Neighbors wonder who moved signs
- Share via
Marisa O’Neil
An Easter morning mystery has residents around St. Andrew’s Church
wondering if they were the victims of a well-timed prank or an
attempt to silence their dissent.
Nearly 100 residents awoke Sunday morning to find signs declaring
“No” to the church’s expansion had vanished from their yards.
Residents first wondered if someone wanted to hide any controversy on
a busy church-going day. Then, late Monday, church officials declared
it a youthful prank.
“I kind of laughed at it at first,” Cliff Haven resident Jim
Carmack said of discovering his two signs missing. “It’s asinine.
It’s childish. In fact, it could be kids who did it. Then I started
to think it’s really repulsive.” While he wouldn’t blame church
officials “in a million years,” for organizing a mass theft, Carmack
said, the timing had many residents wondering if it wasn’t someone
wanting to save the church from embarrassment.
“It makes sense that they wouldn’t want those signs up on Easter,
when they’ve got lots of people parking in the neighborhood and
walking past them,” said resident Bill Dunlap.
Members of the area’s homeowner’s association contacted church
officials Monday morning to discuss the vanishing signs’, Dunlap
said. They denied any involvement.
“We were absolutely not involved -- had absolutely no
participation or involvement. We feel terrible about the taking of
any property,” Jill Kanzler, a spokeswoman for the church, said early
Monday.
Later in the day Monday, church official Herb Smith said the signs
had turned up behind an apartment on the church’s property Saturday
night. An intern living at the apartments found them and removed them
without telling officials, he said.
“We do think it was a prank,” Smith said. “We don’t know who was
involved. We hope it was a prank and not a malicious act by
somebody.”
But that news still doesn’t sit well with some residents.
“We’re still concerned,” Dunlap said. “It was many signs taken at
one time. It’s an awful big prank.”
The case of the missing signs is the latest snag in an ongoing
debate between the church -- which wants to add 22,000 square feet to
accommodate its growing flock -- and nearby residents, who want their
streets quiet and free from excessive traffic.
Residents opposed to the expansion plan first planted signs
imploring: “Please, no expansion.” Those were recently replaced with
new, more direct ones simply stating: “No expansion.”
“It’s kind of unfortunate,” Dunlap said of the sign incident.
“We’re having a public debate over an important issue for our
neighborhood. We tried to keep it level with no mudslinging or
anything underhanded. This really changes the rules of engagement.”
Church officials are launching their own investigation into the
incident, Kanzler said.
* MARISA O’NEIL covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4618 or by e-mail at marisa.oneil @latimes.com.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.