Commission to look at rules for school
Deirdre Newman
The Planning Commission on Monday will consider changing some
requirements for the Prince of Peace school, in response to
neighbors’ concerns that school officials are violating city rules.
Residents who live near the school, which is on Baker Street, have
complained about the planting of ficus trees, the number of
preschoolers on the campus and the school’s use of a walkway next to
the Baker Street driveway.
On Monday, the commission will consider requiring church officials
to address any problems that might be caused by the ficus trees and
their roots; consider allowing a maximum of 315 students on site
without differentiating between preschool and elementary students;
and consider allowing the school to use of the sidewalk next to the
Baker Street driveway.
While school officials say they are happy to abide by all three,
some residents say the city is thereby rewarding the violations by
just changing the original conditions for approval of the school.
“It seems to the citizens of Costa Mesa that the ‘conditions of
approval’ only means ‘suggestions of approval,’” resident Edward Kao
said.
In January 1999, the Planning Commission approved an application
that allowed the Prince of Peace church to put in four modular
buildings on its property. Off-site parking at the United Methodist
Church site across Baker Street was approved to help out the school.
The commission also required planting screening trees and shrubs
between the buildings and the Baker Street property line.
Church officials say they’re amenable to all three.
“We’re looking forward to moving forward on this situation and
getting this behind us and getting to be better neighbors with our
neighbors,” said Keith Kerslake, school administrator.
The church planted 30 ficus trees without city approval along a
portion of the Baker Street frontage and 35 trees on the Mesa Verde
Drive Eats frontage. After the trees were planted, some neighbors
voiced their concerns that the tree roots would damage city sidewalks
and pose hazards to pedestrians. These neighbors wanted the trees
removed. Instead, church officials installed root barriers.
Planning staff members feel that requiring the church to shoulder
the cost of repairing any sidewalk damage that could be caused by the
ficus trees in the future will suffice.
Kao thinks otherwise.
“I think they’re just trying to push it down -- delay the problem
instead of solving it the right way, because this not a matter of if,
it’s a matter of when,” Kao said. “If you don’t take them out while
they’re still young, then it will be a bigger problem down the road.”
Neighbors also expressed concern about the school not complying
with its requirement to allow only 15 preschool students on the site
at any one time. Planning staff found that the requirement also
allows 300 kindergarten through eighth-grade grade students.
The school has 253 students. Since the school is not exceeding the
maximum number of students, city workers found that the number of
preschoolers versus all other students was not so important a
calculation. So it is recommending the requirement be changed to set
a maximum on the number of students.
Kao pointed out that there were state mandates that contributed to
the limit on the number of preschoolers allowed.
“We are puzzled that instead of asking the Prince of Peace
[school] to reduce its preschool population, the city staff rewarded
their violation by asking the Planning Commission to change the
condition,” Kao said.
Serving more preschoolers -- some in the morning and some in the
afternoon -- is beneficial to the neighborhood because it breaks up
the time they’re brought and picked up throughout the day, Kerslake
said.
The commission will also consider whether the school should be
allowed to use the walkway next to the Baker Street driveway. One of
the school’s requirements is that parents not use the Baker Street
driveway for pedestrian access. So the church built the walkway to
compensate.
Planning staff believes that it’s better to allow parents and
students to use this walkway instead of making them walk around the
coroner to the Mesa Verde Drive entrance -- through a driveway,
without pedestrian protection. So it is suggesting changing the
requirement to allow the use of the walkway.
Kao is concerned that the walkway, which empties onto Baker
Street, is dangerous because the street is a main thoroughfare and
doesn’t contain any pedestrian markings to connect the school to the
off-site parking.
Since church officials are receptive to the new requirements, it
bodes well for approval, Planning Commission Chairman Bruce Garlich
said.
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