Church construction presents a physical danger
I am opposed to the expansion of St. Andrew’s Church. The expansion
will bring more noise, traffic and pollution to an already congested
neighborhood.
I am particularly concerned about the massive effects of
construction. Our direct concern is for the persons subjected to
airborne particles due to demolition and grading. The draft
environmental report shows significant impacts. A hundred days of
digging, grading and hauling dirt is much too much for a residential
neighborhood to bear. When this demolition and grading occurs in the
warm months (which is most of the year), it means that many of us
will not be able to live in our homes during that time for the
following reasons:
* The windows are open, in that the majority in our community do
not have or do not use air conditioning. The dirt will cover
sidewalks, stairs and porches and stick to shoes, so that the dirt
will be tracked into homes.
* The dirt and airborne particles will cover the entire outside of
homes in the area. Anyone in the neighborhood with allergies or
breathing disorders will be harmed and possibly become ill. Even
those without breathing difficulties may sustain physical/bodily
damage due to breathing in, for at least 100 days, such a huge
quantity of pollution.
* This dirt and these particles will be inhaled and create
significant health risks.
* When the windows are opened, rugs, sofas, clothing, lampshades,
bedding, curtains, levelers and wall paint will be irreversibly
damaged. Even with windows shut, making the interior not habitable,
there will be penetration of these particles.
* The particles will creep in through skylights and windows and
doors, even if sealed. (It is common for Southern California, as our
climate is so mild, to have homes not sealed tightly around windows,
doors, skylights, etc.)
* The dirt particles will collect on trees, screens and windows,
so that when windows are open, and any kind of a breeze blows, the
dirt will blow inside.
* Dust swarming will also damage the outside of homes, patios,
gardens and pools and coat them with dirt.
This duration and this environment created by the construction
will have an enormous impact. Some of us work at home and will be
susceptible 24 hours a day to this density of pollution caused by the
demolition, digging and hauling.
Who among you planning commissioners would like to have your home
or your home office across the street or just down the street from
such a huge construction project? Who among you would want to live
near such a massive quantity of dirt and noise pollution for an
extent of time that could last two years or more? Please, visualize
yourself living across a rather narrow residential street from the
site of a gym for 400 people and an underground parking garage. Would
you support such an extent of growth if you had to live through two
years of noise and dirt, and the subsequent daily increased traffic
and noise and car-light pollution? Would you like to live across the
street from the noise inside and outside of a gym, which could host
400 adults and teens? Would you like to live across the street from
the site, where crowds will go to hear live music, which is not
appropriate for the church sanctuary?
I also want to add that just the headlights and noise of the cars
exiting the St. Andrew’s parking lot now, with no new growth, is
horrifying. I live across the street, and on many weeknights, the
noise is deafening, and the lights shine right into my living room
for an hour at a time, repeatedly, over and over.
Most of us are very much in favor of youth programs. These
activities create drug-free and supervised activity for our youth.
However, if you simply said “no” to the St. Andrew’s expansion, new
youth and teen programs would still be created. The church will find
a location off campus and in the community and continue to create
these programs. The church is committed to creating these programs
for youth. If you said “no,” the church could spend its money, some
of which it now spends on fees and lobbyists to find another location
in the greater Newport area, which is more conducive for the
community as a whole for building youth programming.
ELLEN SHIRO
Newport Beach
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