School district neglecting neighbors
Thomas and Mary Marshall
Yes, we are going to lose our ocean view due to a 30-foot fencing
that will be surrounding the Laguna Beach High School baseball field.
Other things have also affected us. They have been forgotten,
overlooked or not mentioned while the renovation and construction is
taking place at Laguna Beach High School.
There is the outside painting of the high school that the
surrounding residents were never alerted to, thus not given the
opportunity to protect their cars or belongings from the over spray.
Due to the over-spray, we have had to have both our vehicles detailed
to remove the paint and will still need additional detailing.
There are the large construction trucks and tractor-trailers
constantly up and down our streets with their loud engines, holding
up our traffic during a workday while they try to turn onto St. Ann’s
Drive and other surrounding streets or just sitting idle on the
street with their running engines with little consideration of the
residents.
We have the construction workers who not only park in front of our
residence but talk on their cellphones, drink their coffee, smoke and
chat with one another loudly in the early-morning hours.
Let us not forget the overflow of dirt, filth and trash that has
haunted our streets. Yes, the school district has sent a street
sweeper periodically down our streets in the early-morning hours but
it doesn’t even put a dent in keeping the surrounding areas clean.
What about the temporary chain-link fence that has taken up
residency on Park Avenue, leaving absolutely no room to walk safely
on that side of the street.
We are blessed to live in Laguna Beach, to be able to enjoy a safe
morning stroll or evening walk, to open our windows and enjoy the
ocean air. Unfortunately, this has not taken place this year. Instead
we have to reconsider where we walk to avoid trucks, workers, fences
along Park Avenue that put us unsafely on the street and the muddy
areas that surround the high school. We no longer enjoy the ocean air
because we have to keep our windows closed so we are not overwhelmed
with all the dust from the construction, the exhaust fumes from the
trucks and the over-spray when they painted the outside of the high
school.
When the district received its $3.2-million approval for the
renovation, did it consider the residents and their additional
out-of-pocket expenses that had to be incurred because of what has
been left behind for them to clean up on their properties inside and
out?
Our weekends are supposed to be a balance of catching up on
regular housework, complemented with leisure time to relax, spend
valuable time with our families and friends and a break from a hard
work week. Instead we are constantly washing down our sidewalks,
entry ways, patios, yards and our pets. We now have the constant
upkeep of the inside of our homes from the dust and dirt brought on
by the renovation, picking up the trash others have left behind,
empty soda cans, cigarette butts left by the workers around our homes
and the safety issues regarding so many strangers who freely have
access to our area, in which we already worry about crime brought on
by outsiders.
Of the millions and millions of dollars spent on this project, has
the district done anything to ease the parking situation that has
existed all year long? During the school year, the students are very
limited on where they can park. Because parking spaces around the
school are few, the students are forced sometimes to park in places
where they shouldn’t. They park in our driveways, in front of the
fire hydrant or other areas that are marked “no parking.”
During the weekends, we are confronted with the “outsiders” who
come over to play basketball at the high school, using up all of the
limited parking space available. Now we contend with the construction
workers. They not only use up all of the parking spaces, they are
setting out orange parking cones to reserve a spot for themselves.
The residents and their visitors do not have a place to park.
The school board now has this beautiful new football field and
baseball field -- tell me, where are the visitors going to park? Did
we really need all those new trees in front of the high school?
Wouldn’t a parking lot have been more logical and more accommodating
approach to the students, staff and residents?
In an article written in the Coastline Pilot newspaper, as stated
by school board member El Hathaway, district leaders plan to continue
to meet with neighbors (of St Ann’s) and are planning to schedule a
meeting with homeowners. We, the Marshalls, are also impacted by all
of this and yet the board has failed to notify us, yet Hathaway says
he met with us. When did he plan on notifying us, or are we supposed
to read about it after the fact in the newspaper?
We realize our specific problems do not impact other residents of
Laguna Beach, but we want them to be aware of how insensitive and
inconsiderate the school board’s actions have been throughout all of
this.
* THOMAS AND MARY MARSHALL are Laguna Beach residents.
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