Taking the right path
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A look at the Daily Pilot’s Forum page reveals that St. Andrew’s
Church is not simply preaching to the choir on its leaders’ latest
multimillion-dollar plan to build a new youth and family center and
create more parking.
A flurry of letters have reached this page since May, when
opinions on the church’s controversial renovation plans were first
aired in front of the Planning Commission.
And that’s the way it should be.
Neighbors in and around the Cliff Haven area have every right to
be concerned about the continued growth -- more than 35,000 square
feet of it -- on the 4-acre church campus at 600 St. Andrews Road.
But caution is also needed as public comments begin to flow in on
the project. The church is a neighbor in the community, and its
leaders deserve to lay plans on the table, which they think could
better the neighborhood. The church’s leaders want to open up their
new facility to children in the area, many who could benefit from a
youth center.
Let’s not blindly kill a project in the court of public opinion
before a full and civil airing of its pros and cons is debated on
these pages, in neighborhood meetings and City Hall.
City staff members still must finish responding to comments on the
development’s environmental study before commissioners can take
action on a zoning change that could allow the project. And after
that, the City Council must also weigh in.
That process will be followed by this paper, and residents should
also follow it to absorb enough knowledge to ensure they aren’t
against something they thought was something else.
That said, church leaders would do well to listen to the concerns
of a large and vocal group of neighbors legitimately concerned about
the scope of St. Andrew’s development.
If recent comments on the issue are any indicator of dialogue,
those on both sides of the debate need to do some more talking.
“The positions of the neighborhood and the church are very
distant,” said Don Krotee, president of the Newport Heights
Improvement Assn., in a recent Pilot story. “The neighborhood wants
to see zero growth, and the church wants to see more than 39,000
square feet, so we’re pretty far apart.”
St. Andrew’s Pastor John Huffman has said he wants to remain a
community church. Fine.
But for a church to be successful in a community -- in a
neighborhood -- it would behoove him and his associates to continue
to take the neighbors’ concerns into consideration, and even look for
ways to fuse them into renovation plans.
Even winning approval could come at a price, a costly future of
church-versus-neighborhood bad blood that would not be healthy for
the community.
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