A neighborly heads-up would have been nice
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Terry Botros
I read with great interest your interview with John Huffman, senior
pastor of St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church, in Sunday’s edition (“Q &
A”).
In the piece he says of the expansion, “we should have done this
in the early ‘80s ... but we didn’t know how to do it right.” As a
longtime neighbor of St. Andrew’s, I respectfully suggest to Huffman
that they’re still not “doing it right.” Here are some facts.
In 2001 and 2002, the church approached the school district with a
plan to erect a parking structure at Newport Harbor High School on
15th Street. They did this without consultation with the neighbors.
Not surprisingly, the neighborhoods opposed this outlandish proposal
for many reasons: traffic, security, financial priorities within the
school district, school land use, aesthetics, etc. In fact, the
proposal was lampooned on the editorial pages of the Daily Pilot. The
school board was left holding the bag in the face of the
neighborhood’s reasoned opposition and rejected the church’s plans.
After all, who among the readers would welcome a parking structure in
their neighborhood, especially if that structure was only the first
step of a large expansion?
In pursuing the existing development proposal, the church once
again never consulted with the neighbors before filing their plans
with the city. Let me repeat that: The church put together plans for
a parking structure, gymnasium/performance hall, a 35% expansion of
space, and filed those plans with the city without ever approaching
the Cliff Haven and Newport Heights neighborhoods to look at
acceptance or feasibility. Instead of working cooperatively with the
neighborhoods on plans that meet the church’s needs while mitigating
the many existing traffic, density and noise issues, the church
retained the services of a cadre of well-connected consultants to
lobby and push the proposal through the city.
Since those plans have been filed, the neighbors have had several
meetings in which the church has presented and attempted to sell the
expansion plan, but at no time has the church administration proposed
tabling the proposal and working with us on alternatives.
Instead, the church representatives insist -- as Huffman repeats
in the interview -- that this 35,000-square-foot expansion is a
simple remodel, as many of us have done in our own homes. I don’t
know about you, but I’ve not seen many homes remodeled to add a
full-court gymnasium and performance hall and 400-space parking
structure.
In recent years, St. Andrew’s has also bought the apartments at
the corner of Haven Place and St. Andrews Road, and is on the record
as wanting to acquire the Masonic Lodge at the corner of 15th Street
and St. Andrews Road. These are the actions of a church looking to
expand. The church is not spending $20 million simply to have a nicer
facility for the present congregation. Through its regular
advertising in the Los Angeles Times, Huffman’s own closing words in
the interview and through the statements in the church’s fundraising
material for this expansion, St. Andrew’s is clearly looking to raise
the number of activity participants. That would be well and good if
the church was at a site adequate for that level of congestion.
The neighbors believe that a development that will become
two-thirds the size of a Wal-Mart Supercenter is not a simple remodel
and is not appropriate for a residential area. We believe a
development that will result in an additional 328 car trips a day is
not appropriate in an area in which the city already has to spend
tens of thousands of dollars to mitigate the existing traffic
congestion. We believe that a development in which a proposed
mitigation is to cone off public streets and have ushers direct
traffic and parking is not one that is indicative of a community
church. We believe proposing a gymnasium/performance hall and a
parking garage within a few dozen feet of residences does not show
sensitivity as a neighbor, and is simply lousy land use. We believe
that St. Andrew’s already has a tremendous impact on the surrounding
homes, homes which did in fact predate the present church by decades.
To continue the metaphor Huffman offers in the interview, even now
the shoe does not fit the foot.
The church, of course, has every right to propose any plan they
wish and file it, as they have done, without consulting the
neighbors. Unfortunately, by proposing a plan that is so out of scale
with the surrounding residential area, and by attempting to steamroll
those plans over the neighbors, the church is seen by many as
insensitive and bullying.
In my opinion, “doing it right” would have the church coming
together with the neighbors, many of whom are parishioners, with a
list of project objectives, combining that list with the neighbors’
existing concerns, and then cooperatively developing a reasoned
enforceable plan that meets the needs of both without requiring
zoning changes or general plan amendments. That process wouldn’t be
easy, and it wouldn’t be quick, but for a Christian institution it
would most certainly be the right thing to do.
* TERRY BOTROS is a Newport Beach resident.
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