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The Academy Charter High School MND I City of Santa Ana Planning Division <br />new high school facilities on the approximately 25-acre RFCPS, which accommodated an enrollment of <br />approximately 1,960 students in grades 6 through 11 (both middle school and high school). Specifically, the <br />project consisted of constructing 30 new high school classrooms with 810 seats to serve new and existing <br />students, grades 9 through 12, as well as a new gymnasium, a new library, a career center, administration <br />offices, plant manager facilities, additional parking facilities, and removal of 16 portable classrooms. Key <br />environmental issues addressed in the EIR included aesthetics, traffic, air quality and health risks, noise, <br />cultural resources, and infrastructure and public services. Special consideration in conducting the impact <br />analysis and developing mitigation was focused on minimizing the impact to existing students at the RFCPS <br />during construction of the new school facilities. <br />Year Completed: September 2007. <br />Reference: John Anderson, Consulting Program Manager, Los Angeles Unified School District, Facilities <br />Services Division, 333 South Beaudry Avenue, 20th Floor, Los Angeles, California 90017, (213) 893-7424 <br />Charter High School EIR—Port of Los Angeles <br />ICF prepared an EIR to evaluate environmental impacts associated with redeveloping a 3.5-acre property for <br />three buildings: a charter high school, police headquarters, and California Maritime Studies Center. The charter <br />school portion of the project involved modifications to a 72,774-square-foot, two-story building to be used for the <br />school to provide 36 classrooms, two research/technical labs, a cafeteria, slx offices, two conference rooms, two <br />teachers' lounges/workrooms, a textbookfinedia storage room, a library, four restroom complexes, and a fitness <br />room. Environmental concerns related to this project Included traffic, air quality, and noise. <br />Reference: Dennis Hagner, Environmental Specialist, Port of Los Angeles, 425 South Palos Verdes Street, San <br />Pedro, California, (310) 732-3682 Year Completed: 2006 <br />Fehr & Peers Projects Within the Last Five Years <br />Fehr & Peers brings extensive experience preparing traffic analysis for school projects. We have selected a few <br />projects to highlight. <br />Turning Point School Traffic and Parking Review —Culver City <br />Turning Point School is a private school with an enrollment of 480 elementary students. The school moved from <br />West Los Angeles into a former industrial building in the City of Culver City. Fehr & Peers conducted traffic and <br />parking analysis for the new site, specifically concentrating on the impact of school traffic on the adjacent <br />residential neighborhood and on the adequacy of pickup and drop-off areas for the school. To make the project <br />work successfully from the city's standpoint, the school developed a transportation demand management <br />program that established a target carpool program and a subscription bus program. In addition, offsite parking <br />with a shuttle bus service for special events at the school was developed. Fehr & Peers also assisted the traffic <br />review for the physical expansion of the school into an adjacent building in 2006. <br />Valley Region Fulton Span School Addition Traffic and Parking Study—LAUSD <br />Fehr & Peers prepared traffic and parking studies as part of the preparation of an environmental impact report <br />for the proposed expansion of the existing Fulton Middle School in the Van Nuys neighborhood of Los Angeles. <br />The studies were prepared in accordance with the methodologies and standards used by the LAUSD in <br />consultation with the City of Los Angeles Department of Transportation. The project proposed to eliminate 14 <br />existing middle school classrooms and add 30 high school classrooms on the site. Because the expanded <br />school would be used by adult continuing education students in the evening hours, weekday p.m. peak hour <br />impact analysis was performed to supplement the typical a.m. peak hour impact analysis. Estimates of net trip <br />generation were prepared, and potentially significant traffic impacts identified. Future parking demand was <br />estimated and compared to the proposed parking supply. Specific recommendations were made on how to <br />address issues that were identified regarding access to the on -site parking supply. Vehicular and pedestrian <br />ICF <br />