Neighbors air concerns about day-care center
Greg Risling
EAST SIDE -- Only a handful of neighbors showed up at a meeting Monday
night held to resolve lingering issues with an East Side church and its
accompanying day-care center.Those who did show up did voice their
complaints and offer suggestions for problems around the Lighthouse
Coastal Community Church and the Southcoast Early Childhood Learning
Center.
Neighbors were initially upset with the construction of a wall around the
day-care center. The wall was built four months after an incident where a
39-year-old Santa Ana man drove his car onto the playground. Two children
died and several others were injured.
Following the tragedy, the city granted the church an encroachment permit
with special conditions, one of which included hosting community
meetings.
The latest concern by neighbors was the amount of cars congregating
outside the day-care center. Neighbors said parents and their children
aren’t using the crosswalk, making it dangerous for motorists turning
onto Magnolia Avenue from Santa Ana Avenue who might not see them.
“We don’t want any more tragedies in our neighborhood,” said resident
Patricia Duvall. “It’s a very frightening effect to hit a child.”
Parents are supposed to use a church parking lot to drop off their kids.
Yet some parents, neighbors contend, double park and let their children
run across the street.
Center operator Sheryl Hawkinson said she has told parents numerous times
to use the crosswalk. She said there is a parents’ handbook that
discusses pedestrian safety.
Other issues neighbors brought up included signs, trash collection and
curb designation. Rande Hawkinson, who owns the center with his wife,
Sheryl, said they have tried to accommodate neighbors’ needs.
He said he doesn’t know how much is enough.
“We have done everything we can to comply,” he said. “It seems everything
we do is met with some level of resistance. We want to be a good
neighbor.”
For some residents, that may not be enough. Howard Denghausen said he
will ask the city’s Planning Commission to issue a new use permit for the
day-care center. There has been some debate whether a permit issued by
the city in the 1960s for the day-care center site is still valid.
“What the Planning Commission needs to do is issue a new conditional-use
permit, so there can be some force behind it,” he said. “Then we can have
the police write tickets if people [jaywalking] don’t comply.”
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