the 24th day of April, 2001.
ATTEST:
Chairperson
Susan W. Jones, CMC
City Clerk/Authority Secretary
[SEAL]
STATE OF CALIFORNIA )
COUNTY OF RIVERSIDE ) ss
CITY OF TEMECULA )
I, Susan Jones, Secretary of the Temecula Public Financing Authority, HEREBY DO
CERTIFY that the foregoing Resolution No. TPFA 01- was duly adopted at a
the 24t~regular
meeting of the Board of Directors of the Temecula Public Financing Authority on day of
April, 2001, by the following vote:
AYES:
NOES:
ABSENT:
BOARDMEMBERS:
BOARDMEMBERS:
BOARDMEMBERS:
Susan W. Jones, CMC
Authority Secretary/City Clerk
DEPOSIT/REIMBURSEMENT AGREEMENT
Temecula Public Financing Authority
Community Facilities District No. 01-1
(Butterfield Stage Road)
THIS DEPOSIT/REIMBURSEMENT AGREEMENT (the "Agreement") is by and among
the City of Temecula (the "City"), the Temecula Public Financing Authority (the "Authority") for
itself and on behalf of the proposed Temecula Public Financing Authority Community Facilities
District No. 01-1 (Butterfield Stage Road) (the "CFD"), Ashby Development Company, Inc.
("Ashby") and Calloway 220, LLC ("Calloway" and, together with Ashby, the "Developers).
RECITALS:
WHEREAS, the Developers have requested that the Authority consider the issuance of
bonds for the CFD (the "Bonds") under Sections 53311 et seq. of the California Government
Code (the "Act"); and
WHEREAS, the Developers are willing to deposit funds with the Authority to ensure
payment of the costs of the Authority and the City in forming the Authority and otherwise in
connection with the issuance of bonds for the CFD and the proposed expenditure of the
proceeds thereof, provided that such funds so advanced are reimbursed to the Developers from
the proceeds of any bonds issued by the Authority for the CFD to the extent provided herein;
and
WHEREAS, the Authority and the Developers now desire to specify the terms of said
deposit and reimbursement.
AGREEMENT:
NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the foregoing and the mutual covenants set
forth herein, and for other consideration the receipt and sufficiency of which is hereby
acknowledged, the parties hereto agree as follows:
Section 1. The Deposit: Additional Advances. Ashby has provided to the City $113,500
and Calloway had provided to the City $18,500 (collectively, the "Deposit"), to be used by the
City to pay the costs in conducting proceedings for the issuance of bonds for the CFD (as more
fully described in Section 2(a) below, the "Initial Costs"), said amounts having been heretofore
delivered by the Developers to the Finance Director of the City by means of checks made
payable to the "City of Temecula." The City, by its execution hereof, acknowledges receipt by
the City of the Deposit. The checks representing the Deposit have been cashed by the City,
and the Deposit may be commingled with other funds of the City for purposes of investment
and safekeeping, but the City shall at all times maintain records as to the expenditure of the
Deposit.
The Developers hereby agree to advance any additional amounts necessary to pay any
Initial Costs incurred by the City or the Authority, in excess of the amount of the Deposit,
promptly upon written demand therefore by the Finance Director of the City; provided that (a)
Ashby shall contribute 86% of any such additional amounts requested and Calioway shall
contribute 14% of any such additional amounts so requested; and (b) the amount of the
Deposit, plus any such additional amounts (the "Additional Deposits" and, collectively with the
Deposit, the "Deposits"), shall not exceed $200,000 without the prior written consent of the
Developers. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the City Manager may direct City and Authority
staff and consultants to cease all work related to the issuance of the Bonds and/or the
formation of the Authority and the CFD until any additional amounts so demanded has been
received by the City.
Section 2. Use of Funds. The Deposits shall be administered as follows:
(a) The Finance Director of the City may draw upon the Deposits from time to time to
pay the Initial Costs, including but not limited to: (i) the fees and expenses of any consultants to
the City or the Authority employed in connection with the issuance of the Bonds and the
proposed expenditure of the proceeds thereof (such as engineering, legal counsel, including
the City Attorney, Bond Counsel and financing and special tax consultants); (ii) the costs of
appraisals, market absorption and feasibility studies and other reports necessary or deemed
advisable by City staff or consultants in connection with the Bonds; (iii) costs of publication of
notices, preparation and mailing of ballots and other costs related to any election with respect to
the CFD, the rate and method of apportionment of the special taxes to be levied therein and
any bonded indebtedness thereof; (iv) a reasonable charge for City staff time, as determined by
the City Manager in his sole discretion, in analyzing the CFD, the Bonds and the expenditure of
the proceeds thereof, including a reasonable allocation of City overhead expense related
thereto; and (v) any and all other actual costs and expenses incurred by the City or the
Authority with respect to the CFD or the Bonds after the date of execution of this Agreement.
The Developers hereby acknowledge that, at a minimum, the following amounts will or may be
charged against the Deposits, whether or not the CFD is formed and the Bonds are issued: (i)
up to $30,000.00 to David Taussig and Associates, Inc., special tax consultant, (ii) up to
$30,000.00 to an appraiser, (iii) up to $12,000.00 to Richards, Watson & Gershon, City Attorney
and general counsel to the Authority, (iv) up to $15,000.00 for a market absorption analysis
related to the CFD, (v) up to $20,000.00 to Fieldman, Rolapp & Associates for financial advisory
services, and (vi) up to $25,000.00 to the City for City Staff time in analyzing the CFD, the
Bonds and the expenditure of the proceeds thereof, including a reasonable allocation of City
overhead expense related thereto, including all other actual costs and expenses incurred by the
City.
(b) If the Bonds are issued under the Act by the Authority secured by special taxes
levied upon the land within the CFD, the Authority shall provide for reimbursement to the
Developers, without interest, of all amounts charged against the Deposits, said reimbursement
to be made solely from the proceeds of the Bonds and only to the extent otherwise permitted
under the Act. On or within ten (10) business days after the date of issuance and delivery of
the Bonds, the Finance Director of the City shall return the then unexpended Deposits to the
Developers, without interest, less an amount equal to any costs incurred by the City or the
Authority or that the City or the Authority is otherwise committed to pay, which costs would be
subject to payment under Section 2(a) above, but have not yet been so paid.
(¢) If the Bonds are not issued, the Finance Director of the City shall, within ten (10)
business days after adoption of the resolution stating the intent of the Authority to terminate
proceedings under the Act with respect to the issuance of the Bonds, return the then
unexpended Deposits to the Developers, without interest, less an amount equal to any costs
incurred by the City or the Authority or that the City or the Authority is otherwise committed to
pay, which costs would be subject to payment under Section 2(a) above but have not yet been
so paid.
(d) The Deposits shall be charged, and reimbursements and/or returns of unexpended
funds shall be allocated, 86% to Ashby and 14% to Calloway.
Section 3. Reimbursement of Other Developer Costs. Nothing contained herein shall
prohibit reimbursement of other costs and expenses of the Developers or any successor in
interest thereto with respect to the land in the CFD incurred in connection with the CFD from the
proceeds of the Bonds, including, but not limited to fees and expenses of legal counsel to the
Developers and/or their successors in interest and special consultant expenses. Any such
reimbursement shall be made solely from the proceeds of the Bonds and only to the extent
otherwise permitted under the Act and otherwise provided for, at the reasonable discretion of
the Authority, in the proceedings for the issuance of the Bonds.
Section 4. A,qreement Not Debt or Liability of City or Authority. It is hereby
acknowledged and agreed that this Agreement is not a debt or liability of the City or the
Authority, as provided in Section 53314.9(b) of the Act. Neither the City nor the Authority shall
in any event be liable hereunder other than to return the unexpended and uncommitted portions
of the Deposits as provided in Section 2 above and provide an accounting under Section 7
below. Neither the City nor the Authority shall be obligated to advance any of their own funds
with respect to the CFD or for any of the other purposes listed in Section 2(a) hereof. No
member of the City Council, the Board of Directors of the Authority or officer, employee or
agent of the City or the Authority shall to any extent be personally liable hereunder.
Section $. No Obligation to Issue Bonds. The provisions of this Agreement shall in no
way obligate the City or the Authority to issue any bonds, or to expend any of their own funds in
connection with the CFD.
Section 6. Severability. If any part of this Agreement is held to be illegal or
unenforceable by a court of competent jurisdiction, the remainder of this Agreement shall be
given effect to the fullest extent reasonably possible.
Section 7. Accounting. The City Finance Director shall provide the Developers with a
written accounting of moneys expended under this Agreement, within ten (10) business days of
receipt by the Finance Director of the City of a written request therefore submitted by an
authorized officer of a Developer. No more than one accounting will be provided in any
calendar month and the cost of providing the accounting shall be charged to the Deposits.
Section 8. Successors and Assigns. This Agreement shall be binding upon and inure
to the benefit of the successors and assigns of the parties hereto.
Section 9. Counterparts. This Agreement may be executed in counterparts, each of
which shall be deemed an original.
-3-
IN WITNESS THEREOF, the parties hereto have executed this Agreement as of the day
and year written alongside their signature line below.
Executed on:
April __, 2001
DEVELOPERS:
ASHBY DEVELOPMENT COMPANY, INC.
By:
Its:
Executed on:
April __, 2001
CALLOWAY 220, LLC
By:
Its:
Executed on:
April __, 2001
CITY:
CITY OF TEMECULA
By:
City Manager
Executed on:
April __, 2001
AUTHORITY:
TEMECULA PUBLIC FINANCING
AUTHORITY, for itself and on behalf of the
proposed Temecula Public Financing Authority
Community Facilities District 01-1 (Butterfield
Stage Road)
By:
Executive Director
TEMECULA PUBLIC FINANCING AUTHORITY
LOCAL GOALS AND POLICIES FOR
COMMUNITY FACILITIES DISTRICTS
(adopted April 24, 2001)
I. INTRODUCTION. Section 53312.7(a) of the California Government Code requires
that the Temecula Public Financing Authority (the "Authority") consider and adopt local goals
and policies concerning the use of the Mello-Roos Community Facilities Act of 1982 (the "Act"),
prior to the initiation of proceedings to establish a new community facilities district ("CFD")
under the Act. The following goals and policies are intended to meet the minimum
requirements of the Act, and may be amended or supplemented by resolution of the Board of
Directors of the Authority at any time.
II. GOALS. The Authority will consider the use of the Act for financing public facilities
and services, and refinancing existing liens levied or bonds issued to finance public facilities,
only in connection with the prospective development of land in the City of Temecula (the "City"),
or as otherwise referenced in an owner participation or development agreement to which the
City or the Redevelopment Agency of the City of Temecula is a party. Any request for a CFD
which is not integral to the development of land will require amendment of these goals and
policies, and will be considered on a case-by-case basis.
All Authority and noncontingent consultant costs incurred in the evaluation and
establishment of new CFDs will be paid by the proponents of the CFD. The Authority shall use
all reasonable efforts not incur any expense for processing a CFD which are not eligible to be
reimbursed from CFD bond proceeds. Expenses incurred by the Authority that are not
chargeable to the CFD shall be borne by the proponent of the CFD.
Ill. ELIGIBLE PUBLIC FACILITIES AND SERVICES. The improvements eligible to be
financed by a CFD must be owned by a public agency or public utility, and must have a useful
life of at least five (5) years, except that up to five percent of the proceeds of an issue may be
used for facilities owned and operated by a privately owned public utility. The improvements
must be consistent with any relevant specific plan approvals. A CFD shall not vest any rights to
future land use on any properties, including those which are responsible for paying special
taxes.
The list of public facilities eligible to be financed by a CFD include, but are not limited to,
the following:
· Freeway Off ramps
· Street Improvements
· Street lighting
· Traffic signals and safety lighting
· Landscaping in public right-of-ways
· Governmental facilities
· Sanitary sewer facilities
· Storm drain facilities
· Flood control facilities
· Potable and reclaimed water facilities
· Convention Center
· Utility relocations
· Elementary and secondary school
sites and facilities
Libraries
Public utilities
Police and fire protection facilities
Public parking structures
Cultural facilities
Child care facilities
Parks and recreational facilities
The funding of public facilities to be owned and operated by public agencies other than
the Authority or the City shall be considered on a case-by-case basis. If the proposed facilities
are appropriate for financing by a CFD and are consistent with approved land use plans for the
property, the Authority may consider entering into a joint community facilities agreement in
order to finance these facilities. A joint agreement with the public agency that will own and
operate any such facility must be entered into prior to the adoption of the resolution of formation
relating to the formation of any CFD, except as otherwise permitted under the Act.
The Authority will consider on a case-by-case basis CFDs established for the provisions
of services eligible to be funded under the Act. Eligible services are as specified in the Act.
IV. PRIORITIES FOR CFD FINANCING. Priority for CFD financing shall be given to
public facilities which are necessary for development.
V. CREDIT QUALITY REQUIREMENTS FOR CFD BOND ISSUES. All CFD bond
issues should have at least a three to one property value to public lien ratio after calculating the
value of the financed public improvements to be installed and any private improvements for
which financing is reasonably assured, unless the Board of Directors of the Authority finds and
determines that the proposed bonds do not present any unusual credit risk or, by a four-fifths
vote, that the proposed bond issue should proceed for specified public policy reasons. Property
value may be based on either an appraisal or on assessed values as indicated on the county
assessor's tax roll. Any appraiser shall be selected by the Authority (or the City on behalf of the
Authority), and the appraisal shall be based on standards determined applicable by Authority
staff and consultants. The appraisal must be dated within six months of the date the bonds are
issued. The public lien amount shall include the bond issue currently being sold plus any public
indebtedness secured by a fixed lien on real property currently existing against the properties to
be taxed.
A reserve fund equal to the lesser of (i) ten percent of the original proceeds of the bond
issue, (ii) the maximum annual debt service on the bonds, or (iii) one hundred twenty-five
percent of the average annual debt service on the bonds is considered as appropriate for any
bond issue where less than seventy-five percent of the buildable acreage has been developed.
A smaller reserve fund may be appropriate for bond issues in CFDs where over seventy-five
percent of the buildable acreage has been developed. The reserve fund may be maintained by
or on behalf of a public financing authority, if such an authority purchases the CFD bonds, and
need not be held under the fiscal agent agreement pursuant to which the CFD bonds are
issued. Less than a three to one property value to public lien ratio, excessive tax delinquencies,
or projects of poor economic viability may cause the Authority to disallow the sale of bonds or
require credit enhancement prior to bond sale.
-2-
If the Authority requires letters of credit or other security in connection with the issuance
of bonds for a CFD, the credit enhancement shall be issued by an institution, in a form and
upon terms and conditions satisfactory to the Authority. Any security required to be provided
may be discharged by the Authority upon the opinion of a qualified appraiser, retained by the
Authority, that a value-to-lien ratio of three to one has been attained. As an alternative to
providing other security, a portion of the bond proceeds may be placed in escrow with a
corporate agent in an amount sufficient to assure a value-to-lien ratio of at least three to one on
the outstanding proceeds, or other appropriate release requirements.
VI. DISCLOSURE REQUIREMENTS FOR PROSPECTIVE
PURCHASERS.
PROPERTY
A. Disclosure Requirements for Developers. Developers who are selling lots or parcels
that are within a CFD shall provide disclosure notice to prospective purchasers that comply with
all of the requirements of Section 53341.5 of the Government Code. The disclosure notice
must be provided to prospective purchasers of property at or prior to the time the contract or
deposit receipt for the purchase of property is executed. Developers shall keep an executed
copy of each disclosure document as evidence that disclosure has been provided to all
purchasers of property within a CFD.
B. Disclosure Requirements for the Resale of Lots. The Treasurer of the Authority shall
provide a notice of special taxes to sellers of property (other than developers) which will enable
them to comply with their notice requirements under Section 1102.6 of the Civil Code. This
notice shall be provided by the Treasurer of the Authority within five working days of receiving a
written request for the notice, unless otherwise permitted under the Act. A reasonable fee may
be charged for providing the notice, not to exceed any maximum fee specified in the Act.
VII. EQUITY OF SPECIAL TAX FORMULAS AND MAXIMUM SPECIAL TAXES.
Special tax formulas for CFDs shall provide for minimum special tax levels which satisfy the
following expenses of a CFD: (a) 110 pement gross debt service coverage for all CFD bonded
indebtedness, (b) the projected administrative expenses of the CFD, and (c) amounts equal to
the differences between expected earnings on any escrow fund and the interest payments due
on bonds of the CFD. Additionally, the special tax formula may provide for the following: (a)
any amounts required to establish or replenish any reserve fund established in association with
the indebtedness of the CFD, (b) the accumulation of funds reasonably required for future debt
service, (c) amounts equal to projected delinquencies of special tax payments, (d) the costs of
remarketing, credit enhancement and liquidity facility fees, (e) the cost of acquisition,
construction, furnishing or equipping of facilities, (f) lease payments for existing or future
facilities, (g) costs associated with the release of funds from an escrow account, and (h) any
other costs or payments permitted by the Act and applicable law.
The special tax formula shall be reasonable and equitable in allocating public facilities'
costs to parcels within the CFD, unless otherwise agreed to by at least a majority of the
property owners to be subject to the special tax. Exemptions from the special tax may be given
to parcels which are publicly owned, are held by a property owners' association, are used for a
public purpose such as open space or wetlands, are affected by public utility easements making
impractical their utilization for other than the purposes set forth in the easements, or have
insufficient value to support bonded indebtedness.
-3-
The total projected property tax levels for any CFD shall not exceed any maximum
specified in the Act. The annual increase, if any, in the maximum special tax for any parcel
shall not exceed any maximum specified in the Act. The increase in the special tax levied on
any parcel as a consequence of delinquency or default by the owner of any other parcel shall
not exceed any maximum specified in the Act.
The Authority (or the City on behalf of the Authority) shall retain a special tax consultant
to prepare a report which: (a) recommends a special tax for the proposed CFD, and (b)
evaluates the special tax proposed to determine its ability to adequately fund identified public
facilities, Authority administrative costs, services (if applicable) and other related expenditures.
Such analysis shall also address the resulting aggregate tax burden of all proposed special
taxes plus existing special taxes, ad valorem taxes and assessments on the properties within
the CFD.
VIII. APPRAISALS. The definitions, standards and assumptions to be used for
appraisals shall be determined by Authority staff on a case-by-case basis, with input from
Authority consultants and CFD proponents, and by reference to relevant materials and
information promulgated by the State of California. In any event, the value-to-lien ratio shall be
determined based upon an appraisal by an independent MAI appraiser of the proposed CFD.
The appraisal shall be coordinated by and under the direction of the Authority (or the City on
behalf of the Authority). All costs associated with the preparation of the appraisal report shall
be paid by the proponents of the CFD through an advance deposit mechanism. The Authority
shall have discretion to retain a consultant to prepare a report to verify market absorption
assumptions and projected sales prices of the properties which may be subject to the maximum
special tax in the CFD.
IX. TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF BONDS. All terms and conditions of any CFD
bonded indebtedness shall be established by the Authority, after consultation with the
Authority's consultants, City staff and the proponents of the CFD. The Authority will control,
manage and invest, or cause to be controlled, managed and invested, all CFD bond proceeds.
