Council approves child care center
After a contentious debate over traffic concerns, the City Council
Tuesday approved a more than $2-million child care facility and
family resource center to be constructed at the former site of the
Buena Vista branch library.
The council voted 3-1 to approve a construction bid for the center
and close off a nearby alley for a project that has been in the works
for more than two years.
“I’m not pleased at all with the cost, but I do recognize that
providing high-quality child care services is an investment in
children and our future,” City Councilwoman Marsha Ramos said. “I
feel it’s the best use of this facility at the current time.”
The council’s approval -- with Mayor Jef Vander Borght dissenting
-- came after more than a dozen residents spoke on the pros and cons
of the project.
Though most agreed that a child care center was a good idea,
several residents were concerned about possible traffic snarls and
hazards that a center near a busy street and in their neighborhood
could create.
“Parents in a hurry to drop off their kids march to the beat of
their own drummer,” said Steve Guri, a resident on Buena Vista Street
who lives a few addresses away. “In general, I think the child care
center is an excellent idea and I’m all for it -- and it will
definitely increase my property values -- but at the same time I’m
still worried it’s going to bottleneck the road.”
But city Traffic Engineer Ken Johnson said that traffic generated
by the child care center was relatively minor and manageable.
“At the child care center, you’ve got 80 to 90 kids per day, as
opposed to the school, where you have 400 to 500. If problems arise
[the city] can enact enforcements, put up signs, make changes on site
if necessary. They can open and close access points. There’s a lot we
can do if problems arise, but I don’t envision it happening.”
The proposed 7,900-square-foot center and family resource center
at the northwest corner of Buena Vista Street and Verdugo Avenue
would accommodate up to 88 children. The resource center would offer
information on city services and provide classes in parenting, child
development, financial planning and other topics.
The Planning Board in January signed off on allowing the land to
be used for the centers. But they too were concerned about reducing
traffic and parking effects on the neighborhood.
The renovation will include adding 640 square feet to the existing
building, overhead and underground rerouting of electrical lines and
vacating a portion of a north/south alley with access from Verdugo
Road. Residents in the area became concerned that blocking off the
alley behind the building would cut off their access to nearby
streets.
Several options have been considered for the site, with only two
that city officials have found compatible with the area: a
residential use -- either five single-family homes or a nine-unit
residential development -- or the child care center, with the
existing building left standing, according to a staff report.
A community meeting was held in May on the issue and, according to
the report, no consensus was reached for what to do with the site.
But city officials did hear two resounding messages: one was to keep
the existing building and the other was to use it for a
community-based need.
Vander Borght’s dissent was over priorities. It’s a good idea, he
said.
But an investment in local transit would be better, he added.
City Councilwoman Stacey Murphy did not attend the meeting.
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