Commission set to mediate for St. Andrew’s officials, neighbors
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Deirdre Newman
While good fences make good neighbors, good operating requirements
for large facilities near homes make even better ones, according to
planning commissioners.
The Planning Commission tonight will try to bring St. Andrew’s
Church officials and neighbors who oppose the church’s expansion to
agreement on the rules the church will have to adhere to if its plans
are approved.
The church is seeking to grow by about 22,000 square feet -- down
some 40% from church leaders’ original proposal -- centered around
the addition of a youth and family center. This expansion requires a
general-plan amendment.
Both sides presented their versions of the rules the church should
have to operate under to the city on Nov. 4. While there is some
agreement, a number of outstanding issues remain, such as maximum
occupancy and hours of operation. Because the two sides have dug in
their heels on the unresolved conditions, the commission will resort
to a rarely used mediation tactic, chairman Larry Tucker said.
“We’re going to do something that’s highly unusual in our forum
and invite representatives from each side to sit at the conference
table and go through each one of [the conditions], since it does not
seem to be getting resolved,” Tucker said. “We’ll give them a
microphone, and we’ll go through each one and hear what they have to
say, and then the commission will basically come to a conclusion on
each condition on what we think it ought to say.”
After the operating conditions are hashed out to the satisfaction
of the commissioners, staff members will record them officially, so
they are ready for the Dec. 9 commission meeting. That’s when a vote
is finally expected on the oft-postponed expansion project.
The church has had almost two years of discussions with neighbors
and the commission on its desire to grow. It has reduced its plans
twice to get to this point. Some opponents feel even the revised
expansion is still too much, fearing that growth will lead to more
traffic congestion and too much noise.
Both sides say they are looking forward to the commission’s effort
tonight to break the stalemate on the remaining conditions.
“We have worked together [with the neighbors] and come to some
resolution on a number of the items,” church spokeswoman Jill Kanzler
said. “But as you would guess, there are a couple of items that are
not yet resolved, and those are the most difficult, like occupancy
and hours of operation. And we look forward to the Planning
Commission hearing to create a forum to work those out.”
Don Krotee, president of the Newport Heights Improvement Assn.,
said while he’s glad the commission is giving both sides a fair shake
on the operating conditions, he is apprehensive that the church’s
latest expansion plans will inevitably be approved. Krotee is one of
the leaders of a group of Cliffhaven and Newport Heights neighbors
that oppose the expansion. This group has come up with an alternative
plan that includes the coveted youth and family center, eliminates
the church’s proposed parking garage and would require only an extra
2,800 square feet.
“The greatest goal [tonight] is to have the staff and the
commission and all the people in the audience understand there’s a
way of achieving a youth center for this church that can be
accomplished in 2,800 square feet without a parking garage and with
the nearly unanimous consent of two neighborhoods -- something the
church has been trying to do for two years,” Krotee said.
In addition to resolving the operating conditions, some of the
other issues Tucker wants the commission to settle are the
appropriate square footage of the church’s expansion and how many
parking spaces the church will have to provide both on-site and off.
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers government. She may be reached at (714)
966-4623 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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