Each bond issue shall be structured so as to minimize any impact on the bonding capacity or
any credit rating of the Authority or the City.
All statements and material related to the sale of bonds shall emphasize and state that
neither the faith, nor general credit of the Authority or the City is pledged to security or
repayment of the bonds. The sole source of pledged revenues to repay CFD bonds shall be
the special taxes, bond proceeds and reserve funds held under the bond document, and the
proceeds of foreclosure proceedings and additional security instruments provided at the time of
bond issuance, unless otherwise specifically agreed to in writing by the Authority.
X. CFD INITIAL COSTS. All Authority and consultant costs incurred in the evaluation of
CFD applications and the establishment of CFDs will be paid by the proponents of the CFD by
advance deposit increments. The Authority shall use reasonable efforts not to incur any non-
reimbursable expenses for processing and administering CFDs. In general, expenses not
chargeable to the CFD shall be directly borne by the proponents of the CFD.
Xl. USE OF CONSULTANTS. The Authority (or the City on behalf of the Authority)
shall select all consultants necessary for the formation of the CFD and the issuance of bonds,
including the underwriter(s), bond counsel, financial advisors, appraiser, market absorption
study consultant and the special tax consultant. Prior consent of any proponent of a CFD shall
not be required in the determination by the Authority of the consulting and financing team.
Xll. EXCEPTIONS TO THESE POLICIES. The Authority may find that a waiver of any
of the above stated policies is reasonable given identified Authority benefits to be derived from
such waiver. Such waivers only will be granted by action of the Board of Directors of the
Authority.
-5-
ITEM 13
APPROVAL
CITY A'I-rORNEY
DIRECTOR OF FINANCE ~:=:
CiTY MANAGER
TO:
FROM:
DATE:
SUBJECT:
CITY OF TEMECULA
AGENDA REPORT
City Manager/City Council
Gary Thornhill, Deputy City Manager¢~~'~
April 24, 2001
Discussion of 1999 Draft Traffic Study
PREPARED BY: David Hogan, Senior Planner
RECOMMENDATION:
Draft 1999 Traffic Study.
That the City Council provide direction to staff concerning the
BACKGROUND: In February 2001, Council member Mike Naggar requested that staff
agendize the 1999 Traffic Study. As a result, staff has prepared this Agenda Report to bring the
traffic study forward to the Council for consideration. The purposes of this traffic study were to
evaluate the function of the proposed Circulation Plan and provide the information needed to
prepare the environmental document for the City's adoption of a revised Circulation Element.
The City entered into a contract with Wilbur Smith and Associates in March of 1998. The
Council appointed an advisory committee composed of a Council member, a Planning and
Traffic Safety Commissioners, and Staff from both the City's of Murrieta and Temecula. After
many months of work on the process, a draft Circulation Plan was informally reviewed by the
Planning and Traffic Safety Commissions at a joint workshop. At the time the contract was
originally award to Wilbur Smith Associates, the county had not yet announced the Riverside
County Integrated Plan process.
Throughout this process, the Committee and staff worked with the consultant to prepare an
updated Circulation Element that would minimize future traffic and congestion problems. Once
the alternate circulation plans were developed, a detailed traffic study was prepared to
document the impacts of the existing Land Use Plan on the proposed road circulation network.
However, as the traffic study proceeded, the problems with ever intensifying land use changes
in the County's unincorporated areas became obvious. It was felt that the County needed to
finalize their Integrated Plan (RCIP) to provide a more consistent basis for the traffic modeling
effort. When the Growth Management Action Plan was adopted by the Council in March of
2000, the Council concurred that the Circulation Element should be updated as part of the
Comprehensive General Plan Update. Funding was included in the 2000/2001 operating
budget to undertake a comprehensive General Plan Update, including an amendment to the
Circulation Element.
The City has signed a contract with Cotton Bridges Associates to provide planning services to
the City to update the General Plan. This contract includes funding for a traffic study to reflect
the revised City Land Use Plan as well as the projected land uses in the unincorporated areas
through the RClP.
R:\GENPLAN\98 Circ Element UPdate\1999 Draft Circulation Plan.doc
1
If the Council directs staff to bring the Interim Circulation Element Update forward for the
Council's consideration, staff will need time to finalize the Draft Circulation Element report and
recommendations, review the proposed traffic study, and finalize the necessary environmental
document. All of these items will require a formal recommendation from the Planning
Commission prior to the City Council's consideration. An updated Circulation Element is
expected to be revised again by the Comprehensive General Plan Update process that has just
started. The reactivation of the Interim Circulation Element Update would need several months
to bring to the Planning Commission and would cause some delays to the ongoing
Comprehensive Plan Update process.
Given the Council's current direction, staff recommends that the current Comprehensive
General Plan Update process proceed, including the proposed Circulation Element amendment,
to address circulation issues in conjunction with this effort.
FISCAL IMPACT:
None.
R:~GENPLAN\98 Circ Element UPdate\1999 Draft Circulation Plan.doc
2
ITEM 14
APPROVAL
CITY ATTORNEY
DIR.OF FINANCE
CITY MANAGER
TO:
FROM:
DATE:
SUBJECT:
CITY OF TEMECULA
AGENDA REPORT
City Manager/City Council
Gary Thornhill, Deputy City Manager
April 24, 2001
Proposed Eastern Urban Limit Line
PREPARED BY:
Stephen Brown, Senior Management Analyst
RECOMMENDATION: Adopt a map titled "Proposed Eastern Urban Limit Line"
BACKGROUND: On March 27, 2001 the City Council directed staff to prepare a map depicting
an urban limit line on the easterly side of the City of Temecula. This map has been created in
response to comments made by Supervisor Buster during the March 20, 2001 Board of Supervisors
public hearing for the Morgan Hill Specific Plan No. 313. Supervisor Buster was supportive of the
creation of an urban limit line and pledged to take the matter up with the Board of Supervisors for
consideration after the City Council adopted an urban limit line map.
An urban limit line is an officially adopted and mapped line that separates an urban area from its
surrounding open lands including farms, watersheds, and other open space land uses for a set
period of time. An urban limit line is a pro-active growth management tool that seeks to control,
direct or phase growth in order to promote more compact, contiguous urban development.
The impact of establishing an urban limit line include using public facilities more efficiently thereby
saving taxpayers money, affirming the City of Temecula's identity by assuring that it does not merge
with nearby County development; protecting the Temecula wineries, watershed, and wildlife habitat.
An urban limit line has the added benefit of offering more certainty about which lands can and
cannot be developed; and encouraging long-term strategic thinking about Temeoula's future.
FISCAL IMPACT: Potentially millions of dollars due to savings on unnecessary infrastructure and
public services costs.
ATTACHMENTS:
A map entitled "Proposed Eastern Urban Limit Line"
Large Scale County Map
ATTN:P:\PLANNING\WIMBERVG\SP 313 urban limit line staffrpt cc,doc 1
ITEM 15
APPROVAL
CITY ATTORNEY
DIRECTOR OF FINAN.C~,IE
CiTY MANAGER ~/]..//
TO:
FROM:
DATE:
SUBJECT:
CITY OF TEMECULA
AGENDA REPORT
City Council/City Manager
Gary Thornhill, Deputy City Manage~'~-
April 24, 2001
Roripaugh Ranch Specific Plan Processing Schedule
RECOMMENDATION:
That the City Council Provide direction to staff
BACKGROUND:
This item was placed on the agenda by the Council action at the April 10t" meeting. At the meeting,
the applicant, Richard Ashby, requested that the process be expedited for the Roripaugh Ranch
Specific Plan and Environmental Impact Report. The City Council directed the Roripaugh Ranch
Subcommittee consisting of Mayor Comerchero and Mayor Pro-Tem Ron Roberts to meet and
discuss the request. However, the meeting could not be scheduled in time to meet the staff report
deadline. Consequently, an oral report will be provided to the Council on this matter.
FISCALIMPACT:
None.
R:\THORNHG~.oripaugh Rch Schedule.doc
ITEM 16
APPROVAL
CITY ATTORNEY
DIRECTOR OF FINANCE~x~
CITY MANAGER
CITY OF TEMECULA
AGENDA REPORT
TO:
FROM:
DATE:
SUBJECT:
Mayor and Members of the City Council
City Manager
Howard Windsor, Acting Fire Chief
April 24, 2001
Selection of City Council Representative to Serve on Design Team for the
Wolf Creek Fire Station
RECOMMENDATION: That the City Council select one member to serve on the design team
for the Wolf Creek Fire Station.
BACKGROUND: During a recent City Council meeting, Councilmember Jeff Stone expressed
an interest in having a City Council representative serve on the design team for the Wolf Creek
Fire Station.
In the past, whenever the City has designed and built public facilities, we have assembled a
design team that consists of representatives from various City departments. This team selects
the architects and ensures that the facility will best meet the communities needs. In regards
to this fire station, the floor plan has already been identified with the County's standard heavy
urban fire station layout identified to best meet the fire departments needs. The County also
has an architectural firm on contract that has designed and built several of these stations
throughout the County. This will not only save the City money, but will also make
committee's task much simpler because the committee will only need to focus on ensuring
that the station design fits with the surrounding community.
FISCAL IMPACT:
There is no fiscal impact associated with this action.
R.'IYA TESGIWOLF CREEK FIRE STATION COUNCIL SUB COMMITTEE. DOC 1 4/18/01
ITEM 17
APPROVAL
CITY ATTORNEY
DIRECTOR OF FINANCE
CITY MANAGER
CITY OF TEMECULA
AGENDA REPORT
TO:
FROM:
DATE:
SUBJECT:
Mayor and Members of the City Council
City Manager
Jim O'Grady, Assistant City Manager~,,,~
April 24, 2001
Authorization to file letter of protest with the California Public Utilities
Commission regarding the issuance of a Certificate of Public Convenience
and Necessity for the Valley Rainbow Interconnect Project (Application
Number: A. 01-03-036)
RECOMMENDATION: That the City Council authorize the City Attorney to file a letter of
protest with the California Public Utilities Commission regarding the issuance of a Certificate of
Public Convenience and Necessity for the Valley Rainbow Interconnect Project as proposed by
the San Diego Gas and Electric Company.
BACKGROUND: The San Diego Gas and Electric Company (SDG&E) has filed an application
with the California Public Utilities Commission for a Certificate of Public Convenience and
Necessity for the proposed Valley Rainbow Interconnect Project. According to the
Commission's rules, any party wishing to file a protest or response to this application must do
so by May 2, 2001.
This project would construct a 500 Kilovolt (500 KV) Transmission Line from the Romoland
area on Menifee Road to the Rainbow area in northern San Diego County. The project would
also provide a new substation in the Rainbow area and upgrade power substation facilities
owned by Southern California Edison at the Romoland location as well as related system
upgrades.
The proposed route would traverse the wine country east of Temecula and also cross through
portions of Terneeula in the Wolf Creek area. SDG&E has indicated an "environmentally
preferred" alignment that would avoid the Wolf Creek area, but would traverse the easterly
and southerly portions of the Pechanga Indian Reservation. Because of the sovereign status of
the Pechanga Tribe, the preferred alignment would require the permission of the Pechangas. If
this project were ultimately approved by the PUC, other portions of the alignment could be
acquired by SDG&E through eminent domain if property negotiations were not successful.
Attached is a copy of the "Notice of Application" for this project which provides further
information, as well as a map showing the proposed project alignment. In addition, SDG&E
has prepared a "Proponent's Environmental Assessment" consisting of four volumes. Copies
R:IOGRADYJISDGE TRANSMISSION LINE - COUNCIL REPORT DA TED APRIL 24, 2001.DOC 1 4/I 7/01
of these documents are available at City Hall, as well as other locations in Temecula and along
the proposed alignment.
DISCUSSION: This is a significant project, both for SDG&E and for the region. The project
application states that the Project will "allow maximum utilization of and access to existing
and planned generating resources in California, thus enhancing statewide reliability and a
competitive regional market".
While the need for remedies to our current electrical crisis is clear, the role of this project in
addressing these needs is not so clear. The project was originally proposed as a method to
bring additional power to the San Diego region, due to a lack of generating capacity in that
area. Additional generating capacity is now being proposed for the San Diego region (including
northern Mexico) and the project is now being described as a means to distribute electricity
generated in the San Diego region to Riverside County and other areas served by the power
grid in the event that these proposed generating facilities are constructed.
The project will also have substantial impacts. These impacts include:
Visual impacts - The transmission lines in the Temecula area will be typically supported by a
single tubular pole. These poles will be spaced 1000 to 2000 feet apart and will be typically
160 feet in height. Although this design is a "cleaner" design than the alternative metal lattice
structure, the lines and poles are a significant landscape feature and diminish the natural
beauty of the hillsides and valleys of our area.
Economic impacts - The wine and grape industry in the Temeeula region has been calculated
to have an economic value of over $100 million per year. These lines will significantly diminish
the visual appeal of the wine region of Temecula, causing an undetermined reduction in
tourism, property values and related adverse economic impact to the wineries and vineyards of
the area. The proposed line will also require a 170-fbot typical right-of-way width. This
eliminates a great deal of land from development or agricultural production, having an
undetermined adverse economic impact on the region. There may also be a significant adverse
impact on the hot air balloon industry which conducts many events in this area, as well as the
annual Balloon and Wine Festival. This festival has been held for 18 years in this area and
attracts up to 50,000 people.
Impact on Public Facilities - The proposed alignment would traverse land recently approved
for residential development. The transmission lines may adversely impact a proposed 40-acre
sports park and school facilities planned for this area. The right-of-way required and related
loss of developable land may adversely affect the overall development of this area. Certain
public improvements, most notably the improvement of Pala Road, rely on the economic
viability of this land to support a proposed community facilities district. The viability of this
district relies on the current design of this project and significant changes may jeopardize the
planned public improvements. For example, the construction of Pala Road is expected to be a
917 million project.
Noise impacts - The transmission lines are a known source of noise and radio interference.
These impacts will affect the residents and businesses in the area, both from a quality of life
and economic perspective.
Health impacts - Possible health impacts are a significant community concern.
RECOMMENDATION: It is possible that some or all of these issues may be addressed in
further phases of this project as hearings are held and additional studies are conducted and
R:IOGRADYJISDGE TRANSMISSION LINE- COUNCIL REPORT DA TED APRIL 24, 2001.DOC 2 4/19/01
mitigation measures developed. However, voicing the community's concerns is necessary at
this time in order to protect our rights to fully participate at later stages of this project's
consideration by the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC). Therefore, staff
recommends that the City Council authorize the City Attorney to file a protest to this
application with the CPUC at this time. The Electrical Needs Subcommittee (Mayor
Comerchero and Councilmember Naggar) concur with this recommendation,
FISCAL IMPACT: Costs of filing the protest are not significant. Future legal costs
associated with participating in the hearings for this project are unknown at this time.
ATTACHMENTS:
1. Notice of an Application for a Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity
2. Project Map
R.'IOGRADYJISDGE TRANSMISSION LINE - COUNCI£ REPORT DA TED APRI£ 24, 2001.DOC 3 4/19/01
NOTICE OF AN APPLICATION FOR A
CERTIFICATE OF PUBLIC CONVENIENCE AND NECESSITY
Project Name: Valley Rainbow Interconnect Project
Application Number: A. 01-03-036
Proposed Project: On March 23, 2001, San Diego Gas and Electric Company ("SDG&E") applied to the
California Public Utilities CornnUssinn ("CPUC") for a Certificate of Public Conven/ence and Necessity
for the Valley Rainbow Interconnect Project.
Purpose of Project: SDG&E is proposing the Valley Rainbow Intemonnect Project ("Project") to
maintain reliable power delivery, to meet continuing growth in customer load and to provide an important
link in the infrastructure expansion needed to support increased in~¢n-egionaL clectx/c power transfers. If
approved, the Project also will allow maximum utilization of and access to existing and planned generating
resources in California, thus enhancing statewide reliability and a competitive regional market. The Project
}rill provide a significant increase in transfer capability between San Diego County and Riverside County,
~mprovzng power import capability to both areas and strengthen/rig the transmission reliability to SDG&E's
existing service area in San Diego County and Orange County, and to Edison's customers in Riverside
County.
Project Description: If approved, the Project will provide an interconnection between SDG&E's existing
230-kilovolt ("kV") transmission system at the proposed Rainbow Substation on Rainbow Heights Road
near the unincorporated community of Rainbow in San Diego County and Southern California Edison's
("SCE") existing 500 kV transm/ssinn system at the Valley Substation on Menifee Road in the
unincorporated community of Romoland in Riverside County. The Project area is in northern San Diego
County and western Riverside County. The slx major elements of the Project are described as follows:
· 500 kV Transmission Line - A new single-circuit 500 kV transmission line, rated at
approXUnately 1,000 megawatts ("MW"), would interconnect the new SDG&E Rainbow
Substation with SCE's existing Valley Substation.
· New Rainbow Substation - A new SDG&E 500/230/69 kV substation wonid be located in
northern San Diego County to intemonnect the new 500 kV transmission line initially with
SDG&E's existing 230 kV transmission systems and ultimately with SDG&E's 69 kV
transmission systems.
· Valley Substation Modifications - SCE's existing Valley Substation would be modified to
accommodate the new 500 kV txansmission line from the Rainbow Substation. All proposed
modifications would occur on existing utility-owned land within the existing facility
boundaries.
· Talega - Escondido 230 kV Line Upgrade - The existing Talega - Escondido 230 kV line
was originally licensed and constructed using double-circuit structures with only one circuit
installed. Necessary transmission upgrades to support the Project import capability would
include installing the second 230 kV circuit on the existing txansmission s~-ucmres and
modify/ng the existing substations at Talega and Escundido.
· Rebuild of 69 kV Transmission Line - A 7.7 mile section of the existing 69 kV
transmission circuit, currently installed on one side of the existing double-circuit Talega -
Escondido 230 kV transmission line stzucmres and intemonnectmg SDG&E's existing Pala
and Lilac substations, would be rebuilt on new 69 kV wood and steel pole smactares adjacent
to the existing 230 kV line within the existing Talega - Escondido right of way. The rebuild
of the 7.7 mile section of the 69 kV transmission circuit would make room for the new 230
kV circuit referenced above.
· System Voltage Support - A 230 kV Static Synchronous Compensator ("STATCOM")
would be added at the existing Mission Substation. Shunt capacitors would be added at
Miguel and Sycamore Canyon substations (230 kV). The STATCOM would provide
dynamic voltage support and the shunt capacitors would provide continuous voltage support.
Both continuous and dynamic voltage support would be required to allow the increased power
import levels provided by the Project. The STATCOM and shunt capacitors would be
installed at existing substations owned by SDG&E.
Electric and Magnetic Fields (EMF): San Diego Gas and Electric Company will employ measures to
reduce public exposure to EMF in accordance with CPUC Decision 93-11-013 and SDG&E's "EMF
Design Guidelines for Transmission, Distribution, and Substation Facilities". SDG&E has filed copies of
its Preliminary Magnetic Field Management Plan for this project as part of its Application. In addition,
interested parties may contact SDG&E's Proiect Information Line at: 1-800456-6138 to receive a copy of
the Preliminary Magnetic Field Management Plan and the EMF Design Guidelines.
