Becoming a battlefield
Jenny Marder
A battle is brewing between Hope View area residents and the private
soccer club that has played on the school’s field for 25 years.
Outraged residents say the North Huntington Beach Futbol Club is
overwhelming their quiet neighborhood. Club President George Mitton
says they are making it impossible to compromise.
At a meeting mediated by officials from the city and the school
district, the soccer club agreed to surrender 26 practice days per
year, halt a long tradition of swapping fields for tournaments with
other clubs and give up a plan to install brighter lights for evening
practice.
But for many Hope View residents, these concessions only scratch
the surface.
The North Huntington Beach Futbol Club is comprised of 13 teams,
with members nine to 17 years old. The group has practiced at the
Hope View Elementary School Field for 25 years. Teams practice every
afternoon and evening Monday through Thursday and all day on
weekends, with shortened hours on Friday.
Residents began to organize in February when they found out that
the club was planning to install bigger, brighter lights on the
field, which they feared would flood surrounding homes.
“They’re invading the neighborhood and they have the idea that it
is fine,” resident Jan Mallet said. “They think that they have the
right to all the facilities.”
The list of requests from Hope View homeowners is short, but
drastic. They appreciate what they club gave up at its last meeting,
but say it’s not enough. They want the club to stop holding practice
Fridays, Sundays and holidays and to cancel its annual Labor Day
tournament -- for good.
The tournament, which will celebrate its 25th anniversary this
year, runs two weekends and draws thousands each year to the field.
“You’d have thought you were on PCH and Main [Street] on the
Fourth of July,” resident John Prchal said of last year’s tournament.
“As soon as one game gets out, another one is starting. The
neighborhood was overwhelmed. It didn’t have the infrastructure to
handle the crowd that went with it.”
Residents have asked that the club do a better job of cleaning up
trash and that it keep members from parking on residential streets.
They also complain that the club, which has members from cities
outside Huntington Beach ,such as Fountain Valley and Santa Ana,
should open the field to other youth sports teams.
“These fields should be used all day long for free play for both
the students of the school and the children of the day care,” Mallet
said in a speech at the last meeting. “In the afternoons, these
fields should be used by the children who participate in Huntington
Beach youth sports.”
Residents say have tried to be as low key, professional and
reasonable as possible.
“We don’t have anything against [the club],” Prchal said. “We just
want a reasonable use of the fields and the community.”
Mitton said the club has bent over backward trying to meet
residents’ needs. The lights were intended to improve safety during
evening practice, and swapping fields with other clubs for
tournaments is a common practice that makes them a “good soccer
family,” he said.
“They’re very volatile right now,” Mitton said. “They have made it
impossible for us to compromise with the demands that they were
asking.”
The soccer club has offered to install more trashcans near the
fields and do their best to curb parking by encouraging carpooling
and directing traffic.
“I’m not here to make war with the neighbors and I’m trying to
make this thing work,” he said.
Throughout its quarter century at the field, the club has put more
than $200,000 into maintaining the site, Mitton said. The club
doesn’t pay the Ocean View School District to use the field, but
funds a gardener, cuts the grass and maintains the fencing and
lights, he said.
Mary Lou Beckman, chief financial officer at the Ocean View School
District, said that the school district is working hard to reach a
“mutually satisfied conclusion” between the community, the youth
sports, the school district and the city.
“We very much understand and appreciate neighbors’ concerns and
the needs of youth sports,” Beckman said. “Unfortunately there isn’t
enough space in the city for all the groups who want to play a sport.
It ends up with some conflicts at times.”
Hope View residents are now pushing for the city to do an
environmental study that assesses the effect of the club on its
surrounding neighborhood.
Jim Engle, the city’s community services director, did not return
phone calls.
While the club has agreed to cut its usage and be more stringent
in overseeing trash and parking, the neighbors are still dreading the
upcoming tournament weekend, which will run Aug. 23 through 25 and
Aug. 30 through Sept. 1.
“The question still remains when the first tournament comes
whether or not there will be adequate parking and adequate
infrastructure,” Prchal said. “This thing is just huge. The layout
and design of the park never intended to handle an event as large as
this tournament.”
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