Long Beach, CA
File #: 17-0394    Version: 1 Name: PW - Excavations btwn 8th and 9th D1
Type: Agenda Item Status: Approved
File created: 5/4/2017 In control: City Council
On agenda: 5/23/2017 Final action: 5/23/2017
Title: Recommendation to find that excavations are immediately required for the general health, safety, and welfare of the City and cannot be delayed; that alternatives to excavating, such as alternative routing, boring or excavation of the parkway, are not possible; and approve a discretionary permit to excavate Locust Avenue between 8th Street and 9th Street, a street that has been reconstructed within the previous 60 months, in accordance with Section 14.08.060 of the Long Beach Municipal Code. (District 1)
Sponsors: Public Works
Attachments: 1. 052317-C-16sr&att.pdf
TITLE
Recommendation to find that excavations are immediately required for the general health, safety, and welfare of the City and cannot be delayed; that alternatives to excavating, such as alternative routing, boring or excavation of the parkway, are not possible; and approve a discretionary permit to excavate Locust Avenue between 8th Street and 9th Street, a street that has been reconstructed within the previous 60 months, in accordance with Section 14.08.060 of the Long Beach Municipal Code. (District 1)

DISCUSSION
Asplundh Construction Corp. (Asplundh), has filed for a discretionary permit to excavate and install electrical conduit and cables to Renaissance High School on Locust Avenue between 8th Street and 9th Street (Exhibit A). Asplundh is under contract by Linik Corp. the Project Manager representing Long Beach Unified School District, to install new electrical service to the high school.

This portion of Locust Avenue was resurfaced on December 1, 2012, and is under an excavation moratorium until December 1, 2017. Long Beach Municipal Code (LBMC) Section 14.08.060, Public Works permit-issuance, requires that a permit for an excavation in a City street that has undergone slurry sealing within the previous 24 months, or reconstruction within the previous 60 months, and is not for an emergency repair or for a new utility service connection, be deemed discretionary and subject to the approval of the City Council.

Asplundh states that the proposed excavation is necessary for the general health, safety, and welfare of the City and cannot be delayed until after the moratorium has expired because the Renaissance High School students are currently being housed at Mary Butler School and are unable to return to Renaissance High School until electrical service has been installed.

Alternatives to excavating the street, such as routing through adjacent streets, has been considered and rejected because the adjacent streets are under the same excavation mora...

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