Planners straddle the fence at church
-- Jennifer Kho
The Costa Mesa Planning Commission this week gave Prince of Peace
Lutheran Church two years to remove a corner portion of chain-link fence
on church property.
The decision was a compromise between neighbors’ desire to be rid of
the fence and the church’s intent to protect its children.
About 600 feet of the fence on the property is legal because it was
installed before a 1997 code change prohibiting chain-link fences next to
public rights-of-way went into effect.
About 260 feet of new chain-link fence was added on a corner of the
property two months after the code’s start date, however.
Neighbors said the fenced corner, which separates the church
playground from the street, is an “architectural monstrosity” that gives
the intersection at Baker Street and Mesa Verde Drive -- the entrance to
the Mesa Verde community -- an “industrial look.”
Church representative Kevin Coleman said the church needs the fence
because it moved the children’s play area to the corner to accommodate
residents near the old play area who had complained about noise. The
church can’t afford an entirely new fence at this time, he said.
The planners’ decision does not require City Council approval and the
church now has two years to find a financial solution, commissioners
said.
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