Application for CPUC Authorization: Pursuant to California Public Utilities Code Section 1001 and
CPUC General Order ("GO") 131 -D, no electhc utility shall begin construction of electric transmission line
facilities designed for operation at 200 kilovolts or more without .the EPUC having first found that the
present or future public convenience and necessity require or will require such construction.
Public Review Process: Pursuant to the CPUC's Rules of Practice and Procedure and GO 131-D, you
may file a protest or response to this Application within 30 days after the notice of the filing of the
Application was mailed or published. This means that the protest or response must be formally filed with
the ComnUssion's Docket Office (address shown below) no later than May 2, 2001 at the following
address:
Public Utilities Commission
Docket Office
Room 2001
505 Van Ness Avenue
San Francisco, CA 94102
Copies must also be sent to:
Steve Nelson or
Patricia Fleming
Sempra Energy
101 Ash Street
San Diego, CA 92101
and
Protests and/or requests for heating should include the following:
1)
2)
3)
4)
Director, Energy Division
Public Utilities cormmssion
Energy Division
505 Van Ness Avenue
San Francisco, CA 94102
For assistance in filing a protest or response, please contact the CPUC Public Advisor in Los Angeles
at 320 West 4ch Street, Suite 500, Los Angeles, CA 90013 or e-mail public.advisor.la~cpuc.ca.gov.
If the CPUC, as a result of its preliminary investigation after such requests, determines that public hearings
should be held, notice shall be sent to each person who is entitled to notice or who has requested a hearing.
Additional Project Information: To obtain further information of the project, including information
on where and when you can review a copy of SDG&E's Application No. 01-03-036 and the
Proponent's Environmental Assessment, please call SDG&E's project information line at: 1-800-456-
6138
Your name, mailing address and daytime telephone number;
A reference to the CPUC Application Number and Project name;
A clear description of the reason for the protest or request for heating; and
Whether you believe that evidentiary hearings are necessary to resolve factual disputes.
2.2 Project Specifications SDG&E Valley Rainbow Interconnect
Proponent's Environmental Assessment
Figure 2.3 . Proposed Route
SCE's Valley
H ¢~n~et
Sun J"~. Winch.,.'stcr I
[ I ~
Rainbow
Subs at on i
J : ' j Single Pole Mitigation
Proposed Route ~ ~ ~ Redhawk-Central
Route Segments
2-11 Boi-24-039 148698-01 (03/16/01)bp
DEPARTMENTAL
REPORTS
APPROVAL
CitY ATTORNEY
DIRECTOR OF FINAN(~E
CITY MANAGER
TO:
FROM:
DATE:
SUBJECT:
CITY OF TEMECULA
AGENDA REPORT
City Manager/City Council
Howard Windsor, Acting City Fire Chief
April 24, 2001
Monthly Departmental Report
RECOMMENDATION: Attached for City Council's review and filing is the Fire Department's
Monthly Activity Report for the month of March, 2001.
During the month of March, the committee developing and implementing the fire department laptop
program decided to discontinue the use of the Max Responder Program. This decision was based
on the software vendor's (Public Safety Corporation, PSC) inability to correct problems within their
software. Fire and city staff are working with the city attorney to have all monies paid for the Max
Responder software refunded due to their lack of performance. Pdor to terminating our agreement
with PSC, the committee began researching other vendors to meet our software needs.
The committee made contact with Plant Equipment, a local vender in Temecula. Plant Equipment
has starting to market a software program that incorporates all of the fire department requirements
into their software. In the limited time we have been testing their program applications in the field,
the software has performed successful. Fire and city staff are currently working on a RFP to submit
to plant equipment. We anticipate having the RFP process completed by the middle or end of May.
The committee strongly believes we will accomplish the goals and objectives of the city council, as
expected when monies were initially allocated.
Continual updates will be provided to the city council as the laptop program evolves.
Response Statistics for MARCH, 2001
Structure Fire 8 4 9 0 21 89
Fire 3 1 1 2 7 24
Vehicle Fire 4 5 1 2 12 30
..Fire - Other 8 4 0 3 15 42
Medical Aid 69 61 62 97 289 785
Trat~c Collisions 18 24 4 11 57 198
Fire Menace Standby 0 3 1 5 9 34
Public Service 2 4 3 4 13 64
Hazmat N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
Ringing Alarm 38 46 11 15 110 338
Responses Outside of the N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
TOTAL 150 152 92 139 533 1604'
tjustment due to the Traffic Collision line ~tem, which was not previously included in the statistics
breakdown.
Medic Squad 84 Response Statistics
Medic Squad 84 Time Statistics
Medical Aids
173 478
Traffic Collisions
Public Service Assists
39 123
4 13
2 3
6 34
27 80
0 2
0 4
2 5
0 1
253 743
Fire Menace
Structure Fires
Ringing Alarm
Vegetation Fire
Vehicle Fire
.Refuse Fire
Hazmat
4.4 rain
Time 10 rain
Medic Squad Cancelled
Prior to Patient Contact 90
Average Wait Time for
AMR 3.6 rain
N/A
N/A
277
N/A
Medic Squad on Scene
Prior to AMR - Medical
Aids and Traffic Collisions 79 220
Performed *ALS prior to
AMR's Arrival 29 95
*ALS - Advanced Life Support
Medic Squad Comments:
· Medic Squad 84 had 1 response time of 10 minutes for the month, this response time occurred
while responding to station 12's area on Pala Rd. from station 73's area.
· Medic Squad 84 was out of service for mechanical repairs a total of 5 days this month, during
which time Medic Squad 84R was in service.
Personnel
Fire Prevention
1 - Battalion Chief/Fire Marshal
4 - Fire Safety Specialist
1 - Captain/Deputy Fire Marshal
2 - Fire System Inspectors
1 - Office Technician HI
Fire Plan Check Statistics
Fire Plan Check Building TI
Fire Plan Check Building
Fire Plan Check Misc.
27 68
16 45
39 101
Fire Under Ground Water Plan Check
Fire Over or Under Ground Tank Plan Check
17 31
2 4
Fire Sprinkler NCOM Plan Check
Fire Sprinkler TI Plan Check
Fire Hood Duct Plan Check
Fire Spray Booth Plan Check
Fire Special Suppression Plan Check
Fire Alarm Plan Check
Planning Case Plan Review
10 30
6 21
2 6
1 1
0 0
12 29
17 55
Fire Code Permits 0 0
TOTAL 149
391
Fire Prevention (Continued)
Fire Inspection Statistics
Fire Prevention Final
Fire Prevention Shell
Fire-Underground Hydro
Fire Thrust Block
Fire Over Head Hydro
Fire Flow
Fire Flush
Fire Sprinkler Final
Fire Weld Inspection
Fire Hood Duct Final
Fire Pre- Wire
Fire Alarm Final
Fire Spray Booth Final
Fire Safety Inspection
Fire State Mandated Inspection
Fire Special Events Inspection
Fire Piping Hydro
Fire Shear Valves
Fire Over/Under Tank Final
Fire Special Suppression System
Fire Special Project Investigations
Fire Administrative - Meetings etc...
14 60
14 40
7 12
3 14
9 29
1 1
6 12
9 31
4 9
0 3
1 8
11 35
0 2
11 31
0 11
6 7
0 0
0 0
1 2
0 1
0 0
2 8
3 5
0 3
102 324
Fire Misc. Inspections
Engine Co. Follow Up Enforcemem
TOTAL
APPROVAL }7~1.~,
CITY ATTORNEY
DIRECTOR OF FINANCE
CiTY MANAGER ~ "'
TO:
FROM:
DATE:
SUBJECT:
CITY OF TEMECULA
AGENDA REPORT
City Manager/City Council
Jim Domenoe, Chief of Polic~
V
April 24, 2001
Monthly Departmental Report
The following report reflects special teams, traffic enforcement and miscellaneous activity occurring
during March of 2001. Part One crime statistics are displayed by reporting district within the City,
providing stable parameters for monitoring criminal activity, and aiding in planning police resource
deployment.
The Police Department responded to thirty-seven "priority one" calls for service during the month of
March, with an average response time of approximately 6.2 minutes. A total of 1,233 calls for police
service were generated in the City of Temecula during the month (up over 20% from last month).
During the month of March, the Temecula Police Department's Town Center storefront served a
total of 199 customers. Fingerprinting services for this month showed forty-four prints taken, twenty-
four people filed police reports, sixteen people had citations signed off and six oversize vehicle
permits were issued. Crime Prevention Officer Lynn Fanene participated in a number of special
events and community oriented programs during the month. Officer Fanene completed an after
hours, outside lighting survey of businesses to determine compliance with the Governor's Executive
Order. He also assisted in the planning for the up-coming annual "Western Days" event, which will
be held during the month of April. Officer Fanene conducted twenty-four residential security visits
and sixteen business visits during the month. He conducted thirty-one visits to businesses for crime
follow-up information. Officer Fanene completed his article for the Valley Business Journal titled
"SAFES."
The POP Team continued to work on the "Crime Free Multi Housing" project. At this time there is
70% compliance with this program across the City and they are working with two complexes, which
are in the final stages of certification. They are also in the process of working to re-certify four
complexes that are continuing with the program. The team continued their Warrant Apprehension
Program during the month, which resulted in three felony and two misdemeanor warrant arrests.
Monthly Departmental Report
Page 2
The team also assisted with the "Every 15 Minutes" program conducted this month. The team
continued their "Crime Free Parks" program and as a result they made three misdemeanor arrests
for various violations. They also conducted a "Bar Action Response" program which led to one arrest
and two citations. The T.A.G. program for the month was held with six volunteers assisting. No
reportable violations were observed, however three pedestrian checks and two vehicle checks were
made during the program. The team also worked the continuing "Homeless Assistance" program,
which resulted in contacting eight subjects who were offered and refused assistance. Three
homeless subjects were arrested during the month for misdemeanor offenses.
The Old Town Storefront serves as an office for the POP team and a location to assist the public
with police services. This has greatly increased their availability to serve the Old Town area. This
month the Old Town storefront served 118 customers, seventeen fingerprints were taken, eleven
reports were written and two citations were signed off.
The traffic team reported that during the month of March there were 435 citations issued for
hazardous violations, seventy-six citations were issued for non-hazardous violations and 181
parking citations were issued. There were thirteen injury traffic collisions, thirty-two non-injury
collisions were reported and twenty-eight drivers were arrested for DUI. The monthly ERACIT
program this month led to the arrest of four subjects for DUI. The Neighborhood Enforcement Team
(NET) program resulted in 110 citations being issued. This program addresses traffic concerns in
residential neighborhoods with a dedicated motor officer. The traffic team also assisted with the
"Every 15 Minutes" program at Chaparral High School.
During the month of March, the POP officers assigned to the Promenade Mall handled a total of 152
calls for service. The predominant number of these calls were for shoplifting investigations. These
calls resulted in the criminal arrest and filings on seven misdemeanors and three felony cases for
various offenses. Four citations were also issued. Officers Robles and Rupe provided training to
mall employees on "Working with the Police." The mall officers are also working with mall
merchants on an inkless check system. The officers will be conducting training in April for mall
employees on the "lnkless Check" program.
The school resource officers continue to remain active in their schools. During the past month, the
officers conducted numerous presentations in areas such as "Stranger Danger, Loss Prevention,"
and other topics. They also conducted counseling sessions with students. One arrest was made at
Temecula Valley High School. Deputy Kubel planned and facilitated the "Every 15 Minutes"
program, which was held at Chaparral High School on February 28th and March 1se. This program
was very dramatic and was an unqualified success. It received widespread praise from Chaparral
High School staff, students, the local media and the parents involved. The other resource officers
assisted Deputy Kubel during this program.
The JOLT program (Juvenile Offender Law Enforcement Program) continues to be a success in part
through its youth court program. Officer Sherry Adams provided training this month to Probation
officers and Department of Education employees assigned to the program (Safe Schools) regarding
"At Risk" juveniles. The JOLT officer assisted at other schools with truancy meetings and follow up
with parents of juveniles in the JOLT program. Officer Adams facilitated the sixty-first youth court
session and conducted the sixty-second orientation meeting during the month. Officer Adams
continued to work with "At Risk" juveniles throughout the month and also conducted counseling
sessions with their parents. One arrest was made during the month for a juvenile who was charged
with burglary.
Monthly Departmental Report
Page 3
During the month of March, the Special Enforcement Team of Officers Rich Holder and John Morin
handled a total of twenty-nine cases. These cases resulted in twenty-eight misdemeanor and
twenty-two felony arrests, primarily for narcotics violations. They also issued sixteen citations for
various violations. This team continues to work street level narcotics and specialty patrol within the
city on a pro-active basis. The team also recovered three pounds of marijuana, thirty-one grams of
methamphetamine and three weapons.
Volunteers from the community continue to be an integral part of the Temecula Police Department's
staff. Under the guidance of volunteer coordinator Gayle Gerrish, the Police Department's volunteer
staff contributed 573 hours of service in March. Volunteer assignments include computer data input,
logistics support, special event assistance (Every 15 Minutes) and telephone answering duties.
The reserve officer program and mounted posse are additional valuable volunteer resources
available to the police department. The police department utilizes reserve officers to assist with
patrol, traffic enforcement, crime prevention, off road vehicle enforcement and a variety of special
functions. Reserve police officers worked a total of 370 hours during the month (215 hours were
specifically spent on patrol in Temecula). The posse contributed 180 hours during the month.
APPROV~/ff
CITY ATTORNEY
DIRECTOR OF F~C~
C~ ~AGER
CITY OF TEMECULA
AGENDA REPORT
TO:
FROM:
DATE:
SUBJECT:
City Manager/City Council
Jim O'Grady, Assistant City Manager
Apdl 24, 2001
Economic Development Monthly Departmental Report
Prepared by: Gloda Wolnick, Marketing Coordinator
The following are the recent highlights for the Economic Development Department for the month
of Mamh 2001.
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
Leads & Inquiries
In the month of March, the City received I lead and 3 inquiries from the Inland Empire
Economic Partnership. Trade show leads included 171 inquiries from the - Nepcon Trade
Show, 30 of which were out of state and 10 out of the country and 194 inquiries from the
Comdex Trade Show in Canada.
In the month of March, the Southwest Riverside County Alliance responded to 2leads from
the Inland Empire Economic Partnership (IEEP) on behalf of the City of Temecula. The
Alliance received 1 lead and 11 inquiries. Attached is a copy of their activity report.
Film Leads & Hi~lhlil:lhts
In the month of March, the Film Council received 22 phone calls regarding the Film Festival,
36 calls regarding Talent Showcase and 27 calls regarding locations information
requests.
Filming in Temecula
The Temecula Valley Museum and Tony Tobin have been in contact with Huell Howser's
California Gold producers and they have shown interest in the Giant Oak and the ranch owned
by Earle Stanley Gardner. There is a possible visit next month.
USC film students are looking for a small town business area for a current film production and
will make a trip to Temecula when the weather is better.
The taping of the Temecula Students of the Month is continuing. The students from
Chaparral High School are practicing editing for next time. The next filming will be on April 23rd
with the hopes of getting on TV in May.
Please refer to the attached Film Council report for additional activities.
CITYMGR\WOLNICKGXApril'01 DEPT.REPT.DOC 1
Media/Outreach Materials
Staff wrote an article for the Chamber of Commerce monthly newsletter titled "State of the
City Address." The article previded highlights of the many accomplishments of the City
departments including pregrems, and p~ojects that were comp;eted as well as projects
undenvay.
Meetings
Staff attended the EDC of Southwest Riverside County Business Relations Committee
Meeting on March 1~. Company contacts included Waterstone, Opto 22, and ADEX Medical.
and follow-up action reports were given. Committee members were assigned company visits for
the following month.
Staff attended the EDC of Southwest Riverside County Luncheon Program Committee
Meeting on March 8th. Topics and dates for future Luncheon Programs were discussed. Some
of the topics included tourism, Riverside County integrated Project, and the April program,
which will highlight Recruitment & Labor Law. There was also discussion on the EDC hosting a
debate forum for the election in November.
On March 14th, staff attended the Southwest Riverside County Economic Alliance meeting.
Discussion items included the Labor Market RFP/Grant, budget, Alliance website, and the
scope of work program for the Silicon Valley consultant.
On March 15th, staff attended a planning meeting for the upcoming Career & Manufacturing
Expo. The Expo will be held at Chaparral High School on 21st. Discussion items included
media and flyer distribution, exhibitors, layout, program, and sponsorships.
During the month of March, staff attended numerous meetings concerning the
LennarlHarveston project as well as contacts with businesses regarding pending
planned developments.
On March 15th, Economic Development Subcommittee Members Comerchero and Roberts, and
Jim O'Grady met with the Rob Moran, County of Riverside, and Stevie Hirdler, Alliance
Marketing Coordinator, to discuss the Southwest Riverside County Economic Alliance
funding request for FY2001-02.
Staff attended the EDC of Southwest Riverside County Board of Directors Meeting on
March 22"~. Discussion items included Murdeta Chamber proposal to request County
redistricting, and updates on the Career & Manufacturers' Expo, Newsletter and Golf
Tournament. The Wolf Creek Project Referendum and the RClP's Multi-Species Habitat
Conservation Plan affecting Murrieta were also discussed.
Staff attended a meeting at the San Diego State University on March 29t~ regarding Califomia
high-speed rail.
TOURISM
Medial Outreach Materials
Staff provided information and photos to Association News publication. Temecula wes
featured in their March issue. This publication is sent to meeting planners. (See attached.)
Staff provided a staff writer of the Korean Central Daily News with slides, press kit and
information on the Western Days event in Old Town.
CITYMGR\WOLNICKGLApriI'01DEPT.REPT.DOC 2
Staff met with Jessica Rapaido-Ybarra, writer for The San Diegan publication, on March 6th
and provided her with current information on Temecula for her to reference in the Temecula
chapter. The new edition will be published in June.
On March 7th, staff met with Carol Walker of Sign on San Diego, to review and enhance the
City's section on their site.
Site Visits and FAM Tours
On March 29t", the State of Califomia Tourism Officials made a site visit to Temecula. Mr.
Terry Selk, Director of Travel Trade Development for the State of California Tourism Division,
brought three of his tourism representatives, Leeanne Dyer representing Australia, Stefanie
Eggers representing Germany, Austria and Switzerland, and Ko Ueno representing Japan.
Destination Temecula provided them a tour of the aroa. Mayor Comerchero, vadous
representatives of the Temecula tourism organizations and staff were able to visit with them
dudng a lunch at Wilson Creek Winery.
Staff worked closely with Sue McClure of San Diego This Week, Thornton Winery, the
Chamber, various tourism groups and Old Town restaurants on setting up a FAM Tour for 65
concierges from the San Diego and Orange County Concierge Associations (high-end
hotel properties). This was the first time both associations were brought together to learn
about another tourism destination other than their own to market. The event was held on April
2nd'
Travel Trade Shows
City and Chamber staff attended the Los Angeles Times Travel Show March 2 - 4 at the Long
Beach Convention Center. Temecula was included in the San Diego trade show exhibit. The
travel show was open to travel industry professionals in the morning for a few hours each day
and they opened up to consumers. The show was very well attended and Temecula received a
lot of groat exposure lining up with San Diego. Many leads were generated and will be followed
up with.
