Expansion issue keeps bouncing
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Alicia Robinson
Much like a pinball, the controversial St. Andrew’s Presbyterian
Church expansion proposal will bounce back to city officials next
week.
The Newport Beach City Council tonight will consider whether to
send the church’s expansion plan back to the Planning Commission.
St. Andrew’s officials want to enlarge their facilities by nearly
22,000 square feet, adding a new youth and family center, parking
and other amenities. Neighbors have complained the expansion will be
too big and will exacerbate existing problems with traffic and
parking.
The Planning Commission in December approved the church’s
controversial plan with a list of 23 conditions, one of which
required the church to forge a 30-year shared parking agreement with
adjacent Newport Harbor High School.
In response, the church offered a $3.5-million deal to the
Newport-Mesa Unified School District, but the school board last week
refused to consider it until the expansion question is settled.
The issue has been so divisive, it didn’t surprise church building
committee chairman Ken Williams that the school board didn’t want to
get embroiled in it.
“They just didn’t want to take any sides,” he said.
The church will ask the council to make the Planning Commission’s
parking requirement an either/or -- sign an agreement to share
parking with the school or provide more parking on-site as originally
planned.
The issue isn’t likely to be decided Tuesday. Sending it back to
the Planning Commission sounds reasonable to City Councilman Don
Webb, who serves the district that includes St. Andrew’s.
Even if the council approved the church expansion, there’s no
guarantee the school board would then agree to shared parking, Webb
said, adding, “I think the Planning Commission needs to look at that
and consider what the ramifications would be about not having parking
off-site.”
He’s disappointed that the church and neighbors haven’t been able
to work together to greater effect. But some neighbors still hold out
hope for a compromise.
Don Krotee, a spokesman for neighbors in Cliff Haven and Newport
Heights who oppose the church expansion, said he’d like the Planning
Commission to ask the church to redesign its project to be less
intrusive.
“That’s the community’s greatest hope, that we get a more
neighborly proposal through these processes,” he said.
But Williams pointed out the church already has reduced its
proposal from adding 35,948 square feet to 21,741 square feet. No
further reductions are on the table at this point, he said.
And the church may be taking a new tack toward what it sees as
below-the-belt hits by some in the community. People have distributed
fliers and exchanged rumors about what they think church is doing,
Williams said, citing one rumor that St. Andrew’s is planning to
start a private school.
“I think we will probably now get a lot more aggressive on the
misstatements and the exaggerated statements and the sometimes
outright lies about the project,” he said. “We’re just not going to
sit by and let these things unwind anymore.”
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers government and politics. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4626 or by e-mail at alicia.robinson
@latimes.com.
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