A whole lot to consider
Michael Miller
More than 100 residents packed the portable conference room at
Newport Harbor High School on Tuesday night as students, church
members and neighbors voiced their opinions about St. Andrew’s
Presbyterian Church’s proposal to expand the school’s parking lot.
At the meeting, which was set up and moderated by the high
school’s Student Political Action Committee, two sides made
presentations: one a coalition of neighbors, the other a group of
members from the St. Andrew’s Building Committee.
After the presentations, audience members wrote questions on cards
and submitted them anonymously to both sides.
Last month, St. Andrew’s submitted a $3.5 million proposal to the
Newport-Mesa Unified School District offering to expand the school’s
parking lot by 80 spaces and renovate some of the campus’ old
maintenance buildings. In exchange, the church would be able to share
parking with the high school for at least 30 years.
During the 90-minute meeting, members of the church building
committee upheld the proposal as a win-win situation for the school
and the neighboring community. Members of the two neighborhood
groups, however, argued that the parking agreement would make the
traffic problems worse and cause additional woes in terms of noise
and pollution.
Don Krotee, the president of the Newport Heights Improvement
Assn., likened the St. Andrew’s proposal to “an iceberg,” arguing
that “the top part is beautiful, but we’re a little concerned about
what’s below the surface.”
The St. Andrew’s Building Committee, in its presentation, argued
that the added parking spaces would remove cars from the street and
prevent churchgoers from having to park in the nearby neighborhood.
Committee member Gary McKitterick noted that the church and school
had already shared the Newport Harbor parking lot for years.
“St. Andrew’s has been around since 1950,” McKitterick said. “It’s
been using that parking lot all that time. We’re formalizing an
agreement that already exists.”
After each side had made an opening presentation, Action Committee
members read questions that audience members had submitted. One
attendee asked the neighborhood coalition how it would go about
improving the parking problem at Newport Harbor.
Carmack replied that attorney Michael Lawler had started talks
with the Coronado apartment complex across the street about donating
parking spaces to the school.
Lawler later said that he had met with Coronado management Tuesday
and that the talks were “conceptual at this point.”
After the forum, Action Committee co-president Blaise Brunda said
his group would vote again on the parking agreement at its April 11
meeting, then share its thoughts with the district board the
following day.
“We did a vote before March 8, but it was like a straw poll to see
the Action Committee’s position,” said member Harrison Brown,
referring to an earlier district board meeting. “At the time, we
weren’t really well informed, and we see ourselves as a moderator
between the church and the community.”
* MICHAEL MILLER covers education and may be reached at (714)
966-4617 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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