Meetinfls
Staff attended the Chamber of Commerce Tourism Committee Meeting on March 1~t. Staff
gave an update on the City marketing activities.
On March 1~, staff met with Sue McClure, San Diego This Week, Monica Brett-Serte, Concierge
at the Marriott Newport Beach and Karen Brimhall with Thornton to discuss the idea of
Temecula hosting a "Getting-To-Know-You Day" with the San Diego and Orange County
Concierges in Temecula on April 2"d. The groups would hold their Board Meeting that evening
at Thornton.
The Economic Development Subcommittee members Comerchero and Roberts and staff met
with the Temecula Town Association several times in March to discuss TTA issues.
Staff attended the Film Festival's Preview at the Promenade Mall on March 20th.
On March 12th, staff met with Gloria and Lee Easterwood regarding the development of a 'q'our
of Temecula Map Guide." Staff provided the Easterwoods with information on Temecula as
well as local contacts to receive additional information for their map project.
On March 13th, staff met with the Chamber and restaurants that were participating in the San
Diego and Orange County Concierges in Temecula event on Apdl 2"a.
CITYMGR\WOLNICKG~,priI'01DEPT.REPT.DOC 3
On March 27th, staff attended the Chamber FAM Tour Planning Meeting for an upcoming FAM
tour in the spdng targeting travel writers.
ATTACHMENTS
Temecula Valley Chamber of Commerce Activities Report
Economic Development Corporation of Southwest Riverside County
Activities Report
Southwest Riverside County Economic Alliance Activities Report
Temecula Valley Film Council Activities Report
Inland Empire Economic Partnership Newsletter
Association News Article
CITYMGR\WOLNICKGL~kpriI'01 DEPT.REPT.DOC 4
27450 Ynez Road, Suite 124
Temecula, CA 92591
Phone (909) 676-5090 · Fax (909) 694-0201
April 13, 2001
Shawn Nelson, City Manager
City of Temecula
43200 Business Park Drive
Temecula, CA 92590
Dear Shawn,
Attached please find the Monthly Activity Report provided as per our contract with the City of
Temecula.
This is the month of March at a glance:
Business Inquiry Highlights:
In the month of March, 20 businesses requested information on starting or relocating their business in
Temecula. They received a business packet, which includes a copy of the City of Temecula
demographic, relocation, housing, rentals, maps, organizations, etc.
Committee Highlights:
Tourism & Visitors Council: Committee members are planning for the upcoming spring FAM
Tour. A tentative itinerary, transportation, hotel accommodations and a listing of travel writers
and columnists are being formulated. The "Tourism Big Business" presentation is available to
service clubs in the area. The purpose o£the presentation is to educate the community on the
importance and impact tourism has on the community. The City of Temecula and the Temecula
Valley Chamber of Commerce are seeking volunteers to host the Chamber's Tourism Booth.
Education Committee: The committee is diligently working on the Youth Job Fair scheduled for
May 19, 2001 at The Promenade in Temecula, in The Plaza near Edwards Cinema. Employers
with job openings are invited to accept job applications and interview on the spot. The job fair is
co-sponsored with The Promenade in Temecula, EDD, and Workforce Development Center's
Hire-A-Youth Program. Workshops will be held prior to the job fair and will cover job
applications, resumes, job dialogue, dress attire, and job resources. The workshops will be held at
Chaparral, Temecula Valley and Rancho Vista High Schools. ROP will assist in the training of
the students, and career representatives from the school districts will be involved to disseminate
mlbrmation and flyers.
Ways & Means Committee: The State of the City Address was held on Thursday, March 29,
2001 at the Edwards Cinema at the Promenade Mai1 and was well received by the 350 guests in
attendance. Mayor Comerchero delivered a presentation recapping the accomplishments of the
City of Temecula through the past year. Thank you to the City of Temecula and the entire staff
for working with the Chamber to host this fabulous event. The 2001 Golf Tournament is
scheduled for May 4th at Temecula Creek Inn. This year the tournament has expanded to 216
golfers. The committee is currently working on a new upcoming event named "Talk of the Town"
Economic Reality for the Temecula Valley. John E. Husing, Ph.D will be the guest speaker, the
event is scheduled for June 14, 2001.
Local Business Promotions Committee: The committee is recruiting participants for the Shop
Temecula First campaign for June. Currently 60 businesses have committed to both the June
and the November campaign. The committee voted to replace the Success Seminar Series with a
"Lunch & Learn" event to be held twice a year. The purpose of the luncheon will be to offer
information to Chamber members that wilt benefit their business. Business of the month for
April is Bragg Crane and Business Women's Network. The Mystery Shopper for April is
Captain's Cabin and the Chamber Spotlight business is JDL Financial Services, Inc. and JDL
Real Estate, Inc.
Government Action Committee: The Government Action Committee and Board members are
in the process of organizing a Pro-Business Campaign task-force. The committee and Board of
Directors approved a letter to be sent to City Hall encouraging support of the process of
reapportionment of supervisorial districts. Chamber representatives will be attending the 2001
Volunteer Leaders Conference in Sacramento, hosted by the Western Association of Chamber
Executives and the California Chamber of Commerce. Good-Morning Sacramento is scheduled
for July 24, 200l.
Membership Committee: Chamber staff and Ambassadors attended 10 Ribbon Cuttings in the
month of March. A very successful Mixer was held at Rancho Physical Therapy's new location
on Hwy. 79 on March 21, 2001 with over 250 guests in attendance. On April 6, 2001 the newly
implemented Round-Table Meetings proved to be very successful. Members discussed business
insurance solutions. This new event's objective is to educate members with solutions to common
problems faced in the day-to-day operation of their business. Members of the specific topic were
invited to attend and provided informative information. March 28, 2001, 80 business owners
attended the Ambassador Networking Breakfast.
Tourism Highlights (Bulk brochure distribution)
· 1,500 Temecula Brochures, 1,200 Winery Brochures, and 40 Visitor Guides to L.A. Times Travel
Show tour operators, press and consumers attendees.
· 250 Temecula Brochures to the Sheriff's Department for distribution to new recruitment
officers.
· 225 City Maps and 225 Visitor Guides to the City of Temecula for distribution to walk-in traffic.
· 200 Winery Brochures, 150 Temecula Brochures and 150 Pechanga Entertainment Brochures for
distribution at TVCC's Weekend Visitor Center.
· 200 Temecula Brochures to Paseo del Sol for distribution to clients.
· 200 Temecula Brochures, 200 Winery Brochures and 100 Visitor Guides to the Embassy Suites
Hotel tbr distribution to guests.
· 150 Visitor Guides, t00 Temecula Brochures and 100 Winery Brochures to Vail Lake RV
Resorts tbr distribution to guests.
· 125 Visitor Guides to the Lawrence Welk Resort tbr distribution to guests.
2
· 100 Temecula Brochures, 100 Winery Brochures and 90 Visitor Guides to Century 2l-Newsom
for distribution to clients.
· 100 Winery Brochures to Creekside Texaco for distribution to tourists.
· 50 Temecula Brochures to ComSoft Corporation for distribution at an upcoming regional
meeting.
· 50 Temecula Brochures to Temeku Hills Sales Office for distribution to clients.
· 50 Winery Brochures to Outdoor Resorts for distribution to guests.
· 50 Visitor Guides and 50 Winery Brochures to Southern California Department of Agriculture for
distribution at a study tour in Temecula.
· 40 Temecula Brochures to All Aboard America for distribution to a group touring Temecula.
· 35 Winery Brochures for distribution to Dr. St. John for distribution to tour guests.
· 30 Visitor Guides and 30 Pechanga Entertainment Brochures to the Best Western Guest House
for distribution to guests.
· 25 Winery Brochures to Kathleen Callan for distribution at a family reunion.
· 20 Visitor Guides to A-I Solutions for distribution to visitors.
· 20 City Maps, 20 Temecula Brochures, 20 Visitor Guides and 20 Winery Brochures to the U.S.
Border Patrol for disu-ibution to new agents relocating to the area.
· 15 Visitor Guides and 15 Winery Brochures to Custom Leisure Services for distribution to
visitors attending a tour of Temecula.
· 10 Temecula Brochures, 10 Visitor Guides and 10 Winery Brochures to Riverside Elks Camper
Club for distribution to club members visiting Temecula.
· 10 Winery Brochures and 10 Temecula Brochures to Levison Search Association for distribution
to clients.
Marketing Highlights:
The City of Temecula, Temecula Valley Chamber of Commerce and the Tourism & Visitors
Council representatives conducted two exciting marketing opportunities on March 26, 2001 and
April 2, 2001.
Tourism officials from the State of California; Terry Selk, Director of Travet Trade Development
and representatives from Japan, Germany and Australia requested a tour of Temecula. The day
consisted of a tour of the Temecula Museum, Old Town Temecula, lunch at Wilson Creek
Winery, Stuart Cellars, Churon Winery, Temecula Creek Inn and concluded with a tour of the
Pechanga Entertainment Center.
65 Concierges and 4 Board Members from the San Diego and Orange County areas requested
Temecula as a destination to host their general meeting. On Monday, April 2, 2001 the
Concierges enjoyed a Welcome Reception, a taste of Old Town Restaurants, Tour of Old Town
Temecula, Museum Tour, Wine Tour, Evening Reception and dinner at Thornton Winery.
Activity Report:
· Total Tourism calls were 1,921 in March.
· Total Phone calls were 3,706 in March.
· Total Walk-ins were up 4.34 percent in March.
· Total Mailings were 345 in March.
· E-mail requests were up 32.77 percent in March.
Also attached are the meeting minutes for the Tourism and Visitors Council, Education, Ways &
Means, Membership and Marketing Committee, Local Business Promotions, Government Actions. If
you have any questions regarding this information, please feel free to call me. Thank you.
Mayor JeffComerchero
Mayor Pro Tern Ron Roberts
Councilman Jeff Stone
Councilman Sam Pratt
Councilman Mike Naggar
Shaw~n Nelson, City Manager
Jim O'Grady, Assistant City Manager
Gary T~omhill, Deputy City Manager
Gloria Wolnick, Marketing Coordina~r
TVCC Board of Di~t:tors
TEMECULA VALLEY CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
MONTHLY ACTIVITY REPORT
FOR MARCH, 2001
PHONE CALLS
TOURISM
TOURISM REFERRALS
Calendar of Events
Special Events
General Information
TOTAL TOURISM CALLS
RELOCATION
DEMOGRAPHICS
CHAMBER
MISCELLANEOUS
TOTAL PHONE CALLS
* CHAMBER REFERRALS
WALK-INS TOURISM
CALENDAR OF EVENTS
SPECIAL EVENTS
GENERAL INFORMATION
RELOCATION
DEMOGRAPHICS
CHAMBER
MISCELLANEOUS
TOTAL WALK-INS
MAILINGS
TOURISM
RELOCATION
DEMOGRAPHICS
TOTAL MAILINGS
E-MAIL
TOURISM
RELOCATION
MISCELLANEOUS
TOTAL E-MAIL
WEB PAGE USER SESSIONS
GRAND TOTALS
PHONE CALLS
WALK-INS
MAILINGS
E-MAIL
Chamber Vis. Center
This Month This Month
369
237
223
1,092
1,921
250
88
1,266
181
3,706
N/A
364
181
97
1141
291
117
935
184'
3,310
168
104
73
345
47
47
141
235
N/A
44
8
53
204
5
0
1
56
371
THIS MONTH
3,706
3,681
345
235
Total
Year-To-Date
1,024
579
914
3,341
5,858
632
226
4,076
545
11,337
N/A
1,208
489
321
3,575
70O
255
2,664
550
9,762
411
377
28O
1,068
143
135
317
595
N/A
YEAR-TO-DATE
11,337
9,762
1,068
595
CHAMBER REFERRALS N/A
ANNUAL VOLUME COMPARISONS
Chamber Chamber Percentage
March, 2000 March, 2001 Increase
PHONE CALLS
TOURISM
Tourism Referrals 466 369 -20.82
Calendar of Events 213 237 11.27
Special Events 342 223 -34.80
General information 1,573 1,092 -30.58
TOTAL TOURISM CALLS 2,594 1,921 -25.94
RELOCATION 211 250 18.48
DEMOGRAPHICS 118 88 -25.42
CHAMBER 2,332 1,266 -45.71
MISCELLANEOUS 223 181 -18.83
TOTAL PHONE CALLS 5,478 3,706 -32.35
CHAMBER REFERRALS N/A N/A N/A
WALK-INS
TOURISM 280 364 30.00
CALENDAR OF EVENTS 196 181 -7.65
SPECIAL EVENTS 94 97 3.19
GENERAL INFORMATION 1031 1141 10.67
RELOCATION 188 291 54.79
DEMOGRAPHICS 143 117 -18.18
CHAMBER 1040 935 -10.10
MISCELLANEOUS 163 184 12.88
VISITOR CENTER WALK-INS 393' 371 -5.60
TOTAL WALK-INS 3,528 3,681 4.34
MAILINGS
TOURISM 154 168 9.09
RELOCATION 139 104 -25.18
DEMOGRAPHICS 132 73 -44.70
TOTAL MAILINGS 425 345 -18.82
E-MAIL
TOURISM 51 47 -7.84
RELOCATION 41 47 14.63
MISCELLANEOUS 85 141 65.88
TOTAL E-MAIL 177 235 32.77
* Chamber referrals reflects faxes, walk-ins and phone calls
April 12,2001
Jim O'Grady
City of Temecula
PO Box 9033
Temecula, CA 92589-9033
RE: Activity Summary - March 2001
Activities of the EDC for tbe month of March were as follows:
Business Development
Staff received the following eight business development leads for the month of March:
· An in-person visit with Ansar Firdosi who is searching for a sight to start up a plastic manufacturing/extrusion
business. Mr. Firdosi currently lives in the Bay area and will be moving to Southwest Riverside County within
the next year. Staff provided Mr. Firdosi with various demographic and resource information for Southwest
Riverside and provided contact information on local plastic/extrusion businesses.
· A phone inquiry and later an in-person visit with Dick Ritz of Bio Stimulants, Inc. m Temecula. Mr. Ritz is
seeking contact information on the Lake Elsinore Watershed Project. Staff provided Mr. Ritz with information
on the project and information on Eastern Mumcipal Water District and Metropolitan Water District.
· Staff assisted McCall's CountIy Canning with ~affing contacts that included information for Diversified The
Staffing SolutiotL, Manpower Temporary Services, and the Employment Development Department. McCall's
manufactures fragrant candle products and is relocating to Murrieta from Missouri.
· An in-person visit with Mike Coats of Americor in Hemet. Staff provided Mr. Coats with demographic and
contact information on Diamond Valley Lake, and a list of local cxmunercial brokers.
· A phone inquiry from MaryAnn Cunni~gham, who is looking to start a new business. Staff provided Ms.
Cnnningham with a Business Resource Guide.
· A phone inquiry from Tom Courbat of ExecufiveLinkage.com, an Interact-based executive search enterprise.
Mr. Courbat was seeking a possible link to the EDC website as a resource for worlcforce development.
· An in-person visit with Chris Brinkley who was referred by Bob Larson, Guidant retired. Mr. Brinldey has
relocated to Mumeta and was seeking possible business opportunities with local companies. Mr. Brinkley
provided staff with a resume and indicated his interest to volunteer for EDC activities. Staff emailed Mr.
Bdnkley's resume to board and EDC members for employment counections.
· An in-person visit with Jake Jacobson of Valley Metal Treating, Inc. Mr. Jacobson was seeking contacts of
industrial businesses. Staff provided Mr. Jacobson with contact information to the cities of Lake Elsinore,
Murrieta, and Temeoala to obtain business license lists.
· An in-persoa visit with Ann Burgher with AFLAC Insuumee. Ms. Burgher recently moved fi~om Georgia and
was seeking to meet community leaders in the region. Staff invited Ms. Burgher to attend the EDC Business
Relations Committee meeting. Ms. Burgner attended and has indicated she wishes to join the EDC.
Marketing, Outreach
Staff attended the following meetings/events:
Jim O'Grady
City of Temecula
Activity Summary - March 2001
Page 2 of 2
March 2, 2001 - Murrieta Temeeula Group - Staff attended the regularly scheduled monthly meeting at
Bailey's Winery in Temeeula. Presenters were Riverside County Supervisor Bob Buster and a representative
of the Riverside County Transportation Commission.
March 9, 2001 - Temecula CONNECT Links Lunch - Staff attended the monthly lunch at UCR Extension in
Temeeula. "IT Education in the Inland Empire -- Tapping into the Region's Hidden Teeh Workforee" was
presented by keynote speaker Eric Blum, director of Information Technology and Engineerin4g, UCR Extension.
· March 21, 2001 - SWRC Manufacturers' Council Meeting - Staff attended the general Board of Directors
meeting of the Manufacturers' Council at Guidant Corp. Staff serves as an honorary board member.
· March 27, 2001 - Murrieta Creek Workshop - Staff attended the Murrieta Creek workshop at Mumeta
Council Chambers. Presentations were provided to attendees regarding the various alternatives to the Murrieta
Creeks alignment.
· March 29, 2001 - Temecula State of the City - Staff attended the Temeeula State of the City event at the
Edwards Cinema Theaters in Temeeula.
Business Relations
· March 1, 2001 - Staff attended the EDC Business Relations Committee Meeting. (See meeting minutes for
details.)
Administration/Organization
· March 8, 2001 - EDC Program Committee Meeting - Committee members discussed possible topics and
guest speakers for future EDC luncheons.
· March 13, 2001 - SWRC Career & Manufacturers' Expo Meeting - Staff attended a plannin4 meeting with
the Career Expo Committee to discuss details of the upcoming Southwest Riverside County Career &
Manufacturers' Expo scheduled for April 21, 2001 at Chaparral High School in Temeeula.
· March 14, 2001 - SWRC Economic Alliance Meeting - Staff attended the monthly meeting to discuss
marketing and business attraction strategies with Alliance partners.
· March 22, 2001 - EDC Board of Directors Meeting held in the Workforce Development Center in Temeeula.
(See meeting minutes for details.)
· March 27, 2001 - Worldorce Devdopment Center Ali-Staff Meeting was held at the Temeeula Center.
Topics included mutual issues and interests relative to each agency in the Center.
· March 27, 2001 - Workforce Development Center Safety Team Meeting - Staff is a team member for the
Temeeula WDC Safety Team. Policies and protocol for rolling blackouts in the workplace were discussed.
· Administration - During the month of March, stuff managed the daily operations of the EDC office,
coordinated details for the quarterly luncheon to be held on April 26, coordinated details for the upcoming
Career & Manufacturers' Expo scheduled for April 21, mailed out 300 golf tournament announcements and
sponsorship letters, and attended a five-week evening course in Grantsmanship at UC Riverside Extension in
Riverside. Class began on February 28 and finished on March 28.
