Church should abide by 1984 agreement I’m...
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Church should abide by 1984 agreement
I’m a 25-year veteran of the St. Andrew’s issue.
My husband and I have lived in Newport Heights and have owned and
operated an architectural firm for 30 years, also in Newport Heights.
My perspective comes from both a concern about our neighborhood and
an understanding of the city’s due process. But, like the neighbors
who have cried out publicly and in the local paper, I am deeply
concerned.
The proposal St Andrew’s is making is too large for its suburban
setting. The reality of this is obvious.
This project needs to be reduced to the limits set forth in 1984
by Evelyn Hart and the City Council. I was actively involved with
that process in 1984 as an officer of the Newport Heights Community
Assn. and remember well the deliberations and anxiety we all endured
to reach an equitable solution.
The compromises we all reached at that time were to be final. All
parties involved accepted the final resolution and agreed that this
1984 decision would be a permanent solution. The very fact that the
1984 decision would end any future talks of expansion was part of the
negotiated deal.
St. Andrew’s was granted its 1984 approvals based upon an
agreement to self-impose limits to future growth -- to fit within the
fabric of a neighborhood church.
I have no complaint with St. Andrew’s Church or its parishioners.
The church has provided a needed and valuable service to our
community.
However, if it has again outgrown its facilities, it should look
elsewhere for facilities properly zoned for continued growth, or
allow the current facility to be a satellite of a larger main
facility located elsewhere, so that the current facility can remain
to serve the local residents.
BONNIE JEANNETTE
Newport Heights
It’s time for a fourth plan for City Hall
I am in complete agreement with Joseph DeCarlo’s letter of May 11
wherein he recommends outsourcing city services before mortgaging the
future to build a new City Hall.
I attended one of the public-outreach presentations and was
disappointed to not get any information from our city manager about
his cost-benefit analysis of outsourcing.
I guess this topic did not fit into the fancy PowerPoint sales
presentation we paid $550,000 for. Maybe Homer Bludau hasn’t crunched
these numbers yet.
As I awaited Bludau’s eventual discussion of outsourcing as a
viable or even impractical alternative (which never occurred), I did
notice one interesting slide put together by the
build-it-and-they-will-come consultants. In order to provide the
planned staff at capacity of 225 employees (a 19% increase over
existing levels) with reasonable space, our consultants figured that
276-gross square feet per employee is just about right. First of all,
what are the additional 36 city employees for?
Second, could outsourcing possibly reduce City Hall staff by this
same planned growth number? If yes, then the existing City Hall would
provide about the same gross square footage per employee. By reducing
City Hall staff, we may not need a three-story parking structure
either. This seems way too simple, but I am sure glad we paid
$550,000 to those guys.
I believe Bludau and the council owe residents a thorough
outsourcing analysis prepared by third-party, independent consultants
(call it the Fourth Alternative). It should be put out to the public
via the same road-show atmosphere as was used for Griffin Structures
and LPA Architects’ expensive slide show.
Given the nature of this council’s attitude toward resident
concerns, I believe it is the minimum we need to make the right
decision.
If we are not careful, the next thing Ridgeway and company will do
is convince us we need a boardwalk down Mariners Mile.
EDWARD LYON
Newport Beach
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