City manager: Preschool wall will stay
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COSTA MESA -- A reinforced wall built to protect a day-care center where
two children were killed by a car in May will remain standing, City
Manager Allan Roeder has decided.
After listening to neighbors’ complaints about the wall infringing on
public sidewalks, Roeder upheld a prior decision to issue an encroachment
permit.
In an eight-page letter to neighbors opposing the wall’s location, Roeder
admitted “the wall should not have been constructed where it presently
exists.” However, the city’s top administrator believes several
modifications will address the neighbors’ concerns.
“We acknowledge an error was made to the location of the wall, but (to)
what extent is it hazardous to the public?” Roeder questioned. “I think
the underlying issue is whether an encroachment should be allowed at this
site. Examining the criteria, we felt it should.”
The wall surrounding the Southcoast Early Childhood Learning Center was
meant to shield children who attend the day-care facility from the kind
of tragedy that happened nearly four months ago. Two children were killed
and several more injured when a 39-year-old Santa Ana man plowed through
a chain-link fence into a playground.
While the wall has come to symbolize security for day-care
administrators, some neighbors see the barricade as a safety hazard.
During a community meeting last Thursday, several residents complained
the wall is a visual hindrance for motorists trying to inch their way out
of an alley onto Santa Ana Avenue.
Roeder disagreed with that notion, saying the line of sight coming out of
the alley is adequate. One of Roeder’s recommendations is to add parking
restrictions on curbs that abut the alley so motorists aren’t hindered by
parked vehicles.
The city also will contact Edison International about adding better
lighting to the area, and Roeder suggested seven trees be planted on the
L-shaped playground.
Paul Wilbur, who lives near the day-care center, said he hasn’t talked
with other neighbors about appealing the decision. Residents have until 5
p.m. Thursday to file an appeal, which would leave the matter to the City
Council to decide.
Wilbur said the city’s Planning Department failed to give him answers
about the zoning of the center’s playground two months prior to the
tragedy.
“How did the playground get this way?” he asked. “The Planning Department
has been working against us. We’ve tried to bring this up to the city,
and we’ve been portrayed as people who aren’t concerned with the safety
of the kids. That isn’t true.”
In researching the dispute, Roeder found a gaping, adversarial rift
between some of the neighbors and the day-care center, which is owned by
the Lighthouse Community Church across the street. Roeder believes both
sides should sit down and talk about resolving their differences.
“The problems go beyond the wall,” he said. “The church should initiate
contact to assemble some meetings to identify these problems.”
While the wall’s future may be set in place, there are other roadblocks
ahead. Day-care teachers want to place a plaque there commemorating the
lives of the two slain children, 4-year-old Sierra Soto and 3-year-old
Brandon Wiener. The permit doesn’t allow modifications of the wall. The
church’s facilities manager Ed Deckert proposed last month to the City
Council that the wall be dedicated as a memorial.
“We’re happy for the moment,” said day-care Assistant Director Carrie
McCluskey. “But if this drags on, I don’t know how much energy we have
left. I’d like to have things hashed out so we can get back to our focus
... the kids.”
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