This is my third attempt at contacting Charlie Conner, president of Conner Homes, regarding issues with the Cimmaron townhome project, therefore I am resorting to having to send this to you via the Renton Reporter.
Regarding the Cimmaron townhome project in the Renton Highlands: I live adjacent to this construction site in a residential area and would like to request that the loud music be turned down or preferably not played at all before, during or after normal construction hours. I have called some of your employees to no avail. The music is played so loud that I can hear the “rancheras” inside my home with all doors and windows closed.
Additionally, I have found long nails in my backyard, apparently tossed there by construction workers because they were bent and unusable. Please ask the site manager to speak to them and remind them they are in a residential neighborhood and reasonable noise levels and respect for adjacent properties must be observed.
In addition to several townhomes in my community being flooded last summer by your site, this is the second summer in a row we are suffering from Cimmaron’s “Desert Storm” effect. The grit resulting from construction covers our decks, back yards, windows, doors and exterior walls, making our outside areas unusable this whole summer. Couldn’t your people water down the site when dry and dusty, i.e. all summer?
According to your online bio, “He supports the Evergreen Freedom Foundation and the Pacific Legal Foundation in the fight to preserve private property rights…”.
Therefore, please ensure your contractors carry out your mission statement and respect private property rights of residents adjacent to the Cimmaron site.
Thank you.
JV Alexander,
Renton