Loop road approved despite residents’ ire
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Marisa O’Neil and Alicia Robinson
An access road at Newport Coast Elementary School that came under
fire by neighboring residents got the go-ahead at Tuesday’s City
Council meeting and is scheduled for completion before school starts
in the fall.
Residents turned their ire on city staffers and council members
Tuesday for the process used to OK the loop-road project. A number of
residents who spoke in opposition to the project criticized city
officials for not notifying them of the proposed road until they were
ready to vote on a contract, and they raised the specter of a
possible lawsuit on the grounds that it doesn’t meet standards of the
California Environmental Quality Act.
“We feel like we’re being railroaded on the issue,” said Gregory
Brown, a resident of the Tesoro gated community, which sits on a
bluff overlooking the school and proposed road.
The 1,100-foot-long, 20-foot-wide road will direct traffic from
northbound Newport Coast Drive, around the school’s playground, into
the parking lot and out onto Ridge Park Road during student drop-off
and pick-up times. It will be closed the rest of the time.
Traffic problems have plagued the school since it opened in 2001,
with long lines of cars queuing outside and parents dropping off
their children across the busy street.
About a dozen residents spoke on the loop-road issue at Tuesday’s
council meeting. Most were either Newport Coast Elementary School
parents, who urged the council to consider the safety of students, or
residents of Tesoro, who argued that using the road as a school
entrance will hurt their property values and damage their quality of
life with vehicle noise and exhaust.
Bromberg said the council also was notified about the issue
relatively late in the game, and he took staff members to task for
that but added that the council has a share of the responsibility.
“We’re the policymakers, and I think we blew it with respect to
putting [property owners] on notice,” he said.
Bromberg said he would have liked more time to consider various
alternatives being suggested by residents, but Public Works Director
Steve Badum said if the council didn’t approve the contract Tuesday,
the delay might require rebidding the entire project and would make
it impossible to complete by the beginning of school in the fall.
“There’s a huge concern that something’s going to happen out
there, and that’s why we’ve pushed this through so quickly,” he said.
Tesoro residents simply want to know how the road will affect
their neighborhood, environmentally and otherwise, resident Thomas
LeBeau said Wednesday. They also want assurances that it will be a
part of a total package including cooperation from parents and
enforcement by police.
Council members on Tuesday voted 4 to 2 to award a $364,552
contract to GCI Construction to build the loop road, with councilmen
Steve Bromberg and Dick Nichols dissenting. Councilman Gary Adams was
not present.
“They realize the issue of safety was the issue at hand,” said
Shana Woodyard, the school’s PTA president. “We have worked to try
and protect the children, and we’re hoping we can work with the
surrounding community to make this a win-win for everybody.”
Woodyard said the project’s success will rely upon cooperation
between the school, city, police and neighbors. Other measures, like
a new entrance for buses and crossing guards at the exit, will also
be necessary, she said.
“I have lived the nightmare every day with the traffic and seen so
many near misses and heard parents say: ‘Please solve the problem,’”
she said.
* MARISA O’NEIL covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4268 or at [email protected]. ALICIA ROBINSON covers
business, politics and the environment. She may be reached at (949)
764-4330 or at [email protected].
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