School district needs to keep space open...
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School district needs to keep space open
The Fountain Valley School District Board of Trustees approved the
sale of the Ward and Lamb school sites located in Huntington Beach at
the Feb. 10, 2005 meeting. The board’s stated intent is to sell the
properties for residential purposes for approximately $50 million
dollars and use the invested income to fund annual operating
expenses.
For decades the open space on these school sites has been used by
thousands of Huntington Beach residents annually for recreational and
open space purposes. Open space is a necessity of life to feed the
mind, body and spirit of our citizens. Once open space is developed
it is gone forever.
Huntington Beach Tomorrow’s position on closed school sites is to
preserve the open space and allow development only within the
footprint of the existing buildings on the property. The complete
position with its supporting rationale may be found at
www.hbtomorrow.org.
It is expected the school district will follow state law by
declaring the sites surplus and offer the sites for sale to the city
within a few weeks. The city will then have 60 days to accept or
refuse the offer. Huntington Beach Tomorrow understands the city does
not have the funds to purchase the property nor is there time to
conduct a bond issue ballot.
Huntington Beach Tomorrow requests the City Council take immediate
actions to prevent the conversion of open space on these school sites
to other uses.
One option is to zone the open space on the properties officials
as open space. Supporting rationale is the open space was always
planned to be used as open space and has been used for that purpose
since inception. In addition, Government Code Section 65852.9 states
a city may rezone school sites to “open-space, park or recreation, or
similar designation” where the adjacent property is so zoned. The
Wardlow school site is adjacent to Wardlow Park. The school buildings
could continue to be leased or sold to provide income to the school
district.
Huntington Beach Tomorrow believes the City Council and city staff
will need to take immediate, forthright actions to prevent the
permanent loss of these valuable community resources. Huntington
Beach Tomorrow strongly supports actions that will lead to preserving
these open spaces for posterity.
ED KERINS
President, Huntington Beach Tomorrow
Redevelopment right for Beach, Adams
Redevelopment at Beach and Atlanta would have the potential to
increase sales tax revenue to our city, improve the grading and
drainage of a low lying large parcel that is currently under used due
to the way the buildings are placed on the site.
Lessons learned from the long-term wait for completion of the
redevelopment of Huntington Center need to be applied here: The
anchoring tenants must be carefully integrated and transitioned into
the process. It has taken far too long for the new shopping center at
Beach and Edinger to come online and a major reason is the delays due
to negotiations needed with the anchors there: former Montgomery
Ward, Burlington Coat Factory and Mervyns. It would be difficult to
leave the existing larger buildings in the same positions and build
around them at Beach and Atlanta.
Due to the flood plain location (note the higher graded elevation
of the project built recently north of Beach and Atlanta), careful
grading will be required to insure the impact of changes in grade are
addressed in the planning process and any high rise construction is
well engineered for this specific location.
It would be informative to hear from our local government how much
sales tax revenue loss is projected by the closure of Kmart on
Magnolia and the redevelopment of Target on Adams until these
locations are again occupied and open as Home Depot and an updated
Target store and how that affects our city budget. For the short term
it is hoped that the owners of the commercial property at Beach and
Atlanta will work with their existing tenants to keep the center
viable until it is necessary to demolish some of the existing
structures. May the owners manage their property well and create a
good plan for the best use for this property and a realistic time
table for its redevelopment.
KAREN JACKLE
Huntington Beach
Mall change overdue, needs proper care
When I first heard about the dilapidated strip mall getting an
overhaul I was very excited. My husband and I lived in Seaside
Village for four years (still own the property), which is directly
across from Big Lots on the west side of Beach Boulevard. We had
always wanted to see something done with that property. After reading
the article in the Independent, I became concerned when I saw a
preliminary proposal for a multi-story luxury hotel. Huntington Beach
already has two luxury hotels that sit at less then capacity the
majority of the year. Another hotel is planned for The Strand as well
as Pacific City. Five luxury hotels is not what the city of
Huntington Beach needs.
Huntington Beach needs more upscale shopping so residents won’t
travel to nearby South Coast Plaza or Westminster Mall. We also need
more restaurants to support the travelers who stay in the nearby
Hilton and Hyatt as well as the locals who travel to places like
Fashion Island for dinner. Building another luxury hotel at Beach and
Atlanta is not site specific for the size of property it would be
located on. That strip mall -- as old as it may be -- sits right in
the middle of residential communities. Anything being built more than
two or three stories will not be appropriate for that location.
I do like the idea of a European look but hope the city of
Huntington Beach will proceed with caution. We don’t want South Coast
Plaza or Fashion Island traffic problems.
ANGIE DAHMAN
Huntington Beach
Proposal has ups and downs to it
I was excited, as I’m sure many of my neighbors in southeast
Huntington Beach were, to read the article about a project that will
eventually replace the long outdated strip mall at the corner of
Beach and Atlanta. Las Barcas aside, that property has been in need
of a new identity for 20 years, at least. New ideas are what that
property needs and I look forward to its future.
However, I was concerned to read a quote attributed to Bijan
Sassounian: “We don’t want to jeopardize our project by bringing in
opposition.” He was also reported as saying he didn’t want to release
any details until a formal application had been submitted to the
planning department.
