Expansion begets expansion
Monica Mazur
A few years back, a neighbor wanted an encroachment permit to enlarge
his garage from a two-car to a three-car garage to within 3 feet of
the fence line. The family’s needs had changed. Their child had a
car, and they wanted to park it in the garage. One household objected
to the city of Newport Beach, and the encroachment permit was denied.
After a few years, the child went away to college and took the car
with him. Once again, the family’s needs had changed. The garage
expansion was unnecessary since the original need for the three-car
garage changed.
About 20 years ago, St. Andrew’s Church wanted to expand because
its needs had changed. With much opposition from the Cliffhaven and
Newport Heights neighborhood, the expansion proceeded. Being the
“good-neighbor” church, it said this expansion satisfied its needs
and wouldn’t request another expansion.
Since that time, the parking and traffic problems in Cliffhaven
and Newport Heights have escalated, not only due to the original
church expansion, but also from Newport Harbor High School, cars
cutting through the neighborhood and more cars owned by residents.
This has been enough of a problem that the neighborhood and the city
have held multiple meetings, and the city is potentially going to
spend hundreds of thousands of dollars to install various devices --
such as traffic circles, bulges, new striping -- in an attempt to
alleviate the traffic issues.
Now the church’s needs have apparently changed again. Not living
up to its word from 20 years ago and waving the “for the youth” flag,
it proposed a 35,948-square-foot (which has been reduced to 21,714
square feet) expansion with an underground parking garage. Hundreds
of residents of Cliffhaven and Newport Heights are horrified. Instead
of the church working with the residents to alleviate the existing
parking and traffic conditions, they want to add to them? Three of
the concessions the church says it would make for the neighborhood to
discourage traffic and parking in the Cliffhaven and Newport Heights
streets in order to push the expansion are:
* to close the Clay Street driveway to the existing church
parking lot;
* to build a solid wall around the parking lot; and
* to work with the high school to move the maintenance buildings
and re-stripe the parking lot to accommodate more cars for church and
school parking.
In the spirit of being a good-neighbor church, one would think
that at least the Clay Street driveway and block wall options should
have been put in effect long ago instead of being a bargaining chip
for the new church expansion.
The church’s request isn’t just an encroachment permit of a few
feet on one small property; it is a Newport Beach general-plan
amendment change, zone change and use-permit change! It isn’t a
project that will take a couple of months of building; it will be
years of building with the accompanying disruption and inconvenience
of noise, dust, dirt, parking and traffic, especially large
dirt-hauling trucks. And the end result will involve neighborhood
residents living with the increased traffic, huge structures and
ever-increasing and changing use of the church facilities.
The church has not provided a “needs assessment” for this project
to the city or to the neighborhood working group. If there is an
overwhelming need for a project of this size to address the church’s
outreach requirements into the rest of Newport Beach, Costa Mesa and
Irvine, it is no longer a “neighborhood church.” This is not the only
church in Newport Beach and Costa Mesa. Many others provide outreach
to the community and after-school student needs. It is time for St.
Andrew’s to move to an area where it can spread out to accommodate
its community needs, or to reassess its needs to fit the neighborhood
location without an expansion.
I am a 26-year resident to the neighborhood and am very much aware
of the church and high school down the street. What is needed is for
the city of Newport Beach to have the church live up to the
regulations, goals, policies and procedures the city has in place to
protect the Cliffhaven and Newport Heights residents from the
unwelcome and unnecessary church expansion. This expansion request is
inconsistent with a residentially zoned neighborhood.
It took only one neighbor to object to an encroachment permit
request to have it denied. In the church’s case, hundreds of
neighbors are objecting to a general-plan amendment change, zone
change and use-permit change! What is this saying? And when will the
needs of the church change again?
Bigger is not always better. Please, no expansion!
* MONICA MAZUR is a Cliffhaven resident.
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