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Calabasas Hopes to Take Over 60 Acres From Los Angeles

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

Calabasas is exactly 60.3 acres too small for Mayor Dennis Washburn--the size of a smallish but extremely popular notch of land coveted by the city but owned by Los Angeles.

So Calabasas is positioning itself to make a second bid to take over the only portion of the folksy, lumber-fenced Old West throwback known as Old Town Calabasas that it does not own. The area contains the anchors of Calabasas’ historical and cultural identities: Sagebrush Cantina, the county’s second most popular watering hole, and Leonis Adobe, the historical gateway to Old Town.

A long-range annexation plan is on a list of items Calabasas’ new city manager will ask the City Council on Wednesday to make a priority.

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While the issue teeters, Bob McCord III, whose Sagebrush Cantina attracts yuppie socialite get-togethers, business executives’ meetings and chrome-and-leather biker rallies, continues to do business on a corner that pays taxes to one city but identifies with another.

“I got 5,000 people a week coming through my door,” said McCord, whose restaurant is a key property in annexations talks. “If I got parking trouble on one side, I get a call from Los Angeles. If I have a parking problem on another side, I get a call from Calabasas. My water belongs to DWP, my gas belongs to Las Virgenes. If somebody gets hurt, nobody knows who to call--the county paramedics a block up the street or [Los Angeles] city paramedics a mile away.”

To absorb the whole strip, City Manager Don Duckworth, who started his job a week ago, will need to persuade three prime properties to abandon Los Angeles for more cozy dealings with Calabasas, primarily tax breaks.

The two cities would have to agree to any realignment--and Los Angeles has said repeatedly that it does not want to give up the lucrative businesses--unless the property owners and the city of Calabasas initiate action with the Los Angeles Community Formation Committee to change the borders and circumvent Los Angeles authorities.

Calabasas officials are going to the property owners first, knowing full well that Los Angeles will never give away the more than $500,000 in annual tax revenue from the Motion Picture & Television Fund retirement home, a luxury condominium complex and Sagebrush Cantina in Old Town.

When the city of 27,000 in the western San Fernando Valley was established nine years ago, founders sought to annex a stretch of Los Angeles that included part of Old Town, one of the area’s main attractions. With nothing to gain in the deal and money to lose, Los Angeles officials refused to give up the property, but Calabasas invested nearly $2 million in developing Old Town anyway and hoped to acquire the remainder later.

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When the City Council meets Wednesday--in a City Hall sandwiched between two parcels of Los Angeles County land--the council will have annexation on its mind, Duckworth said.

“There have been isolated annexation efforts in downtown and areas Calabasas has historically been interested in,” Duckworth said. “But I’m thinking we ought to have some long-range program, not only for our city but also for Agoura Hills, Westlake and Malibu.”

Two major advances have raised the stakes since Los Angeles officials declined requests to change its borders, most recently in 1998: Old Town has grown into a bustling draw, and the 40-acre retirement home has announced an expansion. Calabasas says it wants to unite civic services and add to the Old Town atmosphere.

“There are lots of reasons for unity and, unfortunately, lots of opportunity for confusion,” Mayor Washburn said. “We did improvements on [L.A.’s] property in order to provide the ambience there. It’s been 3 1/2 years, and they’re not interested in putting in any traffic control to make it a smoother-running public facility. We’re in position to make that commitment and investment.”

But Los Angeles City Councilwoman Cindy Miscikowski said Calabasas is out to take over tax revenues generated by the cantina and usage fees from the retirement home. A 1994 city report estimated that Sagebrush Cantina produces more than $150,000 in annual tax revenue for Los Angeles.

“We looked at different options that would keep tax equity neutral,” Miscikowski said. “But Calabasas was interested in all or nothing. That’s why it stays in limbo. I’m not going to take tax value away from my city and give it to another city.”

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McCord has been on both sides of the annexation debate. On Sundays, especially during football season, his six-acre Sagebrush Cantina is the night life of Calabasas. It has the second-busiest bar in the county and a Calabasas address, although it technically lies within Woodland Hills.

“It would be a lot better to me to be in Calabasas,” McCord said. “Right now, everybody knows I’m on the [L.A.] side. I’m a big part of the community, but sometimes organizations don’t want to meet here because I’m in L.A.”

Three years of discussions with the past administration have McCord doubting that Calabasas will offer the deal he says will get him to join the annexation bandwagon: a promise in writing to grant at no extra cost all the licenses and permits he now holds in Los Angeles.

The restaurateur believes he has the leverage to eventually get the deal he wants. The half-million dollars McCord said he pays in taxes and fees to L.A. could increase Calabasas’ municipal budget by 6%.

The Motion Picture & Television Fund Country House, which also has flip-flopped on joining Calabasas, has announced plans for a new assisted living center on its campus and has obtained the initial permits from Los Angeles. The Mountain Gate condominium complex has been a voice of unwavering support for annexation.

For now, Robert Yalda, intergovernmental affairs director for Calabasas, says Old Town is “the heart of our town, but it’s like half our heart is not in our body.”

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