City steps in to help Meadow View soccer parents, residents
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Angelique Flores
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- The city’s Community Services Commission has set
down some restrictions for soccer parents in an attempt to reach a
compromise between the battling parents and residents in the community
around Meadow View School.
And while, these decisions have not made American Youth Soccer
Organization’s Region 143 officials happy, residents are waiting to see
if the changes will make a difference.
“I have no objection to children having places to play, but when it
impacts neighbors the way it has [here], something has to be done,” said
resident Denise Sheldon.
The commission’s ad hoc committee will try out the following plan:
reduce the fields from three to two which may cut down on noise, traffic
and parking; restrict parking to the lot and street parking to the school
side of Clark Drive; post “No Parking” signs on the resident’s side of
Clark Drive; police will provide concentrated enforcement at the
beginning of the soccer season and will provide ongoing periodic
enforcement thereafter; stagger start times of the games, allowing an
hour between the games; post signs informing people to pick up after
their dogs.
The Ocean View School District will also look into removing the
storage bins and moving the port-a-potties outside the fenced basketball
courts so the area can be locked.
“Hopefully this will be an improvement,” Sheldon said. “I’ll wait and
see.”
Neighboring homeowners have complained about noise, speeding cars,
congested parking and blocked driveways on the weekends during game
times.
AYSO, on the other hand, said it has been plagued by incidents of
vandalism. In October, vandals killed 1 1/2 acres of grass, leaving
children with one less soccer field and damages costing $6,000.
Residents and AYSO officials point fingers at each other when the
fields are littered with trash.
In 1998 AYSO leased the closed Meadow View School on Clark Drive, from
the Ocean View School District, for soccer games on Saturdays. The league
renovated the rundown soccer fields with the help of a youth sports grant
through the district. More than $85,000 was spent on the facility, and
about $20,000 a year is spent on maintenance.
The city stepped in to help the two sides resolve the matter. The
Community Services Commission formed an ad hoc committee of commission
members, Ocean View School District officials, AYSO representatives and
homeowners in December to settle the ongoing dispute.
“The residents had some legitimate concerns, and AYSO has done an
excellent job of modifying things to make it work,” said Jim Engle,
deputy director of the Community Services Commission.
The lack of playing fields in the city make it necessary for the
elementary schools to be used.
“AYSO is making concessions to make it a workable plan,” Engle said.
But the AYSO officials aren’t as satisfied with the
committee’sproposals.
“Their demands are totally unreasonable,” said Jorggi Delaney, AYSO
Commissioner for Region 143.
While the residents and the city are hopeful that these compromises
will alleviate the problems, Delaney is worried about the effect of
losing a field.
“Where are we going to put the kids that go there?” Delaney said. “I
have to find another set of volunteers to work on the new fields, that’s
if we can get the field and get another set of equipment. We have no
where else to play.”
Region 143 was looking into using the Robinwood field at Coastline
Community College, but the 50-year-old irrigation system needs to be
replaced. With an estimated cost of $50,000, the project doesn’t fit into
the college’s budget for this year. Ocean View will look into opening the
closed Haven View School for games to help relieve the load at Meadow
View.
The AYSO season runs from Aug. 15 to Dec. 16, with games played from 9
a.m to dusk every Saturday. With 1,600 children in the region, the site
has about 150 people on the fields when three games are being played.
The league, however, sometimes subleases the site to other club soccer
groups that host tournaments, including AYSO teams. Tournaments will be
reduced from four to two per year. This poses another concern for AYSO
officials because these tournaments help the league raise money to pay
for the maintenance of the fields.
The committee will meet midway through the trial period, at the end of
June, to determine how well things are working. At another meeting in
August, at the end of the trial period, the committee will determine new
conditions for a second trial period during the league’s season.”I think
the neighbors should be grateful that we’re keeping 1,600 kids off the
streets, keeping their minds and hands occupied [and] giving them an
alternative to destruction,” Delaney said.
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