This concludes the activity summary for March 2001. Should you have questions or need further detail, please call
me at 600-6064.
Sincerely,
Diane Sessions
EDC of Southwest Riverside County
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION
OF SOUTHWEST RIVERSIDE COUNTY
BUSINESS RELATIONS COMMITTEE MEETING
Thursday, March 1, 2001 - 9:00 a.m.
Workforce Development Center, Executive Board Room
27447 Enterprise Circle West, Temecula, CA
AGENDA
Time Guide* Subiect
9:00 a.m.
9:01 a.m.
9:03 a.m.
9:30 a.m.
9:35 a.m.
9:40 a.m.
10:00 a.m.
*Actual times may va~
Welcome
Follow-up Action Reports
· Waterfall Oasis
Company Contact Reports
· Waterstone - L. Moss & & M. O'Connor
· Opto 22 - J. O'CJrady
· Hessco Theraquip, Inc. - G. Youmans
· CKS Multi-Media - G. Youmans
· Beaver Medical Group - G. Youmans
· Adex Medical - G. Youmans
· Others
Goal Progress Report
New Committee Assignments
· Strategic Visits
EDC News and Information
· EDC Board Update
· City, County, and Chamber News
· SWRC Manufacturers' Council Update
· Economic Alliance Update
· Economic Alliance Visitation List
Adjournment
Next Business Relations Committee Meeting: Thursday. April 5, 2001 - 9:00 a.m.
Location: Workforce Development Center, Executive Board Room, 27447 Enterprise Circle West, Temecula
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION
OF SOUTHWEST RIVERSIDE COUNTY
BOARD OF DIRECTORS GENERAL MEETING
Thursday, March 22, 2001 - 9:00 a.m.
Workforee Development Center
27447 Enterprise Circle West, Temecula, CA
BOARD MEMBERS
Marlene Best, City of Lake Elsinore
Ron Bradley, Temecula CONNECT
Dennis Frank, UCR Extension
Ted Hating, Eastern Municipal Water District
Ron Holliday, City of Murdeta
Keith Johnson, Mission Oaks National Bank
Jim King, The Gas Company
Rob Moran, Riverside County EDA
Phil Oberhansley, Cannon Parks & Oberhansley
Jim O'Grady, City of Temecula
Bonnie Renz-Hanna, Diversified The Staffing Solution
Gary Youmans, Community National Bank
EDC STAFF
Diane Sessions
MEMBERS AND GUESTS
Stevie Hirdler,
SWRC Economic Alliance
CALL TO ORDER
· President Gary Youmans called the meeting to order at 9:05 a.m.
MINUTES
· Motion was made by Dennis Frank, seconded by David Rosenthal and carded unanimously to approve the
minutes of the February 22, 2001 Board of Directors Meeting as amended by striking "UCR" and replacing
with "Beckman Institute" in the first sentence of page 4 under Open Discussion - SWRC Manufacturers'
Council.
FINANCIAL REPORT
· The Board reviewed the February 28, 2001 Financial Report that showed total monthly income of $t,057,
total expenses of $6,692, and total cash-in-bank of $77,410. Diane Sessions reported unfavorable variances
year-to-date in Total Revenues of $8,435 and favorable variances year-to-date in Total Expenses of $21,168.
Motion was made by Keith Johnson, seconded by Bonnie Hanna and carded unanimously to approve the
February 28, 2001 Financial Report as presented.
· Approve FY 2001-02 Operating Budget: The Board reviewed the dratt 2001-2002 Operating Budget that
showed total projected revenue and expenses of $104,000. Ms. Sessions reported there were various line
items reduced or removed from the previous year's budget due to non-applicability. Discussion was held
relative to how the County contribution would reflect in the budget. Rob Moran reported the County would
reimburse the EDC for rent of the current fiscal year and requested an invoice be sent to him. Mr. Moran
reported the County would continue to support the EDC with an in-kind contribution of office space at the
Temecula Workforce Development Center. He further stated the County would not require the EDC to pay
monthly rent for the coming fiscal year, which would eliminate the reimbursement process. The Board agreed
Economic Development Corporation
of Southwest Riverside County
Board of Directors Meeting -March 22, 2001
Minutes - Page 2 of 4
the FY 2001-02 budget should reflect the reimbursement from the County as "Previous Year's
Reimbursement" and also should note the County's current in-kind contribution, although there would be no
material rent income or expenses. Motion was made by Ron Bradley, seconded by Dennis Frank and carded
unanimously to approve the FY2001-02 Operating Budget as amended by noting the County's current in-
kind contribution of rent valued at $11,200.
NEW BUSINESSS
· Ratify Resolution #2001-01 - Opposition to the Wolf Creek Specific Plan Referendum: The Board reviewed
Resolution #2001-01 that was adopted on February 22, 2001. Board members commended Gary Youmans
for his leadership in supporting the organization's mission statement. Motion was made by Ted Haring,
seconded by Jim King and carried to ratify Resolution #2001-01-Opposition to the Wolf Creek Specific Plan
Referendum as presented. Jim O'Grady and Rob Moran abstained.
· Ratify Resolution #2001-02 - Not Support the Proposed Riverside County Integrated Plan (RCIP) Multi-
Species Habitat Conservation Plan Affecting the City of Murdeta: The Board reviewed Resolution #2001-02
that was adopted on January 25, 2001. The Board suggested the resolution be sent to local, state and federal
legislatures. Motion was made by Dennis Frank, seconded by Ron Bradley and carried to ratify Resolution
#2001 - Not Support the Proposed RCIP's Multi-Species Habitat Conservation Plan Affecting the City of
Murrieta as presented. Jim O'Grady and Rob Moran abstained.
· Marlene Best reported the City of Lake Elsinore was united with the City of Murfieta to oppose the
proposed RCIP Multi-Species Habitat Conservation Plan. She further reported the County had proposed
that approximately 10,300 acres of commercial/industrial/residential-zoned land in Lake Elsinore along 1-15
and Hwy. 74 corridors be set aside for habitat preservation. She asked the Board to oppose the proposed
habitat conservation sites in Lake Elsinore identified under the RCIP. Motion was made by Run Bradley,
seconded by Dennis Frank and carded to adopt a resolution in support of the City of Lake Elsinore to limit
the areas designated for habitat conservation within the City's influence and to forward said resolution to
local, state and federal legislature. Jim O'Grady and Rob Moran abstained.
· Appoint Nominating Committee: Gary Youmans asked for five volunteers to serve on the 2001 Nominating
Committee for the director elections. Bonnie Hanna, Jim O'G-rady, Ted Haring, David Rosenthal and
Marlene Best volunteered to serve on the committee. Ga~ Youmans appointed said committee members.
CONTINUING BUSINESS
· Munieta Chamber Proposal to Request County Redistricting: Ron Holliday reported the Chamber would
continue theft discussion on county redistricting through a joint committee formed with the Temecula
Chamber. He would provide further details at a future EDC board meeting.
· Manufacturers' Career Fair Update: Diane Sessions reported plans were moving forward and 21 companies
to date would participate. Large employers included Chemicon, Guidant, Laser Power Corporation, Milgard
Windows, Professional Hospital Supply, Scotts, Southwest Traders, U.S. Border Patrol, and others.
· Newsletter Update: Diane Sessions reported the newsletter was mailed on March 20, and the next quarterly
newsletter would be printed and mailed in late June. She suggested a feature article could include a
retrospective to highlight the EDC's 10-year anniversary. Ms. Sessions asked that articles be submitted in
early May.
Economic Development Corporation
of Southwest Riverside County
Board of Directors Meeting - March 22, 2001
Minutes - Page 3 of 4
Golf Tournament Update - Ga~ Youmans reported all major sponsors were secured for the golf tournament
and the flyer and sponsor letters were mailed.
Ga~ Youmans reported he received a letter of resignation from Bob Lopez that indicated he could no longer
serve on the EDC Board due to the current state of Southern California Edison. Mr. Youmans called Bob
Lopez to discuss the positive support to the EDC by Edison in past years and asked Mr. Lopez to withdraw
his resignation. Mr. Lopez withdrew his resignation and would continue his term as a director.
OPEN DISCUSSION
* EDC Administrative Update: The Board reviewed the February 2001 EDC Monthly Activity Report
submitted by Diane Sessions. Gary Youmans thanked Jim O'Grady and others for support letters sent on his
behalf as nominee for SBA's National Financial Services Advocate of the Year. Mr. Youmans reported he
was honored with the award and would travel to Washington DC in May. Jim King provided a media kit of
The Gas Company, which would serve to ease negative public relations due to the power shortage crisis.
· City, County and Chamber Updates: City of Temecula - Jim O'Grady reported the City attorney concluded
the petition against the Wolf Creek project was insufficient, and consequently not submitted to the County
Registrar. The City attorney determined that adopted City resolutions and the Wolf Creek Specific Plan was
not made available during the petition drive, which invalidated the petition. Mr. O'Grady stated that requests
to arbitrate the petition's validity was deemed not lawful. The Board discussed a possible referendum by
special interest groups to halt construction of the Temecula Ridge apartments. Other matters reported by
Mr. O'Grady were the Belaggio project would proceed with no appeals; construction of Scotts was moving
forward with an anticipated opening date in July 2001; the City building department would be scheduling
tours of the construction site; the State of the City would be held on March 29 at Edwards Cinema Theaters
in Temecula; community newsletters were mailed; and Southwest Traders would expand to 75,000 square
feet through fast tracking. Jim O'Grady thanked the EDC for submitting the resolution and support letter to
endorse SANDAG as the lead agency for the State Interregional Partnership Grant. Grant funds would be
used to analyze the impacts of job and housing imbalances and develop mitigation policies. City of Lake
EIsinore - Marlene Best reported the Padres exhibition game would be held at Storm Stadium next week;
bids for the McVicker fire station were out and the project was moving forward; the Chamber EDC luncheon
was scheduled for April 12 at Diamond Stadium and would include a presentation by the Small Business
Development Corp.; water and lake issues would be discussed at the next city council meeting; Davcon
completed tenant improvements on two new industrial buildings and occupants would move in soon; the
south side of Hwy. 74 would see commercial/industrial development; the season opener for the lake was
scheduled for April 7; the City would be an exhibitor at the Fred Hall Boat Show in Del Mar; and Totally
Themed in Lake Elsinore would hold a special reception and tour of their company on April 5 & 6. C/ty of
Murrieta - Ron Holliday reported an informal workshop would be held on March 27 for the Murrieta Creek
project and groundbreaking for the new police station was scheduled for April 3. County of Riverside EDA
- No report available. SWRC Economic Alliance - Stevie Hirdler reported the Alliance entered its third
year; the marketing CD-ROM was moving forward; and a company that manufacturers golf shafts would
consider relocation to Southwest Riverside. Temecula Valley Chamber of Commerce - Bonnie Hanna
reported the official groundbreaking for the new site was on April 26; sponsorships for the crystal wall were
still available; and the Chamber's golf tournament was on May 4 at Temecula Creek Inn and would include
27 holes.
Economic Development Corporation
of Southwest Riverside County
Board of Directors Meeting - March 22, 2001
Minutes - Page 4 of 4
* SWRC Manufacturers' Council - David Rosenthal reported the Council's luncheon went well and the next
would be held in May. The topic would include industry clustering and brief state-of-the-region updates.
Mr. Rosenthal reported he would like to hold a meeting on power shortage issues. He further stated the
Council's website was revamped, and new brochures and business cards were completed.
· EDC Business Relations Committee Update - Ga~y Youmans reported that visits to local businesses were
on track.
ADJOURNMENT
· The Board adjourned the meeting at 10:05 a.m.
Respectively submitted by:
Diane Sessions Phil Oberhansley
Recording Secretary Board Secretary
3/14/01 SWRC Economic Alliance Meeting
Present
Jim O'Grady
Gloria Wolmek
Al Volbrect
Marlene Best
Diane Sessions
Sarah Mandy
Rob Moran
Teresa Gallavan
Stevie Hirdler
Forbes -Labor StudyfNOFA - Jim shared that the RFP for the Labor Study was submitted
to WRCOG/SANDAG on 3/9/01and we should be notified in June as to whether the Alliance
has been awarded a grant for this project. Jim also stated that each partner might be
contacted by WRCOG for letters of support.
Budget - The budget for contract year 00-01 was reviewed and discussed. The revised copy
will be provided to each partner, It was agreed that the data for '~New Proposed Marketing
Expenses" should be reformatted. The $6,000 allotted for "direct mail" will be taken out and
placed in "consultant services", with an additional $1,000 from "unallocated funds" to total
$15,000, which is the total consultant fee for Phase I and Phase II. With the above-mentioned
changes, the budget was approved unanimously.
CD-ROM - Script and copy was provided to each partner for review for the CD-ROM.
Comments were to add a brief "generic" conunent under utilities. A power point presentation
or draft CD will need to be viewed before print of copies. Suggestions for testimonials
include Jim Lewis with AIMS, Susan Norton with Guidant or Bob Dowden with Guidant
discussing how the assets of SWRC enable him to recruit employees. Al suggested that an
interview with a business owner who went through the fast track process and the experience
they had in getting their business relocated. It was mentioned that still pictures at the Padres
game at the Storm in Lake Elsinore would be great to see on the CD. It was discussed that
stock pictures are available through photographer Chip Morton, John Edwards or Dave
Curtis. The timeline for the CD will be amended and provided to each partner.
Web-site - The idea of updating the Alliance web-site was discussed and agreed upon.
Before proceeding, however, I will provide a list of applications at our next meeting in April.
Web-sites that were referred to as model sites were the city web-sites for Vallejo, Rancho
Cueamonga and San Mateo. The partners also agreed that providing a link to available sites
in SWRC through Loop Net is important. This can be done through the EDC web-site.
It was also agreed that using the GIS system would be a benefit to users. This will enable the
user to obtain demographic reports, parcel information, detailed site reports etc. I will be
contacting Pablo for more information on GIS applications features and costs.
Ron Nater/Sili¢on Valley - The scope of work for retaining Ron Nator was provided to each
parmer, reviewed and approved with minor changes. A new copy is attached to these
minutes. It was agreed to proceed, however, a timeline must be provided from Mr. Nater. It
was also agreed that we inquire as to whether certain phases can be done simultaneously.
The partners also agreed that they would like to see Mr. Nater go through the permit process
as well as talk to people who have gone through it for feedback. In the formal agreement
between thc County of Riverside and Mr. Nater, we will indicate that thc total fee for both
phases is $15,000 and attach the timeline. I mentioned during our meeting that Mr. Nater is
out of town until March 26.
TEMECULA VALLEY FILM COUNCIL
ACTIVITIES REPORT
March 2001
Members of the Temecula Valley Film Council are Maggi Allen, President;
Sunny Thomas, Vice-President; Steve Phelps, Secretary/Treasurer; Sheri
Davis, Pat Martinez, Judi Staats, Eve Craig, Joe Hohenberger, Patty Slaton
and Ellen Watkins
The Business of the Film Council
· This month we received 115 phone calls; 22- Film Festival, 27-
locations information requests, 36- Talent Showcase, 30- council
business.
· The TVFC web site. www.temeculafilmorg has received 808 "hits" since it
opened on September 4, 2000. Photo and link updates are a continuous
process.
· The "Great Temecula Shoot Out" began on February 17 and due to
weather conditions has been extended to continue throughout the year.
Participants are calling when their cameras are ready for developing.
Over 120 disposable cameras have been assigned to local groups and
individuals to take pictures of the special places they know of in the
Temecula Valley.378 photographs have been developed so far. TVFC
will be placing the first postcard order in April. Local response has been
very favorable. New photos will be chosen for Temecula Postcards and
later a 16 month calendar of "Temecula Through Our Eyes" as we see
what develops
· To date, 27 locations inquiries have been received directly related to our
attendance at Locations Expo 2001. Many photographs have been sent
and with better weather, we expect to meet with locations scouts very
soon.
· Temecula Talent Showcase 2001 is scheduled for May 19th at the CRC.
Over 70 acts have been scheduled for auditions which will be held on
April 7t~ & 8th.
· Volunteer and production meetings for the Temecula Valley Film and
Music "Festival 2001" are continuing on a monthly basis at this time. A
special Sponsors Pre-Festival party was held on March 20th at the
Promenade Mall. Food and entertainment were provided. Sponsorship
packages were available for all those attending.
Filming in Temecula
The taping of the Temecula Students of the Month is continuing.. The
students from Chaparral High School are practicing editing for next time.
The next filming will be on April 23rd with the hopes of getting on TV in
May.
· The Temecula Valley Museum and Tony Tobin have been in contact
with Hueli Howser's California Gold producers and they have shown
interest in the Giant Oak and the ranch once owned by Erie Stanley
Gardner. There is a possible visit in the near future.
· USC film students are looking a small town business area for a current
film production and will make a trip to Temecula when the weather is
better.
We will continue to support the daily management of filmmaker's requests,
and encourage the growing awareness of the industry in this community. It
is our goal to generate a higher awareness of the Temecula Area within the
context of filmmaking activities, and to present the opportunities and
benefits of this production to local merchants and businesses.
Respectfully,
Maggi Allen
President, TVFC
INLAND EMPIRE ECONOMIC PARTNERSHIP
REAL ESTATE SUCCESSES
~rhe I£EP reports monthly on significant real estate b-ansaCtions that occurred with or without the assistance of ~££P, in order to provide leads to our membem,)
Home Depot, which currently has a distribution center in the city of Rancho Cucamonga, is
expanding its operations with the construction of a 150,000 square foot transportation
facility on a 30-acre site in the city of Rialto. The company anticipates hiring 500 new
employees. The financial investment is estimated at $12,000,000. The Inland Empire
Economic Partnership (IEEP) conducted the site search for this project and coordinated
meetings between the client and partnering cities. IEEP has also worked with this.company
in the past on Inland Empire expansion projects.
Ponica Industrial Co., Ltd., serving the audio and video recording industries as well as CD
replication, has expanded within Corona moving its headquarters to 125 S.'Klug Circle in
Corona:The purchase of this 54,511 square foot building has resulted in a $3,379,682 deal.
The company estimates they will be adding 15 new positions to accommodate their
expansion. Ray Schumaker of Lee & Associates, Ontario, represented the buyer and
Timothy Hawke of Grubb & Ellis Company represented the seller, Marshall J. Stewart, in
this transaction.
Eagle One, a leader in the development and manufacturing of automotive care products,
leased 40,157 square feet of space at 14575 Yorba Avenue in Chino. This five-year lease
is valued at $965,000'. Cameron Driscoll and Scott Evans of Cushman &'Wakefield Inc.
represented the lessee. Source: CoStar
DisCopyLabs Inc. (DCL), a manufacturer, warehouser, and distributor fo~ software and
hardware companies, is relocating their City of Industry facility to 2950 East Jurupa Avenue
in Ontario. The company has signed a five-year lease valued at $965,000. The number of
new jobs to the region is not available at this time. Source: CoStar
Construction is underway on HomeCenter Ontario, a 130,000 square-foot retail center
located at Milliken Avenue and the 1-10 Freeway. Tenants signed to date include Levitz
Furniture, Krause's Sofas, Thomasville, Arizona Leather, Mattress Discounters, Denny's
Restaurant and others. The center is scheduled to open in Fall 2001. The project is being
marketed by lan Brown, Walter Pagel, and Vanessa Brown of Grubb & Ellis Company.
