Residents not to blame for road problems
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I read the Thursday Daily Pilot article regarding the escalation of
the cost of the new loop road at Newport Coast Elementary with great
concern (“Price tag for new loop road balloons”).
As a former resident of the Tesoro neighborhood, I feel the story
focused far too much of the blame on the Tesoro residents instead of
on the elected officials, where blame truly lies.
To begin with, the residents of Tesoro only heard about this
project for the first time in the form of a flier stuffed into their
mailboxes on June 18 to notify them of an informational presentation
at the school on June 21. This was to be followed immediately the
next night with a vote on the matter by the City Council and
groundbreaking within a week or two. Obviously, the council had more
than four days notice to prepare to vote on the matter since it made
the agenda and construction contracts were already underway. Either
someone was sitting on this ball to run out the clock or they just
frankly dropped the ball because of incompetence.
The city and school district owed this neighborhood more notice
than the four days they gave it, and they now owe them a thank you
for working with the involved parties in a spirit of cooperation and
compromise rather than halting things indefinitely though litigation,
as many other groups in this town would have done.
To blame Tesoro for the escalated cost is simply inaccurate and
unfair.
I think perhaps it would be better to step back and look at this
school for what it is, a pure design failure. This is a school that
in its first three years of operation has had two major construction
projects on its grounds. Newport Coast is a very well planned family
community that was laid out many, many years ago; however, it seems
somewhere along the way the Newport-Mesa Unified School District
missed the memo.
To add insult to injury, the Newport Beach City Council rushed
into this construction project for the loop road on the grounds that
it was a safety hazard to the children crossing Ridge Park. What
happened in June that created this emergency need that hadn’t
happened in the first three years the school was opened? The loop
road has not solved any safety concerns on Ridge Park as evidenced by
the additional crossing guards now on-site every afternoon. The
street is littered with unsightly “No Parking” and “No Turn Lane”
signs and markers forcing children to cross Newport Coast Drive -- an
even busier street where parents are forced to park in the Pavilions
parking lot because the street parking was eliminated on Ridge Park
as part of this “solution.” I fear it is only a matter of time before
some child walking home to Newport Ridge is hurt or worse because
they chose to walk down the loop road rather than Ridge Park to cross
Newport Coast Drive, an intersection where there is no crosswalk or
crossing guard.
I think the real blame here should go to the school district and
the people who planned this debacle of a school, and, rather than
continually adding bandage after bandage, they should come up with a
master plan for the school focused on the real logistical needs for
the future to fix these design flaws once and for all.
With the addition of the community center at the corner of Newport
Coast and San Joaquin and the popularity of the new restaurants and
shops in the Newport Coast Shopping Center, this immediate area is
only going to get busier with more traffic as time goes by. When you
add these factors to the opening of the Pacific Ridge communities at
the top of Ridge Park, the school and area will only become more
populated with children every year. Our politicians on the council
and school board need to stop shooting from the hip conducting these
back-room planning meetings and start engaging more with the Newport
Coast community to develop comprehensive strategies that actually
solve problems and not just move them around.
For any council member to now blame the Tesoro residents for the
failure or cost escalation of the loop road is an attempt to hide
their own poor decision-making through scapegoating. I can only
imagine how my former Tesoro neighbors will feel when the school
district parks double-wide trailers beneath their homes to
accommodate more children once the school reaches its capacity. While
I have not heard of any such plans to date, it is an inevitable event
as public schools, including nearby Lincoln Elementary and other
Newport-Mesa schools, use this temporary solution for fast, cheap,
extra classroom space.
How little notice will they be given then?
J.P. HANNAN
Crystal Cove
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