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Residents sue over Brethren expansion

Neighbors of private Christian school say plan for new gymnasium defies law and will damage local quality of life.

June 24, 2009|By Kathryn Watson

Residents near Brethren Christian Junior and Senior High School filed a lawsuit Friday against the city after the school and city approved plans for expansion that include an approximately 31-foot-tall, 26,785-square-foot gymnasium.

The residents contend that the plan does not conform to predetermined laws regarding land use, traffic, design parking and the California Environmental Quality Act, a statute requiring local agencies to pinpoint and lessen significant environmental implications of actions like construction.

“We’re alleging that the city of Huntington Beach failed to analyze the full magnitude of the expansion project,” said Stephen Miles, the residents’ attorney. As a result, the city has also failed to notify residents of these implications, Miles contended.

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City attorney Jennifer McGrath said the city denies these allegations, but she sympathized, saying she could “appreciate the residents’ concerns.”

The civil case is unlimited, meaning residents are demanding more than $25,000.

Terry Crowther and his wife, Sharon, who have lived in the neighborhood for five years, have collaborated to rally neighbors against the city. More than 370 registered voters have signed a petition in opposition to the city council’s approval of the school’s expansion, Crowther said.

“Our neighbors have reached into their pockets. Seniors on fixed incomes, families on single incomes, residents of this city for 40 years have all dug in their pockets,” he said.

Crowther didn’t give a specific number as to how much residents have pitched in to fund the lawsuit but said it’s “thousands of dollars.”

The fact that Brethren Christian is a private school makes no difference in the lawsuit’s procedure, McGrath said, because it is a “land use decision.”

In addition to the gym, the expansion project will also include a football field and an expanded, multiple-use soccer field.

Residents appealed the council’s April approval of the project but lost.

After the Design Review Board approved the entire project June 11, residents got ready for action.

The next step will be a settlement conference, where the parties involved will decide if there is “any room for settlement,” Miles said.

“We’re pretty confident that the city is going to be open to settlement discussions,” Miles said.

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