CALENDAR ITEMS
To register online for SBDC events: w~mw. iesbdc.org
April: A "Business Planning Workshop" is being offered during the following dates, times and locations:
IApri~ 25
April 26
8:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. San Bernardino April 26 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. Murrieta
Riverside
6p.m. to8p.m.
This workshop is free of charge. For more information contact Melanie Cote at (909) 781-2345.
April 18: Attend the "Marketing Your Small Business'; workshop in San Bernardino from 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. and
learn how to increase sales, profitability, and efficiently manage your marketing dollar. Cost is $20. For more
information contact Melanie Cote.at (909) 781-2345.
April 24: "Doing Business with the Government" is a workshop designed to pro~/ide you with a simple overview of
how to sell your products and services to the Federal, State and Local government. This workshop is being held at
the Inland Empire SBDC, 1157 Spruce St., Riverside, from 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. Cost is $20. For more information
contact Melanie Cote at (909) 781-2345.
April 25: "Trains, Planes & Automobiles" will be the topic of discussion for the April Membership Luncheon that will
be held from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. at the Mission Inn, San Diego Room, Riverside. Cost is $25. For more
information contact Margie Oswald at (909) 890-1090.
April 28: An expert from Birdwell & Associates is conducting a seminar entitled "Quick Success With QuickBooks
Accounting Software" (Intermediate/Advanced-Part II) from 6:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. at the Inland Empire SBDC, 1157
Spruce St., Riverside. Cost is $25. For more information contact Melanie Cote at (909) 781-2345.
May: A "Business Planning Workshop" is being offered during the following dates, times and locations:
May 2
May 8
12 p.m. to 2 p.m. Riverside May 9, 23 8:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. San Bernardino
9 a.m. to 11 a.m. Ontario
May 10, 24
9 a.m. to 11 a.m. Murrieta
This workshop is free of charge. For more information contact Melanie Cote at (909) 781-2345.
May 3, 10, 17: A three-week, comprehensive seminar entitled "Develop Your Plan For Success" is being held from
9:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. at the Inland Empire SBDC, 1157 Spruce St., Riverside.' Cost is $40. For more information
contact Melanie Cote at (909) 781-2345.
May 1,8, 15: "Selling 1,2,3" is a series of workshops designed to enhance skills necessary in improving relationships
with clients. This workshop will be held from 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. in Ontario. Cost is $40. For more information
call (909) 466-6244.
May 9: A seminar entitled "How to Buy Accounting Software" is being offered from 6:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. at the Inland
Empire SBDC, 1157 Spruce St., Riverside. Cost is $25. For more information contact Melanie Cote at (909) 781-2345.
119LAIgD EMPIRE ECOIgOMIC 119VESTIVIENT COLLABORATIVE
For the third year, the Inland Empire Economic Investment Collaborative (IEEIC) is requesting proposals from
area schools seeking funding for programs linking education to business. Last year $129,000 in funds from Improving'
America's Schools Act provided enrichment programs in eight schools throughout Riverside and San Bernardino
Counties. Area schools will utilize funding from both the San Bernardino County Superintendent of Schools and the
Riverside County Office of Education to enhance business relationships with schools, provide professional
development for teachers, and increase parental participation in a child's learning. Proposals may be submitted to
Janice Moore, Program Manager, at (909) 781-6623.
FOUR H ANNUAL GOLF CLASSIC
Time Is Getting Short ~ We Need Your Support
IEEP invites you to the Foundation's
"Fourth Annual Golf Classic" on Monday, May 7th at
Moreno Valley Ranch Golf Club
Schedule of Events
10:30 a.m. ~ Registration & Lunch
11:30 a.m. ~ Putting Contest
12:15 p.m. ~ Cart Staging
C~OLF CLASSIC 12:30 p.m. - Shotgun Start
5:30 p.m. - Dinner (Steak Buffet)
6:00 p.m.-Awards & Raffle
Awards: Trophies will be awarded to the 1st place team. Gift Certificates will be awarded to the 2nd and 3rd place
teams with the Mayor's Cup Challenge being awarded to the city team with the lowest score whereby they will get
to keep the trophy for display until our next tournament in 2002!
Hole-In-One Prizes: 2001 Chevrolet Cavalier, complete set of Alien DS-9 golf clubs plus two-year Smartcare
Maintenance Program, three year supply of. new Spalding Strata Golf Balls, 4 day/3 night golf vacation for two at the
El Dorado Resort Hotel in Reno, Nevada.
Raffle Prizes: Air travel on Southwest Airlines, golf clubs, golf bags, rounds of golf, theme park tickets, and much more.
To join the fun, please contact Margie Oswald at (909) 890-1090.
CHECK US OUT I I I IEEP ACTIVITY REPORT &lARCH
Business Development - noted three leads, 545 inquiries, one Site Selector Outreach, and two site tours. The
Inland Empire Film Commission (IEFC) - registered 196 total days of film activity and 177 requests for locations,
with 15 permits issued in San Bernardino County, sever~ issued in Riverside County, and 11 issued for the Bureau
of Land Management (BLM), for an economic impact of $7,033,500. Small Business Development Center (SBDC)
- reported the creation of 49 jobs and the retention of one job for an economic impact of $1,353;194. The SBDC
counseled 276 clients for 952 client hours, and conducted 18 training events for 351 training hours and 951
attendees. International Trade recorded one export action for $600,000.
WELCOME 19EW MEMBERS
· Cucamonga County Water District is an independent special district that supplies high quality, reliable drinking
water to the city of Rancho Cucamonga, and portions of Upland, Ontario, Fontana and unincorporated San
Bernardino County. Robert DeLoach, General Manager/CEO, can be reached at (909) 987-2591.
SMALL BUSIIgESS DEVELOPMENT CEIgTER G and Opening
The Inland Empire Small Business Development Center (SBDC) is hosting a grand opening celebration for its
newest office, Inland Empire West SBDC, located at 4141 Inland Empire Blvd., Suite 231, Ontario. This office will
serve the communities of Ontario, Rancho Cucamonga, Upland, Fontana, Chino, Chino Hills, and Montclair.
Additionally, the SBDC has recently opened two outreach offices. The city of Barstow and the SBDC have partnered
to provide services to Barstow and the surrounding communities opening an office at Barstow City Hall that will be
open from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. every Thursday. The Corona office is located at the Corona Economic Development
Department and is open every Wednesday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
E-Tech News [IEHTC]
IE-TechNews is now reaching several hundred people on a biweekly basis. The IE High Technology program has
also gained the services of two interns from the University of California, Riverside, A. Gary Andegson School of
Management to assist in the coordination of this project.
MISSION TO JAPAN... Anothe Wild California IIVIAX Film Adventure
Sarah Miggins, V.P. of Economic Development, participated in a weeklong business development mission and
~ttended two Wild California IMAX screenings in Tokyo and Osaka. The delegation included representatives from the
Los Angeles Economic Development Corporation (LAEDC), San Luis Obispo EVC, University of Southern California
USC), California Technology, Trade and Commerce Agency, and NorCal Idea. The group met with several
companies and governmental agencies throughout the week to discuss future business opportunities.. The trip was
very exciting and encouraging despite the economic challenges in Japan.
SBA AWARDS
The annual SBAAwards program, hosted by IEEP and SBDC, is scheduled for Thursday, May 17th from 11:'30 a.m.
to 1:00 p.m. at the Ontario Convention Center. The theme of the program is "Small-Business America's Favorite
Pastime" and will feature a very creative and entertaining program. For more information contact Marsha Robers at
(909) 781-2345 ext 14.
Please send materials for consideration to Diane Evans. Submissions can be sent by e-mail to devans@ieep.com, or by
fax to (909) 890-1088. All materials should be received by the last Friday of each month.
INLAND EMPIRE ECONOMIC PARTNERSHIP
301 East Vanderbilt Way, Suite 100
San Bernardino, CA 92408
(909) 890-1090 Fax (909) 890-1088
tooms@ Jeep.com - www.ieep.com
Gloria Wo[nick
City of Temecula
P.O. Box 9033
Temecula, CA 92589-9033
MARCH 200:1
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TEMECULA C/T¥' HALL
by Barbara Beckley
WIith Nevada always in the spotlight because of the glittering lights of Las
Vegas, Reno and Laughlin, and Utah stepping onto the international
stage because of the upcoming 2002 Olympic Winter Games, these two
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wouldn't be eager and curious to experience the multimillion-dollar comforts and
state-of-the-art facilities being created in both states to entertain and accommodate
visitors? Natural beauty from pristine Lake Tahoe to surreal Bryce Canyon add to
the attraction for record-setting gatherings. Accommodations throughout both
states--from retreat-style hideaways to large and advanced convention centers---en-
sure a warm welcome for state and regional association gatherings of any size and
any budget. Easy access b~ air and land make getting there that much easier
PRSRT STD LAS VEGAS: KING OF THE HILL
0.$. POS'flOE As the new millennium revs up, Las Vegas con-
S~? F'3 T,e*o., ~ZI tinues to exceed expectations. As the nation's top
P"*r~°~g'~z~ I meeting and convention destination (more than 3.7
million attendees gather in Las Vegas each year),
the city offers 125,093 hotel guest rooms and 6 mil-
(continued on page 30)
Salt Lake City's skyline is reflected in Abravanal Hall, which
is located adjacent to the Salt Palace Convention Center.
DESTINATION: iNLAND TO THE MOUNTAINS
carved stones and Victorian mansions
add to the charm of this palm-lined city.
The renovated and expanded Riverside
Convention Center is part of a quaint
downtown filled with restaurants and
art galleries. The convention center of-
fers 50,000 square feet of flexible meet-
lng space for groups of up to 2,500 peo-
ple. A new outdoor plaza connects the
convention center to the Spanish archi-
tecture of downtown Riverside. Next
door, the 296-room Holiday Inn/River-
side offers nine meeting rooms for
groups of up to 290 people.
A block from the convention center,
the historic 237-room Mission Inn is one
of California's oldest hotels and includes
two chapels. The larger of the two, the
Chapel of St. Francis of Assisi, is a popu-
lar place for weddings. Bette Davis,
Richard Nixon and IIumphrey Bogart
tied the knot there. The inn's 14,000
square feet of indoor meeting space in 11
meeting rooms and 5,000 square feet of
outdoor courtyard function space can ac-
commodate up to 300 people. The hotel's
2,300-square-foot ballroom can accom-
modate up to 250 people.
Riverside has a total of 2,000 guest
rooms. The 286-room Holiday Inn Se-
lect includes meeting space for up to
180 people, and the 163-room Riverside
Courtyard by Marriott offers confer-
ence facilities for up to 100 people. The
163-room Days Inn/Riverside offers fa-
cilities for groups of up to 150 people.
ONTARIO: IRON STRONG
In the early 1900s, Ontario resident
Earl II. Richardson invented the iron,
earning the city the nickname "iron
capital of the world." Founded as a
model colony by two Canadian broth-
ers in 1882, Ontario has several other
claims to fame, including Ontario Mills,
the largest shopping center in Califor-
nia. If need be, a U.S. space shuttle can
land at Ontario Airport. For meeting
planners, the airport provides a more
practical advantage: It is only two min-
utes from the Ontario Convention Cen-
ter and its 70,000 square feet of column-
free space, 20,000-square-foot ballroom
and 20,000 square feet of flexible meet-
ing space.
The convention center is within
walking distance of more than 2,000
guest rooms. An additional 700 rooms
are with/n two miles. Hotels with meet-
Lng facilities near the convention center
include the 308-room Hilton/Ontario
Airport, with 14,000 square feet of
meeting space; the 340-room Double-
Rising above the Inland Empire cities of Riverside, San Bernardino and Ontario, the San Bernarclino
Mountains provide a scenic backdrop--and an icleal spot for pre- or post-meeting day trips.
tree/Ontario, with 24,000 square feet of
space for groups of up to 2,000; the 299-
room Ontario Airport Marriott, with
meeting space for groups of up to 725;
and the 150-room Holiday Inn Hotel &
Suites, with meeting space for up 110.
InnSuites, with 150 guest rooms, has
three large meeting rooms and six
boardroom suites. Country Side Suites
Ontario and Country Inn by Ayers each
offer meeting space for up to 300 peo-
ple. Country Suites by Carlson, Resi-
dence Inn by Marriott and Good Nite
Inn all have meeting space for small
groups. Nearby, the 184-room Radis-
son/Diamond Bar-Ontario offers meet-
lng space for up to 200 people, and the
174-room Holiday Inn/Monrovia has
meeting space for up to 400 people.
POMONA: MEET ME AT THE FAIR
Pomona is 15 minutes from the On-
tario airport and about 35 minutes from
downtown Los Angeles. The 487-acre
Fairplex in Pomona is the. home of the
Los Angeles County Fair and the host of
more than 300 other events every year.
Combined, those events draw more
than 3 million people a year to Pomona.
The Fairplex's exhibit halls provide
from 33,000 to 105,000 square feet of col-
tram-free space and can be used in vari-
ous combinations; parking is available
for 45,000 vehicles. At the Fairplex en-
trance, meeting planners will find the
247-suite Sheraton Suites Fairplex,
which offers 11,000 square feet of meet-
lng space in seven meeting rooms.
Life in Pomona, just 15 minutes
from the Ontario Airport, is also doral-
nated by two academic institutions,
Pomona College and California State
Polytechnic University. The 84-room
Kellogg West Convention Center & Ho-
tel on the Cai Poly/Pomona campus
provides meeting facilities for up to 500
people, including 16 conference rooms
and a team-building ropes course. The
nearby 289-room Shilo Hilltop Suites &
Conference Complex offers 11 meeting
rooms and a convention center that can
accommodate up to 500. Meanwhile,
the Shilo Inn/Diamond Bar-Pomona
offers 162 guest rooms and meeting
space for up to 125 people.
An academic atmosphere is also ap-
parent in Claremont, a New England-
style town in the San Gabriel Moun-
tains just north of Pomona. The city is
anchored by the Claremont Colleges,
founded more than 100 years ago and
known for their strong programs in the
arts and sciences. Set against the moun-
tains, the historic Padua Hills Theatre
can accommodate up to 250 meeting at-
tendees. Hotels with meeting space in-
clude the 270-room Claremont Inn Hotel
& Conference Center, with meeting
space for up to 400. The 124-room Ra-
mada Inn, the 62-room Howard Johnson
and the 50-room Claremont Travelodge
provide rooms for small meetings.
TEMECULA: NEW OLD WEST CHARM
The scenic Temecula Valley, twenty
miles inland from the Pacific and
halfway between Los Angeles and San
Diego, is home to 15 wineries. The city
of Temecula has in recent years re-
stored its Old Town to look as it did in
ASSOCIATION NEwS/MARCH 2001
DESTINATION: iNLAND TO THE MOUNTAINS
the days of the Wild West. Rustic
streets and wooden boardwalks are
lined with more than 640 antique shops
and art galleries. The vineyards and
wineries offer a wide variety of tours
and group activities. The Thornton
Winery features champagne, jazz con-
certs, an outdoor patio area that seats
350 people and indoor meeting facili-
ties for groups of up to 80 people.
Temecula hotels with meeting facili-
ties include the 80-room Temecula
Creek Inn, a sprawling resort that over-
looks the valley and offers 27 holes of
golf. Tlae inn's 2,788-square-foot confer-
ence center can accommodate up to 284
people. The inn is undergoing renova-
tions that will add 50 guest rooms and
a separate 4,000-square-foot banquet
and meeting building.
The 176-suite Embassy Suites/Temec-
ula features more than 3,200 square feet
of meeting space for groups of up to 200
people. The 90-room Days Inn and the
70-room Ramada inn each provide 500
square feet of meeting space.
SAID
c?
Circle 280 on Rapid Response Form
Meeting planners can also choose
the 133-room Pala Mesa Resort in near-
by Fallbrook, with championship golf
as well as 6,000 square feet of meeting
space for groups of up to 200 people, or
the Temecula Meeting Center, with
space for groups of up to 90 people.
PALM SPRINGS DESERT RESORTS:
DESERT CULTURE
While the entire area is often called
Palm Springs, it is in fact made up of
eight distinct cities that line a 25-mile
stretch of the old Route 66. All the
towns share warm desert weather,
mountain views and fine hotels and
spas. The desert scenery of the
Coachella Valley also includes a more
modem-day element: golf courses. The
area is just 100 miles east of Los Ange-
les and can be reached by air at Palm
Spring~ Regional Airport.
Palm Springs sits at the base of
Mount San Jacinto. The village will be
forever linked to the glamour days of
Hollywood, but it is not stuck in the
past. While maintaining a cozy resort
feeling, it is drawing in an increasing
number of high-profile chefs and other
top names in luxury hospitality. Meet-
ing attendees may enjoy a ride on the
Palm Springs Aerial Tramway, which
reaches to the top of Mount San Jacinto
and features new cable cars that re-
volve as they ascend.
You might say Palm Springs was
made for meetings. Most of the resorts
have made a point of providing top-
notch meeting facilities. The Palm
Springs Convention Center has 77,000
square feet of meeting space, 66,000
square feet of exhibit space and a 435-
seat auditorium. Within easy walking
distance of fashionable Palm Canyon
Drive, the center is connected to the
410-room Wyndham/Palm Springs by
an air-conditioned walkway. The Wyn-
dham offers an additional 25,000
square feet of indoor meeting space, a
60,000-square-foot courtyard surround-
ing the pool and sun deck, a 160-seat
amphitheater and a view of the San Jac-
into Mountains.
Hotels within walking distance of
the convention center inclUde the 260-
room Palm Springs Hilton Resort, with
10 meeting rooms for groups of up to
768 people. The 165-room Palm Springs
Marquis Conference Center and Resort
has 17 meeting rooms, 30,000 square
feet of exhibit space and two acres of
outdoor event space. The 192-room Hy-
att Regency Suites offers nine meeting
ASSOCIATION NEWS/MARCH 2001
DESTINATION: INLAND TO ThE MOUNTAINS
nia Poppy Reserve, Z000 acres dedicat-
ed to protecting California's state
flower. The Antelope Valley cities of
Lancaster and Palmdale are an hour's
drive from greater Los Angeles and of-
fer meeting space for up to 800 people.
The 233-room Essex House Hotel &
Racquet Club in Lancaster is the Ante-
lope Valley's largest hotel, with meet-
ing facilities for up to 750 people. The
hotel's Essex Convention Center offers
14,000 square feet of meeting space for
groups of up to 800 people. Additional
Lancaster hotels with meeting facilities
include the 150-room Best Western An-
telope Valley Inn & Conference Center,
with meeting space for up to 400 peo-
ple. The 144-room Desert Inn Hotel has
meeting space for groups of up to 150.
