MAILBAG - Dec. 9, 1999
Your editorial was well stated but too kind (“Newport Beach should cut
first, tax later,” Dec. 4). While the hand-wringing over layoffs at City
Hall was going on in 1994 to 1996, the head count dropped 13% while the
total payroll increased 5%. At the same time, the average salary and
benefits figures per employee increased 20%. It wasn’t the high-priced
dudes that took the hit, was it? No one at City Hall wants to take on the
expensive side of the ledger. Only the revenue side. We have the worst
performance in the county on privatization. Rather than privatize, we
bureaucratize the ambulance service. We talk about labor contracts for
summer lifeguards. We put marine safety personnel on the same incredibly
costly labor contracts as firemen. Fire personnel cost us more than
$105,000 per year, per person in salary and benefits, while police, who
get shot at and shop for groceries on their own time, cost no more than
$85,000. The last time I checked, the principal at Newport Elementary, a
PhD, cost us less than $83,000. The opportunity is on the expense side
and in the 65% of the operating budget that is allocated to employees’
salary and benefits.
TOM HYANS
Newport Beach
All they ask for is notice
Please note that we express our concern regarding the new development on
the North Ridge. When we purchased our property more than a year ago,
both the previous owner and the estate agent assured us that there would
be no development on the ridge and specifically on the slope facing us,
as this was a consideration in purchasing. We had no notice of any
pending development and we feel deprived of our rights as residents of
having no say over the issue. We are not antidevelopment, but feel that
the project should have been presented to us so that any concerns could
have been addressed. The local residents should have been a party to any
outcome with the intent of it being beneficial to all. It appears as if
no proper environmental impact assessment was carried out and there does
not appear to be any environmental management plan. Clarity is required
on these matters, as we are the affected parties and concerned residents.
We urge you to suspend any further development, particularly on the ridge
facing us, and have the developer do a proper presentation of his
intentions. This so we can understand the impact and to discuss our
concerns and be a party to an amicable solution.
RON and PETA PALADIN
Newport Beach
When the Duke came home
Your article “Cowboys and inspiration,” Nov. 27, wrongfully implied that
John Wayne and his wife, Pilar, were residents of Newport Beach during
the 1940s. For the record, they were married Nov. 1, 1954, on Kona, and
lived in Encino. In 1965, while Duke was on location in Durango, Pilar
purchased a home for them in Bayshores, where he lived until his passing
in 1979.
BILL THOMSON
Costa Mesa
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