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<br />Page 1 of2 <br /> <br />Christensen, Angi <br /> <br />From: Deb Reynolds [dlreynolds2000@yahoo.com] <br />Sent: Tuesday, June 29, 2004 9:38 PM <br />To: Alvarez, Claudia <br />Subject: OCHSA parent concern regarding One Broadway <br /> <br />Dear Ms. Alvarez; <br /> <br />I understand that on Tuesday, July 6, 2004 the Santa Ana City Council will vote on the proposed <br />One Broadway Plaza. I also understand that construction of this 37-story structure provides for <br />the re-opening of Tenth Street between Main Street and Sycamore and this street would be <br />subject to use by many cars each day. <br /> <br />My 2 children are students at Orange County High School of the Arts (OCHSA) and must cross <br />that section of Tenth Street several times a day, not only when being dropped off and picked up <br />but during the school day. I am writing to express my concern for the safety ofOCHSA <br />students if Tenth Street is re-opened and to ask that you instead move to abandon Tenth Street to <br />OCHSA. <br /> <br />As the council noted in Resolution Number 2000-059, the closure of Tenth Street is necessary to <br />protect the students attending OCHSA. This resolution was passed when fewer cars used Tenth <br />Street each day. Opening Tenth Street, with no more protection for students than a crosswalk, <br />endangers more than 1,300 OCHSA students, including my children. In resolution 2000-059, <br />you found: <br /> <br />(I) Tenth Street is not necessary to provide access to abutting property; <br /> <br />(2) Tenth Street divides the OCHSA campus; and <br /> <br />(3) Closing Tenth Street is necessary to protect the students. <br /> <br />All three of those factors remain true today. Tenth Street is not necessary to provide access to <br />the abutting property, even with the proposed One Broadway Plaza project. It is merely a <br />convenience for the project and access is available on other streets. Tenth Street still divides the <br />school and closing Tenth Street remains necessary to protect students. In fact, OCHSA has <br />grown from 800 to 1,300 students since the time of that resolution. The risk now is even greater <br />than it was in 2000. It is clear that OCHSA is succeeding and is here to stay. Therefore, the <br />City should not only leave Tenth Street closed, the street should be abandoned so that the school <br />can use it for much needed open space. This should be done regardless of whether the project is <br />approved or rejected. <br /> <br />At a meeting with OCHSA parents on June 15,2004, Mr. Michael Harrah, the developer of the <br />project, stated that student safety has always been a high priority. Mr. Harrah believes that <br />opening Tenth Street is not essential to the One Broadway Plaza project. He agreed that leaving <br />Tenth Street closed should be reviewed very closely. After listening to all of the parent's <br />concerns that opening Tenth Street would create a potentially dangerous situation for OCHSA <br />students, Mr. Harrah promised to contact the City and request the abandonment of Tenth Street <br />to OCSHA, rather than reopening Tenth Street as part of the project. I am writing to request that <br /> <br />6/30/2004 <br /> <br />75E-52 <br />