In Palmdale, the 153-room Holiday
Inn/Palmdale offers meeting space for
groups of up to 130, and the 135-room
Ramada Irm/Palmdale has meeting
space for up to 300. Southeast of Lan-
caster in the Santa Clarita Valley, the
Hyatt Valencia offers 244 guest rooms,
11 suites and 15,600 square feet of
meeting space for groups of up to 625.
In the Mojave high desert, pic-
turesque Ridgecrest has its roots in
Ternecula's balloon and wine festival brings
the area's twin passions together each year.
gold mining. Outdoor enthusiasts can
take in Mount whitney, the highest
point in the lower 48, and enjoy the
lowest point in North America, a two-
hour drive away in Death Valley Na-
tional Park. For association gatherings,
Ridgecrest has 55,000 square feet of
pa_ .e_dena,s Newest .- ?
,With our re~qtly.~bmpleted n~ultianillion dollar:_-
~ renovatibh; the Sheratofi ?asadeha Hotel awaits your
.arrival:for a;b£and n~:'ex-pede-n~d '.' ' '
:' ~ted'i~.the hear~bf~downtowq'Pasa~-e.n.a;.th[-
.'~':~i~t~n Para'dena Hotel_e~tends ~ll'thr,
:engUre:dn.~njUyable and memorable visit.- ..:
~ Your experience with-us~w be an except~ona one.
· 317 beautifully ;
appointed guestrooms
· Club Level with
Club Lounge
· 2~ Hour Business Center
· Lobby Concierge
· The all-new Restaurant
Soleil for an exceptional
dining expedence
· The newly re~iesigned
Charlies Bar for relaxing
· Lighted tennis courts
· Exercise Facilities
· Close to 12~000 square
feet of meeting and
banquet fad[itles
· Only a short [2) block walk
to trend-setting "Old
Pasadena" for limitless
dining, shopping and
entertainment options
Circle 283 on Rapid Response From
meeting space for groups of up to 7,000
people. The Kerr-McGee Civic Center
offers 17,000 square feet of meeting
space and theater seating for up to
2,000 people. The Desert Empire Fair-
ground has 34,000 square feet of meet-
ing space for up to 4,500 people. Hotels
with meeting facilities include the 163-
room Carriage Inn, which can accom-
modate groups of up to 200 people, and
the 169-room Heritage Inn, with meet-
ing space for up to 60 people.
In Death Valley National Park, the
290-room Furnace Creek Inn & Ranch
Resort was built in the 1920s and offers
meeting space for groups of up to 175
people. The resort also boasts the
world's lowest 18-hole golf course--
214 feet below sea level.
GETTINO YOUR KICKS
While flying in is an option for trav-
eling to many of these cities, the drive is
often half the fun--with diverse scenery
and many places to stop along the way.
Once at their destinations, meeting at-
tendees will enjoy ever-changing land-
scapes and unique cultures. Going in-
land to the mountains and deserts is a
trip into America's history. ·
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:
Big Bear Lake Resort Association
Circle 217 on Rapid Response Form
Claremont Chamber of Commerce
Circle 218 on Rapid Response Form
Lake Arrowhead Communities C of C
Circle 219 on Rapid Response Form
Lancaster Chamber of Commerce
Circle 220 on Rapid Response Form
Ontario Convention & Visitors Bureau
Circle 221 on Rapid Response Form
Palm Springs Desert Resorts CVB
Circle 222 on Rapid Response Form
Palmdale Chamber of Commerce
Circle 223 on Rapid Response Form
Pomona Economic Development Corp.
Circle 224 on Rapid Response Form
Ridgecrest Area CVB
Circle 225 on Rapid Response Form
Riverside Visitors & Convention Bureau
Circle 226 on Rapid Response Form
San Bernardino CVB
Circle 227 on Rapid Response Form
Temeenla Valley Chamber of Commerce
Circle 228 on Rapid Response Form
PHOTO CREDITS:
Page 6 & 8: William G. Nar tshom/Photographic
Compositions Pa~e/.~: Pala Mesa Resort
Paste %2: Ann Shepphird; Inset: Association News
Photos Pa~e ~L4: City of Temecula
ASSOCIATION NEws/MARCH 2001
TO:
FROM:
DATE:
SUBJECT:
APPROVAL
CITY ATTORNEY
DIRECTOR OF FINANCE
CITY MANAGER
CITY OFTEMECULA
AGENDA REPORT
City Manager/City Council
William G. Hughes, Director of Public Works/City Engineer
April 24, 2001
Department of Public Works Monthly Activity Report
RECOMMENDATION: Attached for City Council's review and filing is the Department of Public
Works' Monthly Activity Reports for the month of March, 2001.
MOACTRPT
CAPITAL IMPROVEMENT PROJECTS
Monthly Activity Report
March / April 2001
Prepared By: Brian Guillot
Reviewed By: Amer Attar
Submitted by: William G. Hughes
Date: April 24, 2001
PROJECTS UNDER CONSTRUCTION
1. First Street Bridge
This project will construct First Street from Pujol Street to Old Town Front Street, including the construction
of a bridge over Murrieta Creek and the realignment of Santiago Road. The new intersection of First Street,
Old Town Front Street, and Santiago Road will be signalized. The bridge construction is complete with only
deck grinding, tubular handrail and joint seal items remaining. Final asphalt paving is complete on Front
Street, Santiago Road and First Street. The traffic signal at the intersection of First Street / Santiago Road and
Front Street is operational with the installation of the Old Town Series streetlights underway. Contractor is
scheduled to complete channel grading and miscellaneous itams by the end of the April. Construction of the
EMWD lift station continues. The bridge dedication ceremony is schedule for May 1, 2001.
2. Old Town Parking Lot
This project will rehabilitate the Stampede parking lot. It includes resurfacing, landscaping, and Old Town
Series lights. TruGreen began construction on the parking lot on October 2, 2000. Construction is complete
with punch list items remaining. The parking lot dedication ceremony is schedule for May 1, 2001.
3. Pala Road Bridge Environmental Restoration/Median and Parkway Landscape Improvements
This project will install landscape improvements along Pala Road and Cupeno Lane and restore the wetlands in
the construction zone. It includes the installation of an irrigation system, planting, and hydroseeding. Median
& Parkway work is complete. Restoration work commenced on 3/19/01.
4. Pala Road Bridge Environmental Mitigation
The wetlands creation site located approximately 1 V2 mile east of the bridge project has been planted. The
120-day plant establishment period is complete. The five-year maintenance program continues.
5. Pala Road Soundwalls
Work on this project includes the construction of masonry block Soundwalls on Pala Road from west of
Rainbow Canyon Road to east of Club House Drive. The wall averages 14' in height. The sound wall is
complete. Landscaping and other miscellaneous repairs should be completed by the end of April.
6. Sports Park Pond Desiltation
The project included the removal of 15,000 cubic yards of silt from the existing pond located along Rancho
Vista Road. The project is complete. Notice of Completion was scheduled to go to Council on 04/10/01.
R:\Mon~hlyActivityReport\CIP\2001 \March.doc
7. Rancho California Sports Park Field Lighting
Under this proj eot, new lights will be installed in all fields. The project is essentially complete. Adjustment of
thc direction and retrofitting the fixtures remain. Field repairs are underway. Rain has delayed completion.
8. Murrieta Creek Crossing Between Winchester and Rancho California Road - Low-flow Cr°ssing at
Via Montezuma
This project will construct a low-flow crossing of Murrieta Creek connecting Diaz and Del Rio at Via
Montezuma. In addition, this project will rehabilitate the street of Via Montezuma. At the February 13,2001
meeting, the City Council awarded the construction contract to Terra-Cai Construction for the amount of
$404,587.70
The City's Planning Department completed the CEQA process. Tom Dodson & Associates, an environmental
consultant, has submitted the necessary applications for the permitting process. All permits were issued and
construction has commenced. The project area was manually cleared prior to March 15, thc beginning of thc
nesting season. The project was awarded to Terra-Cai Construction of Baldwin Park, California. All of thc
agency approvals have been acquired. The contractor started work on 4/2/01 and will start the pavement
rehabilitation of Via Montezuma the week of April 16. The entire project is scheduled to be completed by
June 2001.
9. City Maintenance Facility Alterations, Phase IH
This project will modify the existing two story masonry block building to accommodate a new second floor of
office space over the existing two-story maintenance bay, including the installation of an elevator, and two new
second floor restrooms. Construction modifications include a single story office space addition. Thc contract
was awarded to T&M construction with a bid amount of $600,000.00. Construction has begun with the
demolition of existing structures.
10. Margarita Road Widening, Pauba Road to Dartolo Road
This project will widen Margarita Road fi.om Plo Pico to Dartolo Road and re-landscape the medians from Dc
Portola to SR 79 South. Included with this project is the pavement rehabilitation of Phase II (Pauba Road to
Plo Pico). City Council awarded the project on 3/6/01 to R.J. Noble with a bid amount of $1,266,140.80. The
Notice to Proceed was issued for April 19, 2001.
11. Rancho California Sports Park Culvert Modification
In this project, the existing culvert will need to be modified to eliminate a slope erosion problem. The project
was advertised for bids and bids were opened on March 6, 2001. City Council awarded the project on March
27, 2001, to KEC Engineering. The pre-construction meeting was held April 10, 2001, with thc Notice To
Proceed issued on April 16, 2001. Construction has begun with the demolition of existing facilities.
12. Light Emitting Diode (LED) Traffic Signal Conversion Program
A grant award in the amount of $140,870.00 was obtained to replace incandescent traffic signal lamps with
Light Emitting Diode (LED) lamps. Under this program, all traffic signal lamps in the City of Temecula will be
replaced with the energy efficient, long lasting LED lamps. The City will recover its matching costs in energy
savings in two to three years. Bids were opened on March 6, 2001. The contract was awarded to Republic
Electric at the March 27,2001, City Council meeting in the amount of $368, 714. A pre-consU'uction meeting
was held on April 18, 200 l. Consmction is scheduled to begin the week of 04/23/01.
2 R: \MonthlyActivityRepor t\CIP\2001 \March .doc
PROJECTS BEING ADVERTISED FOR BIDS
1. Traffic Signal installation at Stonewood and Margarita
A traffic signal will be installed at the intersection of Margarita Road and Stoncwood Drive. City Council
awarded thc construction contract to DBX, Inc. on April 10,2001, in the amount of$132,000. Construction is
anticipated to begin thc first of May.
2. Pavement Management System, Jefferson Avenue
This project will rehabilitate Jefferson Avenue from the northerly City limits to Overland Drive. Areas to be
rehabilitated were identified, and plans and specifications are complete. Bids were opened on April 10,2001,
with ILl Noble the apparent low bidder. The project is expected to be awarded at the April 24 City Council
meeting.
PROJECTS IN DESIGN
1. Diaz Road Realignment
Under this project, Diaz Road will be realigned to Vincent Moraga Road at Rancho California Road. Business
Park Drive will be a T-intersection at Diaz. In response to additional design cost requests by thc designer, City
staff has elected to complete the design in-house. Anticipated design completion is scheduled for June 2001.
2. Pala Road Improvements - Phase II (79 South to Pechanga Road)
This project will widen Pala Road to its ultimate width from the Pala Road Bridge to Pechanga road. Plan
check comments (70% Submittal) were returned to the consultant. Work is proceeding on the remainder of the
design. The approval of Wolf Creek Drainage Basin Study by RCFC & WCD has been delayed about a month
because hydrology studies upstream of Wolf Creek require prior approval. Staffwill be using an appraiser to
assist in thc preparation &the real estate appraisal report. The project is funded for design only at this time.
3. Rancho California Road Median Modifications at Town Center and
The project will include the closing of the two median openings on Rancho California Road in front of the
Town Center, while lengthening the left turn lanes at Ynez Road, Town Center Drive, and Via Los Colinas to
improve traffic circulation.
4. Rancho California Road Widening at Ynez Road (Add right turn lane to westbound lanes)
This project will add a right turn lane on westbound Rancho California Road at Ynez Road. Right of way
acquisition at the northeast comer of Rancho California and Ynez will be required. Design is in process and
appraisals are due at the end of the April.
5. Pauba Road Improvements - Phase II (Margarita Road to Showalter Road)
This project will widen Pauba Road from Showalter to just west of Margarita Road to its ultimate width. The
project is in design and the work is being coordinated with design of the library project. Work is being
3 R:\MonthlyActivityRepor t\CIP\2001 \March.doc
coordinated with design of the library project. All utility issues are being addressed. 90% design plans were
submitted to the City for review. Staff will begin contacting property owners to discuss driveway revisions and
new easements. Potholing of utilities has been performed along Pauba to determine elevations of existing lines.
6. Senior Center Expansion
The expansion will include an addition of 3000 square feet to the existing building. The expansion will be for
recreational, office, and meeting purposes. The project is currently undergoing final plan check review. The
project is scheduled to bid in late April.
7. Rancho California Road Bridge Widening Over Murrieta Creek
This project will widen Rancho California Bridge over Murrieta Creek to provide additional traffic lanes.
Design of the project began in September 2000. Design will take six months. The bridge widening will
include four additional lanes. Provisions for a trail route across the bridge are also being considered. The 30%
plan submittal was received and staff is reviewing the project design.
8. Chaparral High School Swimming Pool
The design committee decided upon the layout of the 25-yard x 25-meter pool at Chaparral High School. The
facility will include a smaller recreation pool component and a bathhouse with locker room facilities, restrooms
and showers. Spray-type play equipment will be included as an element in the base construction bid. The City
and TVUSD reviewed the first design submittal from RJM Design Group, consultants, and the corrected plans
were received on March 21,2001. Staff is completing the final review during the month of April. The project
requires Division of State Architect (DSA) review and approval. The project is scheduled to begin this July
pending DSA approval.
9. Starlight Ridge Southern Cross Road Sidewalk Project
This Project will install approximately one mile of sidewalk on the northwest side of Southern Cross Road.
Preliminary design is complete. Plans have been submitted to utilities for their review. 1st plan check and
constructability review underway.
10. Pavement Management System- Citywide
This project will involve rehabilitating the pavement of various streets in the City for FY 2000-01. A list of
streets has been selected and staff is currently preparing the contract specifications. Additionally, the
consultant will update the Pavement Management System Program (PMS) for the City. The scope of services
includes the evaluation of certain roads that need rehabilitation. A geoteehnical consultant has been selected
and staff is now negotiating the professional services agreement.
11. Margarita Road/Winchester Road Intersection Improvements
Under this project, an additional left mm from eastbound Winchester to northbound Margarita will be added in
order to accommodate increasing traffic volumes. The field survey is complete. The in-house design, including
the preparation of the base maps is underway. Coordination with Caltrans will be required since Winchester is
a State Route at this location. Project will be processed as a Caltrans Encroachment Permit.
12. 1-15 Northbound On-Ramp Widening at Winchester Road
This project will re-stripe westbound Winchester Road from Ynez Road to I- 15 northbound on-ramp to allow
for a better flow of traffic. A consultant has completed a final striping plan. The City applied for an
Encroachment Permit from Caltrans to do the striping. Caltrans is reviewing.
4 R:\MonthlyActivityRepor t\ClP\2001 \March.doc
13. Overland Drive Extension/Murrieta Creek Bridge
This project will entail alignment studies and the design of an extension of Overland Drive, westerly to Diaz
Road, which includes a new bridge over Murrieta Creek. Thc project includes the widening of Overland Drive
from Jefferson Avenue to Commerce Center Drive, and the extension of Overland Drive across Mun-icta Creek
to Diaz Road. Project Design Consultant (PDC), the designer, is working on the final version of the alignment
study & report. It is to be submitted to the City at the end of April.
14. Winchester Road Widening Between Enterprise Circle md Jefferson
This project will add a right turn lane from Eastbound Winchester to Southbound Jefferson, starting at
Enterprise Circle. Preliminary utility research and data gathering is underway. O'Malley Engineering
Corporation is providing the design survey which is scheduled to be completed by the end of thc month. Once
data is received from consultant, staff will begin design with completion scheduled for the end of May.
15. AC Street Repairs - FY2001
This project will rehabilitate and reconstruct selected City streets during 2001. A list of streets has been
selected and staff is currently preparing the contract documents.
16. Pujol Street Sidewalk Improvements - Phase II
This project will complete the knuckle at the intersection of Sixth Street and Felix Valdcz. Data gathering,
concept review, preliminary layout is underway.
17. Landscaping and Sidewalk On 79 South (Front Street to Pala Road)
The project consists of the design and construction of new sidewalk and landscaping along the south side of
State Highway 79 South between Pala Road and Old Town Front Street. Data gathering, concept review,
preliminary layout is underway.
18. Temecula Library
A full service library, approximately 34,000 square feet in area, will be designed and built on Pauba Road, just
west of Fire Station #84. This project will provide the community with library resources and services. Thc
design is progressing on schedule. The architect started on the final drawings after the committee completed
its design and development meetings. The State Librarian is holding Public Hearings that include all agencies
to develop thc guidelines for thc approved Bond measure. Letters were sent to all the utilities requesting
service information. Utility services construction is being coordinated with Pauba Road, Phase II project.
19. Street Name Sign Replacement
This project will entail removing the existing wooden signs in the La Serena area and replacing them with
plastic signs selected by the Public Traffic Safety Commission. Plans and specifications are 95% complete.
20. Traffic Signals Design at Pala Road and Loma Linda, and at Pala Road and Wolf Valley
Two new traffic signals will be installed on Pala Road, one at Loma Linda and the other at Wolff Valley. The
plans and specifications are complete. The project is being coordinated with Pechanga Development
Corporation sewer project. This project is on hold due to environmental constraints.
5 R:\MonthlyActivityRepor t\CIP\200 l \March.doc
21. Pala Road Interim Improvements - (Widening to accommodate four lanes from Loma Linda Bridge to
Wolf Valley)
Pala Road Interim Improvements (58 feet in width) will be completed with the second phase of construct!on of
the Pala Road Trunk Sewer (Pechanga Development Corporation project). An encroachment permit was
issued for the construction of the trunk sewer and the interim street improvements. Traffic signal and striping
plans are complete. The construction of Pala Road Trunk Sewer (Phase Two) by the Pechanga Development
Corporation from Clubhouse Drive to the new Pechanga Casino Driveway (600 feet southeast of Wolf Valley
Road) started November 6, 2000 and the approximate completion date is Spring 2001. The interim project is
on hold due to environmental constraints.
22. Santa Gertrudis Bridge Widening at 1-15
This is Phase II of the Southbound Auxiliary Lane project at the southbound exit ramp for Winchester Road.
This project will widen the 1-15 southbound exit-ramp at the Santa Gertrudis Creek Bridge to provide an
additional lane on the exit ramp just north of Winchester Road. Staff is revisiting the merits ofthis project in
light of the proposed Project Study Report for Cherry Street Interchange. The study shows that this bridge may
have to be removed in the future to accommodate the Cherry Street Interchange.
23. Santiago Road/Ynez Road Intersection Improvements
This project will widen, realign, and adjust the traffic signal timing of the existing intersection. This project
has been delayed indefinitely. The Traffic Division completed some minor striping and signal adjustments
that improved traffic movement through the intersection.
