Bittersweet memorial
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Greg Risling
It’s been weighing on the mind of Sheryl Hawkinson for many weeks.
She wondered when she would hear from the city about placing a memorial
plaque honoring two children who were killed at the day-care center she
operates.
The good news is coming in the mail.
The city on Tuesday sent a letter informing Hawkinson and the Coastal
Lighthouse Community Church, which owns the land, that the monument
dedicated to 4-year-old Sierra Soto and 3-year-old Brandon Wiener can be
erected.
“It’s such a relief to hear we can put it up,” Hawkinson said. “We’ve
felt like everything we have tried to do has met with some resistance.
It’s been one thing after another. The whole year has been a struggle.”
The plaque, which measures 18 inches high and a foot wide, will be
located at the corner of Santa Ana Avenue and Magnolia Street, where
Steven Allen Abrams drove his car onto a playground in May. Abrams,
allegedly aiming his 1967 Cadillac at the children, killed Sierra and
Brandon and injured four other children and a teacher’s aide.
The plaque has been sitting in a classroom at the Southcoast Early
Childhood Learning Center for the last two months. City Manager Allan
Roeder said planners had to consider whether the plaque fell under
regulations reserved for parks and city buildings, which meant it would
have to be a certain size.
The city also had to decide if the plaque could be included as part of an
encroachment permit. The permit was issued by the city earlier this year
for a new, reinforced wall that was contested by neighbors because it was
deemed a safety hazard. The plaque will be placed on the wall.
Roeder said even though the wall is on city property, the application for
the memorial can be a condition of the permit.
“There are still some safety-related issues to work out, but under the
existing permit, we authorize the plaque to be placed on the wall,”
Roeder said. “The wall isn’t a city facility, so the city attorney
determined the plaque doesn’t meet the same criteria we have for our
parks and buildings.”
The plaque features symbols cherished by the children who died. A
shooting star is etched for Sierra, who danced to the children’s ballad
“Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star,” during her dance recitals. A teddy bear
holding balloons is the image on the plaque that Brandon’s mother, Pam,
wanted. The teddy bear was her son’s favorite toy. It was buried with
Brandon at his funeral.
“He always had it nearby,” Wiener said. “It has significance and meaning.
The plaque is one way for people to remember the two children who died.”
Hawkinson agreed the plaque serves as a reminder not only of the tragedy,
but the tremendous outpouring the day-care center staff and children’s
families received after the incident occurred.
“So many people came together as a community to support the families and
us collectively as a school,” she said. “The least we can do to remember
these children is to pay tribute to them, so we never forget what
happened here.”
For those reasons, Hawkinson wants to invite the community to the school
when the plaque is dedicated. She wanted to hold the ceremony before the
year ends, but Sierra’s mother, Cindy Soto, won’t return from vacation
until next month, when a date will be set.
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