School board needs to take residents into consideration
Christian L. Feist
It’s like a war-zone. As I sit down to write this letter it’s 5:45
a.m. Tuesday.
I’m typically slowly coming around at this time of the morning,
but this morning, like many these days, has started with a bang,
literally. There’s a truck sucking waste from a port-o-potty across
the street. Its whining engine blazing away is enough to get my
2-year-old restlessly tossing about so I’d better hurry, she’ll be
awakened soon. This morning’s insult to my home and quality of life
is made all that much sweeter by the smell of human waste being
pumped into a truck across the street.
I digress. Like many in my neighborhood I bought my home across
the street from Laguna Beach High School knowing full well what I was
getting into -- a busy street almost devoid of parking, the trash,
the occasional kid smoking in my yard to avoid detection, all of it.
Not a problem. As a matter of fact I cannot recall having any
problems with any students. To their credit, the kids have been
great.
I have never once complained or called the school about any issue
(well there was one incident, but that’s another story). That is
until recently. The truck I mentioned earlier is part of the larger
construction project at the high school sports fields. And my problem
is not with the early construction starts or the overspray from the
gymnasium that ended up on my car (I had to discover that myself) or
the dirt that covers everything in the neighborhood. Heck it’s not
even the rude and dangerous truck drivers that terrorize my street.
No, my problem is with the design of the new baseball facility and
specifically the new poles that threaten to take away all remaining
views of the ocean not only for me but for many of us in the area. In
addition to the drop in value that will undoubtedly accompany my loss
of view, there’s the lighting that will illuminate my home into the
wee hours of the morning each time a night event takes place. On that
note, I imagine that the frequency of events other than those of the
high school will increase now that such facilities exist. But let’s
not dwell on the “what-ifs.” I want to call your attention to the
“what is.”
Whether the school district acted lawfully (and we will find this
out through our own discovery) in the design-review process, what
they did not do was to act responsibly, ethically or morally with
regards to community impact. The neighbors and I came home one day to
a skyline filled with 8-inch-wide poles and the very real prospect of
having our whole community’s view corridor taken away, all of this
without any warning or consultation from our elected school
officials.
I believe Laguna Beach Unified School District basically
steamrolled this project through without neighborhood input as they
are not held to the same standard as others in the community. This
may be lawful but it is repugnant in its execution.
These folks have to be put in check. I urge all residents of this
city to join us in making our educational system accountable,
responsible and communicative with regard to their plans. We pay for
this stuff and these people and they need to answer to us.
It may not be your neighborhood under siege, but think about the
example these people set for those we entrust to them, our children.
I could not in good conscience send my child to a school or through a
school system whose values are so opposed to my own and that of
common decency.
Laguna Beach Unified School District, you should be ashamed. Your
actions are childlike and without respect for those who employ and
have put their trust in you. Shame on you. You are a bad neighbor.
Again, I urge all residents of Laguna Beach to follow this
situation and have your voice heard if you have an opinion. The
school board members are elected by you. Let them know we’ll find
better guardians for our educational system if that’s what needs to
happen. It’s an election year and maybe we need a cleansing. Thanks
for reading.
* CHRISTIAN L. FEIST is a Laguna Beach resident.
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