I might suggest to Sassounian that he reevaluate his tact. It has
been my experience that people appreciate being made part of the
process from the beginning phases rather than be handed a finished
project and have to either accept it or fight it. It is much easier
for the planners to know what concerns a neighborhood might have
before setting pencil to paper. Believe me, the people of southeast
Huntington Beach are familiar with what makes a project one we might
want to take ownership of and what makes another project a source of
long term angst. Bring the community in early. Set up neighborhood
meetings and get that feedback now rather than at a heated planning
commission meeting two years from now.
DAVID GUIDO
Huntington Beach
Time for southeast development
My first impressions is finally southeast Huntington Beach is even
considered for development. I live off Newland and Atlanta, and
theses street looks like it did in the 1940s. We neighbors call it
tobacco road (Newland Street). It’s just amazing this city’s streets
could look so bad, isn’t it? I guess if the City Council members
lived on this side of town instead of the rich west side, things
might be different.
THOMAS ACHREM
Huntington Beach
Marathon missed one national addition
I thoroughly enjoyed Sunday’s Pacific Shoreline Marathon, and I
especially want to thank the hundreds of volunteers who made it
happen. I have run a lot of these events all over the country, and I
can honestly say I think this is one of the only events I have run
that did not start out with the national anthem. It was noticeably
missed. I recommend adding it to next year’s event.
DWIGHT COLLINS
Huntington Beach
Desalination plant would ease mind
The last thing I want to be concerned about is water, but I am.
All this talk about our depleting reservoirs has raised security
concerns of my future.
As a civilized human I am reliant on water for showers,
maintaining clean dishes, clean clothes, a clean house and my
family’s survival. After we’ve wasted our reservoirs, will we have to
melt the glaciers in Alaska to get fresh water? How much will this
cost? As it is, I’m already moderating myself with other necessities
to keep the bills down. Every little thing counts.
As a tax-paying resident of Huntington Beach, I expect our City
Council to ensure the quality of life for their citizens. I believe a
desalination facility is the best resolution to a potential crisis
because it will cut our dependency on already dwindling sources of
water. Let’s save money and ensure the continuation of our
lifestyles. With the creation of such a facility, we can all feel a
little more secure.
PAUL BORGSTED
Huntington Beach
Conservation only way to save water
The only bit of truth in the whole article was that conservation
was the way to conserve water (“Future is a flush away,” Jan. 13).
The city of Huntington Beach should use Irvine as a model in their
three-tier conservation plan. It’s cheap and it works. The people of
Huntington Beach will welcome an inexpensive way to conserve water
instead of this boondoggle desalination plan that Poseidon is trying
to cram down our throats. That dog won’t hunt.
EILEEN MURPHY
Huntington Beach
Bushard work a disaster from get-go
I watch with great interest, despair and disgust the construction
on Bushard Street in southeast Huntington Beach. This is a new sewer
line being put in by the Orange County Sanitation District. The new
pipe will benefit Fountain Valley, Westminster, Garden Grove,
Stanton, Fullerton and Buena Park and I see no way it will benefit
Huntington Beach residents.
The project was started in December of 2002 and was to take 24
months to complete. They are not even close to finishing. To quote
their information letter of August 2003, “As the project proceeds,
construction along Bushard Street will take place in 1/4 mile to
1/2 mile segments, with road closures lasting approximately two to
three weeks.” The person that wrote this is probably the same one
that appeared in front of the Huntington Beach City Council and said
they would be putting the pipe in at a rate of 80-100 feet per day. I
don’t think they could achieve this in six months.
Notice of closure beginning Feb. 5, 2004 to do approximately
four-tenths of a mile on Bushard from Banning to Drumbeat was
scheduled for 12 weeks or three months. It was not completed until
July of 2004, or 6 months to go less than 1/2 mile. All of this time
Bushard is closed and we have one or maybe two exits out of our
tracts. The closures of tract entrances were common everywhere they
closed a street. On Aug. 2, 2004 they started on the last tenth of a
mile on Bushard to Hamilton and the projected time to complete it was
two months. What happened to the 1/4 mile to 1/2 mile in two to
three weeks? This whole project is a disaster.
Approximately a month ago they stopped work on Bushard between
Hamilton and Atlanta. The machines just sat there with no one working
on anything. They then paved the road and stripped and it is still
closed. I asked an official at the sanitation district on Feb. 8 when
Bushard would be open. He said sometime in February. That could be
three weeks from now. Why is Bushard not open? I was told they had to
put in another small pipe. Why didn’t they do it when they had all
the equipment here? The street just sits there with barricades and
the residents of the area are not allowed to use the whole street
from Hamilton to Atlanta.
I have never seen an incompetent public works job as this one on
Bushard. No one will give you a straight answer and don’t seem to
care.
The best or worst part is they are not even close to finishing
this job and I would guess it will go on for the next three to four
years. In the meantime those of us in southeast Huntington Beach will
be inconvenienced as we are now with absolutely no benefit only
detriment until it is finished.
At this point I wouldn’t trust the sanitation district to take
pure drinking water and make it into sewer water.
TOPPER HORACK
Southeast Huntington Beach
Freeway extension would do little
It’s hard to believe that anyone would be in favor of the
extension of the Orange (57) Freeway into Huntington Beach. A freeway
going down the bed of the Santa Ana River would hurt the
neighborhoods along the riverbed, lower the value of the homes,
disturb Talbert Marsh and Talbert Nature Preserve and chase away the
wildlife that has found a home in this area. Birds like the bald
eagle, ospreys, cormorants, egrets, herons and many different types
of hawks would need to leave. We would lose a lot and gain very
little.
GABI DENDINGER
Huntington Beach
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