Condo owners say churches disrupt neighborhood
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Regarding the story “St. Mark picks new home,” Daily Pilot, Jan. 9:
We have owned and resided in our condominium located in the
immediate neighborhood of both St. Mark Presbyterian Church and Our
Lady Queen of Angel’s for the past 25 years. And as such, we take
great umbrage to the city’s Environmental Quality Affairs Committees
conducting an environmental study on St. Mark’s proposed site when,
in fact, the committee has demonstrated little if any concern on the
effect that these two churches and the high school have had on our
neighborhood.
Equally disturbing to us is while the Environmental Quality
Affairs Committee has drafted a “laundry list of concerns for the
environmental study to examine” at St. Mark’s proposed site, the
committee has exhibited total disregard for the laundry list of
problems that have and continue to wreak havoc in and around their
present location.
These are issues that have and remain unaddressed for far too long
by the committee, Planning Commission and the city itself and have,
in fact, compromised the day-to-day quality of life and environment
in our neighborhood. In failing to address the impact St. Mark’s and
its neighboring church and high school have had on the hundreds of
condominiums and apartments in our neighborhood, the committee
expresses a far greater concern for the effect that St. Mark will
have on a golf course and apartment building. This in and of itself
speaks volumes of the committee’s distorted sense of priorities. In
all candor, we don’t know what offends us more, the committee’s
arrogance or indolence.
Wouldn’t the city in general be far better served if the
Environmental Quality Affairs Committee would focus its considerable
energies on addressing the problems that already exist here before
spending thousands of taxpayer dollars on this environmental study?
We have come to believe that many of these so called environmental
studies serve little purpose, other than to portray the concern of
elected officials and their respective committees and are, at the end
of the day, nothing more than an exercise in futility.
We are not going to waste our time arguing semantics.
Given the city’s histrionics and the lack of any real backbone
when it comes to developments such as this (who can say no to a
church?) it appears that St. Mark’s groundbreaking is a foregone
conclusion and this so called environmental study is only a minor
informality, thereby clearing the way for Our Lady Queen of Angels to
break ground on an overly ambitious proposal that calls for doubling
the size of both its cathedral and school.
Furthermore, despite Scott Barnard’s statement that “expansion
plans for Our Lady Queen of Angels are not yet complete,” all
evidence is to the contrary. Two years ago, when we contacted Our
Lady Queen of Angels seeking information about the scope of its
proposal, officials there directed us to a public relations
representative who was evasive in responding to our queries. Our
suspicions were confirmed by the Planning Department, which verified
that the church had, in fact, already submitted its proposed
expansion plans for review. The clandestine manner in which Our Lady
Queen of Angels operates is neither appreciated nor has gone
unnoticed. It is important to note that its proposed expansion plan
neither addresses the egregious traffic problem that currently exists
or the projected increase of traffic that will come with doubling the
size of both its cathedral and school.
Simply put, Our Lady Queen of Angels has outgrown this
neighborhood.
Adding insult to injury, it appears that neither St. Mark’s or Our
Lady Queen of Angels’ proposed expansion projects will “trigger a
Greenlight vote.” If this proposal were a Koll Development, or any
other developer for that matter, you can bet that Greenlight would be
all over it like a cheap suit.
All our attempts to enlist the help of Greenlight have fallen on
deaf ears. Greenlight’s failure to get involved with this cause is de
facto discrimination and is monumentally illustrative of the double
standard that exists within that organization.
What is troubling to us is that the Environmental Quality Affairs
Committee has given little consideration to the consequences their
actions will, in fact, have on our neighborhood. The streets are not
now, or ever were, designed to handle the traffic and or congestion
that these three institutions bring on a daily basis. The city only
exacerbated an already out-of-control problem when it closed Bison to
through traffic thereby adding unnecessary stress to both
intersections at Eastbluff Drive and Jamboree Road, and effectively
turned what used to be public streets into semi-private roads.
All at the expense of those of us who reside across the street,
adding to the endless list of streets that have become inaccessible
for use by those who contributed to the cost of building and
maintaining them. As it is, access to our own residential streets is
now restricted on school days, thereby limiting our ingress and
egress to our own homes. Remember that these are streets that our tax
dollars contribute to build and maintain. St. Mark’s and Our Lady
Queen of Angels contribute nothing due to their tax-exempt status.
Never mind the fact that high school students, their parents, friends
as well as those attending services at both St. Mark and Our Lady
Queen of Angels regularly exhibit a blatant disrespect for traffic
laws thereby jeopardizing those of us who live here. On any given
day, many disregard stop signs, speed limits, block intersections,
double park and trespass on private property. The sobering reality is
that our very quality of life is disintegrating day by day while the
city’s Environmental Quality Affairs Committee, city planners and
City Council sit idly by doing nothing to protect the interests of
those of us who call this neighborhood, or what’s left of it, our
home.
That said, we want to know what actions, if any, that the city’s
Environmental Quality Affairs Committee intends to take to address
the egregious oversight of these already existing problems, problems
that the committee has turned its collective backs to and the
dramatic effect it has had on our neighborhood. You don’t have to be
a rocket scientist or conduct another useless environmental study to
see that’s there is something wrong with this picture. All you have
to do is open your eyes. Enough said.
WILLIAM AND BETTE DOREMUS
Newport Beach
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