By Donald H. Harrison
SAN DIEGO, Calif.—Rabbi Lisa
Goldstein and
Jackie Tolley are staging a $15 million "race to the
mezuzah" with the winner being the one who can affix a mezuzah to the
doorpost of a new Hillel house first.
Goldstein, executive director of Hillel of San Diego, is
headquartered at the University of California San Diego and, on the other side
of the city, Tolley is the director of Hillel at San Diego State University.
Although the $15 million joint fundraising campaign will raise sufficient money
for both planned facilities, the two Hillel colleagues know that between the
time one draws up the plans and makes a structure ready for occupancy, there can
be many a twist and turn. "So we figured we'd have a pool on which
one of us gets to put the mezuzah up on the front door first," Goldstein
said.
Herbert
Solomon, a former president of the United Jewish Federation of San Diego
County, has agreed to chair the capital campaign, which is expected to begin
soon after post-Memorial Day consultations are completed with Herb Tobin, a
fundraising consultant affiliated with Hillel's Schusterman International Center
in Washington D.C.
The two projects wended their ways through separate bureaucratic processes and
it is an utter coincidence that negotiations, hearings and approvals ended at
nearly the same time for each of them, Goldstein said.
In the UCSD case, Hillel only received permission on May 9 to purchase from the
City of San Diego an unoccupied 33,000 square foot triangle of land bounded by
La Jolla Village Drive, La Jolla Scenic North, and La Jolla Scenic Way.
Permission came on a 6-2 vote of the San Diego City Council after a contentious
hearing in which neighbors in the suburban La Jolla neighborhood close to the
university successfully demanded that the proposed 12,000-square-foot facility
increase the number of onsite parking spots from 40 to 68.
The City Council also made Hillel agree to limit occupancy in the building to
250 people at a time, except for six times a year when that number may be
boosted to 400. Rabbi Goldstein said such occasions as the High Holy Days
and the first Shabbat after the beginning of the school term are the kind of
occasions that permission for the increased number of occupants were necessary.
Voting in favor of Hillel were Council President Scott Peters, who represents
the La Jolla area; and Council Members Kevin Faulconer, Toni Atkins, Tony
Young, Jim Madaffer and Ben Hueso. The two dissenting votes were
cast by Council Members Donna Frye and Brian Maienschein.
Rabbi Goldstein said that City Attorney Michael Aguirre and
Assistant City Attorney Karen Heumann had hosted a series of meetings between
Hillel and the neighbors prior to the City Council session in an effort to forge
agreements. The neighbors continued to oppose the Hillel house, even after
Hillel agreed to various concessions, but as the two sides came to know each
other the debate became less strident, she said.
In previous hearings before various La Jolla planning groups, feelings were so
intense that Goldstein heard herself being heckled, a fairly unusual experience
for a rabbi. There was even one neighbor who would cross the street when
she saw the rabbi approaching. Now, said Goldstein, some of the
opponents, though disappointed in the City Council's decision, are more
friendly. Furthermore, she said, some have expressed willingness to serve on a
neighborhood advisory council to Hillel.
At San Diego State University, Hillel's efforts to win approval for a
10,000-square-foot facility were not nearly so contentious, but they were often
subjected to complicated and time-consuming delays. A major problem was that San
Diego State University wanted to redevelop the urban areas bordering its
campus—a process requiring considerable public input. The process started and
stopped, and different developers were engaged, over a period of 18 years.
Until recently the San Diego State University (SDSU) Research
Foundation, a charitable arm of the university, was driving the project.
But then SDSU President Stephen Weber announced that because of changes in the
way the State Colleges and Universities Board of Trustees funds projects, the
university, itself, would have to take the project over.
Most of the redevelopment attention has been focused on properties not affecting
Hillel, so the Jewish organization was able to arrange a land swap with SDSU's
Research Foundation. Hillel traded its property at 5742 Montezuma Road for
a rental property owned by the SDSU Research Foundation almost directly behind
the current Hillel House on Lindo Paseo. Additionally, Hillel was able to
purchase a property right next door currently owned by the Wesley Foundation of
the Methodist Church.
By combining properties at 5705 and 5712 Lindo Paseo, Hillel will have room to
build a 10,000-square-foot two-story building and a parking lot accommodating
between 15 and 25 cars, Goldstein said. Meanwhile, by acquiring the old
Hillel site, SDSU Research Foundation will be able to assemble three adjacent
lots and offer them for sale at a better combined price than if the three lots
had been sold individually, according to Theresa Nakata, SDSU Research
Foundation's director of community and public relations.
Another three lots are being assembled by the Church of Latter
Day Saints, which will become a neighbor of Hillel's at the new site. There is a
possibility that the two religious groups could pool parking spaces.
Friday nights are the busiest times at Hillel, whereas the Mormons could use the
parking spaces on Sunday mornings
Although parking is always a worry, both Hillel houses are benefited by the fact
that, for the most part, the students they serve either live on or near the
campus, or have campus parking spaces.
Although the UCSD facility would be 2,000 feet larger than the one at SDSU, the
two buildings will serve similar functions.
Goldstein said that at UCSD there will be a multipurpose room
that may be divided into three parts for separate Orthodox, Conservative and
Reform Shabbat services, and then opened up for a common dinner served from the
building's kosher kitchen. There will also be a lounge area, a library,
some meeting rooms and staff offices, she said
Tolley said the SDSU building's architectural plans have not been completed, but
that the design should include these elements: multipurpose space for 200-250
students, lounge areas, library and conference room, kosher kitchen, office
space for Hillel staff and for on-campus Jewish organizations like the Jewish
Student Union, and flexible space.
Although the SDSU Foundation and Hillel have exchanged titles to their
respective properties, they have agreed to rent them back to each other for a
period of two years to accommodate the planning and building processes
With a similar time frame anticipated for the UCSD project, that means
Goldstein and Tolley both will have plenty of time to shop for the perfect
winner's mezuzah.
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