Council approves parking reduction
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Deirdre Newman
City leaders Monday approved a request from the owners of a Mesa
North apartment complex to reduce its parking by 10 spaces.
The decision by the City Council overturns the Planning
Commission’s earlier rejection of the request by Park Mesa Village.
The majority of council members said they felt that reducing the
parking at the Paularino Avenue complex would not add to parking
problems that a handful of homeowners who live across the street on
Manistee Drive say they have experienced.
The residents’ testimony swayed the Planning Commission to reject
the reduction in parking. But they didn’t show up to plead their case
to the council because they thought the Planning Commission had
approved the reduction and that was it, said Manistee Drive resident
Charles Ives.
Upon hearing of the council’s decision Tuesday, Ives and his wife,
Deborah, said they would consider asking for a rehearing. They
contend the parking problem on their street is getting worse, and
Park Mesa Village deserves some of the blame.
The problem, Deborah Ives said will be compounded by the council’s
decision: If you take 10 spaces away when there are already 20 people
who don’t have a place to park, add in an apartment complex across
the street and the houses’ short driveways, the cumulative effect is
a deluge of people parking on Manistee Drive.
Representatives of Cameo Homes, which owns Park Mesa, had asked to
replace 80 existing parking spaces -- 60 open and 20 covered carport
spaces -- with 70 single-garage spaces in seven buildings. They want
to convert the parking to make their property more attractive by
using the garages to buffer nearby freeway noise. There are no
freeway noise walls in this location.
They received an approval for a similar request in 1992, but the
garages were never built because of the recession, said Victor
Mahoney, with Cameo Homes.
To prove that the reduction would not adversely harm the
neighborhood, Cameo conducted a study that found there is excess
parking available in the complex.
But in September, the Planning Commission heeded the concerns of
the Manistee Drive residents and denied the reduction.
In response to that decision, Cameo officials have worked with the
Manistee Drive residents and have only received one complaint about
off-site parking, Mahoney said.
While none of the Manistee Drive residents showed up Monday, two
other residents voiced their dissatisfaction with reducing the
parking at the complex.
“I have a real problem reducing parking anywhere because the
biggest problems [in the city] are parking, traffic and gridlock,”
said Beth Refakes.
But their opinions did not have the same weight as the Manistee
Drive residents had with the Planing Commission and the council voted
4-1 to approve the reduction, following the lead of Mayor Gary
Monahan.
“The comments about problems in the city [with parking] are right
on, but I don’t see how a reduction in spots will exacerbate that,”
Monahan said. “Parking [on Manistee Drive] appears to be driven from
elsewhere or the convenience [of those] who walk through the site.”
Councilman Allan Mansoor dissented because he said he believes the
reduction will increase the parking problems on Manistee Drive.
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