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Friday, November 19, 2010

Clarke said he is buying the property in his own name, rather than the Arroyo Pacific’s:  “Clearly, my intention is for it to be for educational use, but I’m not planning to use it as a separate school.” The educational use, he said, will be “for students at [Arroyo Pacific].  I think we are best seen as another campus for our school to be used for specialized work,” such as the arts or environmental studies.

“The property there is unique in that it provides a serene atmosphere that is good for education — but if you turn it into a noisy hellhole, that won’t help anybody.”

Clarke said he was going to immediately begin seeking a conditional use permit for the property, which will be needed if it is going to be any kind of school.  Such a process can take more than a year to complete.

He also said “the first thing I’m going to do is clean up the property — it’s been a blight on the neighborhood the way it’s … deteriorated.”

However, residents of the neighborhood are viewing Clarke’s plans with a grain of salt.

“I met (Clarke) three weeks ago at the property, and he told me his plan was that he intended to open a high school … Honestly, I started laughing,” said Coleen Sterrit of the PSARA.  “It seemed so absurd to me.  He said his high school was different.  Well, we’ve heard that before.”

Sterrit said that she was puzzled that the plan changed in just three weeks. “I think it’s interesting that someone would spend millions of dollars on a piece of property and not know what to do with it.”

PSARA still has one position: “We don’t discriminate against schools: no school on Palm.”  Rather than a day school of any kind, she said, “We have always had a clear idea: we would like to see something residential there,” such as an assisted living facility, hospice, or even a residential school and care facility, as it was when it was Bienvenidos.  “We would like somebody to occupy the property because it’s no good to any one if the property is empty.

“But a day school of any kind, it’s not going to work.  There’s too much traffic, even if they’re busing them in.  The impact is just too great for our small little neighborhood.”

 

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