6 R:\MonthlyActivityRepor t\CIP\2001 \March.doc
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MEMORANDUM
TO: Bill Hughes, Director of Public Works/City Engineer
FROM: ~ Brad Buron, Maintenance Superintendent
DATE: April 2, 2001
SUBJECT: Monthly Activity Report - March, 2001
The following activities were performed by Public Works Department, Street Maintenance Division in-house
personnel for the month of March, 200t:
I. SIGNS
A, Total signs replaced 66
B. Total signs installed 51
C. Total signs repaired 1
II.
TREES
A. Total trees trimmed for sight distance and street sweeping concerns
5
II1.
ASPHALT REPAIRS
A. Total square feet of A. C. repairs
B. Total Tons
3,856
55
IV.
CATCH BASINS
A. Total catch basins cleaned
156
RIGHT-OF-WAY WEED ABATEMENT
A. Total square footage for right-of-way abatement
-0-
VII.
GRAFFITI REMOVAL
A. Total locations
B. Total S.F.
STENCILING
A. 120 New and repainted legends
B. 1~047 L.F. of new and repainted red curb and striping
25
t~477
Also, City Maintenance staff responded to 39 service order requests ranging from weed abatement, tree
trimming, sign repair, A.C. failures, litter removal, and catch basin cleanings. This is compared to 56
service order requests for the month of February, 2001.
The Maintenance Crew has also put in 85 hours of overtime which includes standby time, special events
and response to street emergencies.
The total cost for Street Maintenance performed by Contractors for the month of March, 2001 was
$ 33,227.00 compared to $ 49,t50.00 for the month of February, 2001.
Account No. 5402 $ 24,327.00
Account No. 5401 $ 7,850.00
Account No. 999-5402 $ 1,050.00
Ron Parks, Deputy Director of Public Works
Ali Moghadam, Senior Engineer - (tiP/Traffic)
Greg Butler, Senior Engineer - (Capital Improvements)
Amer Attar, Senior Engineer - (Capital Improvements)
JerryAlegria, Senior Engineer - (Land Development)
STREET MAINTENANCE CONTRACTORS
The following contractors have performed the following projects for the month of March, 2001
DESCRIPTION TOTAL COST
DATE OF WORK SIZE
ACCOUNT STREET/CHANNEL/BRIDGE. L L
CONTRACTOR: MONTELEONE EXCAVATING
Date: MARCH, 2001 CITYWIDE RAIN CLEAN-UP REMOVE DEBRIS FROM STREETS, SWEEP
STREETS, REPAIR RlP-RAP AND 15' OF
SIDEWALK
# 5402
TOTAL COST $10,942.00
GRADED DIRT ROADS IN SERVICE LEVEL
Date: 03/05/01 SERVICE LEVEL "R" "R" AREAS
GRADING OF DIRT ROADS
# 999-5402
TOTAL COST $1,050.00
CONTRACTOR: RENE'S COMMERCIAL MANAGEMENT
Date: 03/13/01 VIA MONTEZUMA LOW FLOW MECHANICAL WEEK ABATEMENT AND
REMOVAL OF DEBRIS AND TRASH
CROSSING
# 5401
TOTAL COST $ 5,000.00
Date: 03/21/01 NADA LANE WEED SPRAYING, WEED ABATEMENT AND
DEBRIS REMOVAL FROM CHANNEL
# 5401
TOTAL COST $ 2,850.00
CONTRACTOR: BECKER ENGINEERING
viARGARITA AT RANCHO VISTA REMOVE AND REPLACE 4 UNDER-THE-
Date: 03/19/01 SIDEWALK DRAINS
# 5402
TOTAL COST $ 9,640.00
Date:03/01/01 PASEO DE LAS OLAS REMOVED AND REPLACED 373 S.F. OF
THREE LOCATIONS SIDEWALK; INCLUDES ROOT PRUNING
# 5402
TOTAL COST $ 3,745.00
TOTAL COST ACCOUNT g5401 $ 7350.00
TOTAL COST ACCOUNT #5402 $ 24,327.00
TOTAL COST ACCOUNT ~99-5402 $ 1,050.00
oo~
CITY OF TEMECULA
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS
ROADS DIVISION
SERVICE ORDER REQUEST LOG
MONTH OF MARCH, 2001
DATE LOCATION REQUEST DATE WORK
RECEIVED COMPLETED
03/01/01 LIEFER ROAD ROAD GRADING 03/02/01
03/01/01 31385 CORTE TUNAS TREE REMOVAL 03/01/01
03/02/01 45673 CLUBHOUSE DEAD TREE 03/02/01
03/03/01 RANCHO VISTA AT MIRA LOMA DEBRIS PICK-UP 03/03/01
03/05/01 27025 WINCHESTER CR~EI( OIL SPILL 03/05/01
03/05/01 JOSEPH ROAD AT RITA WAY DEBRIS PICK-UP 0-3/05/01
03/05/01 31190 INDIAN SUMMER ROAD GRADE ROAD 03/05/01
03/05/01 30445 LA PRESA LOOP GRADE ROAD 03/05/01
03/05/01 29813 W1NDWOOD CIRCLE TREE REMOVAL 03/05/01
03/06/01 YNEZ AT VALLE JO PLUGGED C.M.P. 03/06/01
03/06/01 10851 DE PORTOLA ROAD ~OTHOLES 03/06/01
03/07/01 N. GENERAL KEARNY AT MARGARITA ROAD DEBRIS PICK-UP 03/07/01
03/08/01 INDIAN SUMMER ROAD GRADE ROAD 03/09/01
03/12/01 41501 REISI.ING COURT STORM DRAIN CONCERN 03/12/01
03/12/01 30310 VERONDA PLACE TREE TRIMM]lqG 03/12/01
03/12/01 40334 CALLE KATERINE P.C.C. PATCHING 03/12/01
03/12/01 39310 GREENWOOD LANE ROAD GRADING 03/12/01
03/12/01 43771 JOHN WARNER ROAD ROAD GRADING 03/12/01
03/13/01 PAUBA ROAD DEBRIS PICK-UP 03/13/01
03/13/01 39120 PALA VISTA ROAD ROAD GRADING 03/13/01
03/14/01 NICHOLAS AT N. GENERAL KEARNY PLYWOOD ON SIDEWALK 03/14/01
03/14/01 RANCHO CALIFORNIA RD. AT CALLE BAHIA VISTA TRENCH FAILURE 03/14/01
03/15/01 MARGARITA ROAD AT DARTOLA TEMP R-1 's 03/15/01
03/14/01 29700 MIRA LOMA POTHOLES 03/14/01
DATE LOCATION REQUEST DATE WORK
COMPLETED
RECEIVED
03/14/01 41588 BIG SAGE cOURT TREE REMOVAL 03/14/01
03/15/01 MARGARITA ROAD AT DARTOLA TEMP R-1 03/15/01
03/19/01 42060 AVENIDA VISTA LADERA TREE REMOVAL 03/19/01
03/19/01 LA SERENA AT WALCOTT LANE DEBRIS REMOVAL 03/19/01
03/21/01 30798 CANTERF1ELD DRIVE BROKEN DRA]]'q 03/21/01
03/21/01 41588 BIG SAGE COURT TREE REMOVAL 03/21/01
03/22/01 CALLE PII~A COLADA AT N. GENERAL KEARNY OIL SPILL 03/23/01
03/23/01 SANTIAGO ROAD ROAD GRADING 03/23/01
03/23/01 UklqCNO CALll~ORNIA ROAD & 1-15 NAILS 0323/01
03/26/01 OVERLAND EAST OF JEFFERSON SAND SPILL 03/26/01
03/27/01 OVERLAND AT I-I 5 GRAFFITI 03/27/01
03/27/01 LONG RIDGE DRIVE AT ROCK BLUFF SIGN 03/27/01
03/28/01 TUOLUMNE AT DEER MEADOWS COUCH 03/28/01
03/28/01 45456 CLUBHOUSE DRIVE CATCH BASIN REPAIR 03/28/01
03/29/01 22086 WINCHESTER CREEK CATCH BASIN QUESTIONS 03/29/01
TOTAL SERVICE ORDER REQUESTS 39
CITY OF TEMECULA
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS
ROADS DMSION
ASPHALT (POTHOLES) REPAIRS
MONTH OF MARCH, 2001
DATE LOCATION SCOPE OF WORK S.F. TOTAL
TONS
03/01/01 CITYWIDE "RAINTM REPA]RPOTHOLES 52 TEMP A.C.
03/02/01 CITYWIDE "RAIN" REPAIR POTHOLES 40 TEMP A.C.
03/05/01 VukRGARITA AT DE PORTOLA OVERLAY POTHOLES 875 6
03/06/01 CITYWIDE "RAIN" REPAIR pOTHOLES 46 TEMP A.C.
03/06/01 JEI~'t.'EI~SON AT DEL RIO ~EPAIR POTHOLES 9 TEMP A.C.
03/08/01 41750 RIDER WAY REPAIR POTHOLES 16 TEMP A.C.
03/08/01 CITYWIDE REPA1R POTHOLES 91 2
03/09/01 CITYWIDE REPAIR POTHOLES 70 2
03/12/01 JEIq~'ERSON AT CHERRY REMOVE & REPLACE 106 3
03/13/01 28165 JEFFERSON ~,EMOVE & REPLACE 174 6.5
03/14/01 28165 JEI~I~'ERSON REMOVE & REPLACE 200 6.5
03/15/01 qICHOLAS AND WALCOTT REMOVE & REPLACE 66 2
03/19/01 28165 JEFFERSON REMOVE & REPLACE 203 6.5
03/20/01 MIRA LOMA DRIVE OVERLAYS 327 3
03/21/01 NOCHOLAS ROAD EAST OF JOSEPH ROAD OVERLAYS 850 4
03/22/01 MIRA LOMA DRIVE OVERLAYS 385 3.5
03/26/01 DE PORTOLA - PIO PICO TO JEDEDIAH SMITH OVERLAYS & BERM 42 3.5
03/28/01 30000 YNEZ ROAD DOWN SPOUT 280 6.5
03/28/01 SANTIAGO AND C STREET REPAIR POTHOLE 24 ~.
TOTAL S.F. OF REPAIRS 3~856
TOTAL TONS 55
CITY OF TEMECULA
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS
ROADS DIVISION
GRAFFITI REMOVAL
MONTH OF MARCH, 2001
__~ ~ ~
BATE LOCATION WORK COMPLETED
03/01/01 MARGARITA AT STONEWOOD (4 LOCATIONS) REMOVED 30 S.F. OF
03/01/01 CALLE ARAGON AT RANCHO CALIFORNIA ROAD REMOVED 8 S.F. OF GRAI~ FI'I I
03/07/01 VIA MEJIA AT McCABE REMOVED 1 S.F. OF GRAIqq ri
03/0701 McCABE AT CAMINO ALAGON REMOVED 4 S.F. OF GRAFIq 11
03/07/01 McCABE AT MEADOWS ?,EMOVED 2 S.F. OF GRAFiq t'l
03/07/01 PlO PICO AT CALLE REDONDELA REMOVED 20 S.F. OF GRAI~'t"[I 1
03/08/01 31067 csAMINo VERDE REMOVED 12 S.F. OF GRAIq~'Irl
03/08/01 VIA PUERTA AT CAMINO VERDE REMOVED 2 S.F. OF
03/08/01 40486 WINCHESTER REMOVED 8 S.F. OF GRAIqq I 1
03/08/01 40480 WINCHESTER REMOVED 2 S.F. OF GRAFFITI
03/14/01 RANCHO CALIFORNIA ROAD AT CALLE TAJO REMOVED 199 S.F. OF GRAFFH'I
03/16/01 fftARGARITA PARK REMOVED 2 S.F. OF GRAIqqTI
03/16/01 BUTTERF1ELD STAGE ROAD N/O RANCHO CALIFORNIA REMOVED 112 S.F. OF GRAt"? [1
03/16/01 TEMECUI~.. ELEMENTARY SCHOOL REMOVED 8 S.F. OF GRAFFITI
03/16/01 31000 CORTE PRIEGO REMOVED 70 S.F. OF GRAI~'Iq:I l
03/19/01 AVENIDA DE LA REINA REMOVED 8 S.F. OF GRAFIqTI
03/19/01 MARGARITA AT YUKON REMOVED 2 S.F. OF GRAFIq'I I
03/19/01 LA SERENA AT CALLE PlflA COt. ADA REMOVED 4 S.F. OF GRAFfiti
03/19/01 LA SERENA AT CAMINO CORTO REMOVED 22 S.F. OF GRP&'Iq 1'1
03/19/01 LA SERENA WEST OF CAM1NO CORTO REMOVED 36 S.F. OF GRAFFITI
03/1901 LA SERENA AT MARGARITA REMOVED 8 S.F. OF GRAFFITI
03/26/01 O~ BRIDGE AT 1-15 REMOVED 917 S.F. OF GRP&'Frl 1
TOTAL S.F. GRAFFI'FI REMOVED 1~477
TOTAL LOCATIONS 25
CITY OF TEMECULA
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS
ROADS DIVISION
STENCILS / STRIPING
MONTH OF MARCH, 2001
DATE LOCATION WORK COMPLETED
03/05/01 SANTIAGO ROAD AT MARGARITA ROAD INSTALLED TYPE 1 ARROW
03/08/01 41750 RIDER WAY INSTALLED 70 L.F. RED CURB
03/09/01 RIDER AT ENTERPRISE CIRCLE WEST REPAINTED 24 L.F. RED CURB
190 L.F. DOUBLE YELLOW, 150 L.F. LANE
03/13/01 RANCHO VISTA (TEMECULA HIGH SCHOOL) INSTALLED LINE, 2 ARROWS
240 L.F. LANE LINE, 4 ARROWS, 90
03/15/01 RANCHO VISTA (TEMECULA HIGH SCHOOL) INSTALLED DOUBLE YELLOW
03/16/01 MARGARITA AT MORAGA INSTALLED 53 L.F. RED CURB
03/19/01 RANCHO VISTA ROAD EAST OF MARGARITA REPAINTED 113 LEGENDS
03/20/01 HEITZ LANE AT VINTAGE CIRCLE NST,~I.I.ED 230 L.F. OF DOUBLE YELLOW
TOTAL NEW & REPAINTEO LEGENDS 120
NEW & REPAINTED RED CURB & STRIPING L.F. 1~047
CITY OF TEMECULA
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS
ROADS DMSION
CATCH BASIN MAINTENANCE
MONTH OF MARCH, 2001
DATE LOCATION WORK COMPLETED
03~6/01 CITYWIDE "RAIN" CLEANED & CHECKED 19 CATCH BASINS
03/07/01 CITYWIDE "RAIN" CLEANED & CHECKED 50 CATCH BASINS
03/12~) 1 AREA 84 CLEANED & CHECKED 30 2ATCH BASINS
03/16/01 AREA g4 CLEANED & CHECKED 17 CATCH BASINS
03/19/01 AREA g4 CLEANED & CHECKED 40 CATCH BASINS
TOTAL CATCH BASINS CLEANED & CHECKED 156
CITY OF TEMECULA
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS
ROADS DIVISION
RIGHT-OF-WAY TREE TRIMMING
MONTH OF MARCH, 2001
DATE LOCATION WORK COMPLETED
03/05/01 PROMENADE CHARDONNAY HILLS AT HEITZ TRIMMED 1 R.O.W. TREES
03~)7/01 CALLE BARCALDO AT CORTE ALMONTE TRIMMED 2 R.O.W. TREES
03/12/01 RANCHO VISTA AT MARGARITA TRIMMED 2 R.O.W. TREES
TOTAL ILO.W. TREES TRIMMED $
CITY OF TEMECULA
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS
ROADS DIVISION
SIGNS
MONTH OF MARCH, 2001
DATE LOCATION WORK COMPLETED
03/01/01 YNEZ AT MOTOR CAR PARKWAY REPLACED ~.-11 & TYPE K
03/01/01 :~AUBA WEST OF MARGARITA REPLACED CARSONITE
03/01/01 DIAZ ROAD REPI~CED BUS STOP SIGN
03/06/01 RANCHO VISTA EAST OF MARGARITA REPLACED 5 R261-81 7 R-26
03/06/01 MEADOWS AT PAUBA REPLACED R-I FADED
03/07/01 AREA #2 (SEE DAILY FOR LOCATIONS) REPLACED 28 R-1
03/08/01 PlO PICO AT MARGARITA REPLACED R-2 "45" T.C.
03/08/01 kRGO AT RANCHO VISTA REPLACED R-1 T.C.
03/08/01 PAUBA AT VIA CERA REPLACED R-1 T.C.
03/08/01 ~.VENIDA ALVARADO AT DIAZ ROAD REPLACED R-1 T.C.
03/08/01 SANTA CECILIA AT COSMIC REPLACED 5 R- 1-2 FADED
02/12/01 KLARER AT CALLE KATERINE REPLACED R-I FADED
03/12/01 CALLE MEDUSA AT ENFIELD REPLACED R-1 FADED
03/14/01 MEADOWS PARKWAY AT SPY GLASS INSTALLED 2 W54A
03/14/01 ~A PAZ AT YNEZ REPLACED R2 35
03/15/01 LA PAZ AT YNEZ REPLACED R2 45
03/15/01 CORONADO NORTH OF YNEZ REPLACED R2 45
03/15~)1 TEMECULA HIGH SCHOOL REPLACED ~.-18
03/15/01 WINCHESTER AT FARMER BOYS REPLACED R-7 TYPE K
03/16/01 LA SERENA AT MEADOWS REPLACED 2 DELINEATORS
03/19/01 MEADOWS PARKWAY AT LEENA REPLACED R-1 T.C.
03/20/01 HE1TZ Ia~qE AT VINTAGE CIRCLE INSTALLED 16 R.P.M.
03/23/01 RIESLING COURT INSTALLED I W-53
03/26/01 WINCHESTER - DIAZ TO JEFH~RSON INSTALLED 12 R-26
03/27/01 WINCHESTER- DIAZ TO 3EI'~'I~RSON INSTALLED 10 R-26
DATE LOCATION WORK COMPLETED
03/28/01 MARGARITA NORTH OF STONEWOOD INSTALLED CIP SIGN
03/28/01 JEH~ERSON AT OVERLAND AND CHERRY INSTALLED 2 CIP SIGNS
03/29/01 RANCHO VISTA AND MEADOWS PARKWAY REPLACE 1 R-lA "DAMAGED"
03/29/01 PAUBA WEST OF CORTE VALLASA INSTALLED TYPE N- Y1ELD 1
03/29/01 PAUBA WEST OF CORTE VALLASA INSTALLED 2 CARSONITES
03/29/01 ,~RONT AT 79 SO. INSTALL 1 CARSONITE
03/29/01 FRONT AT 79 SO. INSTALL 3 TYPE Qs M/SSING
03/29/01 RANCHO CALIFORNIA ROAD AT BUTTERFIELD STAGE REPAIR 1 CITY LllvtIT SIGN
TOTAL SIGNS REPLACED 66
TOTAL SIGNS INST~I J~F~D SI
TOTAL SIGNS REPAIRED I