Council stalls on plan to ease school traffic
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Marisa O’Neil
Plans for a new access road at Newport Coast Elementary School to
alleviate traffic congestion were put on hold until the city can ease
the concerns of nearby residents.
The City Council on Tuesday continued two items -- including a bid
award -- that would have allowed work on the new road to begin in
July and finish by the start of school in the fall. The decision came
one night after residents questioned the project’s timeline and
feasibility at a Newport Coast Advisory Committee meeting and
complained they hadn’t been given proper notice of the plan.
“I think everyone recognizes that there’s a problem down there,”
said Newport Coast resident and parent Thomas LeBeau. “I think what
needs to be developed is a comprehensive plan that involves the
community, the school, Newport Coast as a whole and the surrounding
property interests.”
Deborah O’Connor, who lives above the proposed road, said she was
concerned about increased noise and traffic behind her home. The
proposed project would pave a dirt access road allowing cars and
busses from northbound Newport Coast Drive to go around the school’s
athletic field and into the parking lot. That plan came after aerial
photography of the site showed the gridlock during busy drop-off and
pickup times, Public Works Director Steve Badum said.
Residents said at Monday’s meeting that they only recently became
aware of the plan. City Councilman John Heffernan, who attended
Monday’s meeting, said he hadn’t heard about the road either and was
surprised that there was not more outreach done.
Badum apologized on Monday for the lack of notice.
“In our effort to find a solution, we didn’t think a small access
road would be an issue,” he said.
City and school officials hoped to have the project completed
before the fall, when enrollment is expected to grow by 100 students.
Newport Coast Elementary School, like other schools in the district,
will do away with its staggered start and end times, creating more
traffic in the morning and afternoon.
The city will hold a workshop June 21 for residents and parents to
present alternative plans to alleviate the problem. Traffic has been
a problem at the school since it opened in 2001 because the school
has only one entrance. The single entrance off Ridge Park Road causes
long lines of vehicles trying to enter the school to block traffic.
Parents hoping to avoid the crush exacerbate the problem by
dropping children off across the street and allowing them to jaywalk
to the school, residents said at the meeting.
“The queue is so long, people park [across the street],” Newport
Coast resident and parent Jean Donnelly said. “They’d rather risk
their children’s lives [than wait].”
A loop road would allow those cars to drop off children out of the
way of traffic, Badum said. It will cost about $350,000 to build and
will use funds from a 1998 bond secured by mello roos taxes on the
Bonita Canyon development in Newport Beach.
Officials will listen to what parents and residents have to say at
the upcoming workshop and will consider the options, but City Manager
Homer Bludau said he expects the item to be on the council’s June 22
agenda.
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