MAILBAG - Jan. 6, 2000
- Share via
The ability of the Greenlight Traffic Control Initiative to gather
sufficient qualifying signatures with such rapidity bodes well for its
ultimate approval at the polls (“Greenlight group wants special
election,” Dec. 29). In response, I expect that political pressure from
developers will increase exponentially, pushing the City Council to
approve their 11 huge pending projects before the initiative comes to the
polls.
The City Council should either make a commitment not to approve any
further large developments before the November 2000 election or approve a
special election. If they scramble to approve these projects before
voters can decide the fate of Greenlight, they will be thumbing their
noses at the voters in this city.
SUSAN SKINNER CAUSTIN
Newport Beach
Renew leases at Marinapark mobile homes
Peninsula residents associations from McFadden Square east to the Wedge
have expressed their collective support for long-term renewal of leases
for the American Legion as well as for the mobile home owners and tenants
at Marinapark on the bay.
We live in a delightful and very public area, which we happily share with
tourists, day users and businesses. Unhappily, and of necessity, we also
are beneficiaries of 60% of the police department’s patrol budget. For
public access, the peninsula offers five miles of public ocean beach, but
only a half dozen of bayside beaches, including the three blocks between
16th and 19th streets.
There are three existing uses between 16th and 18th streets, and between
the bay and Balboa Boulevard, not just Marinapark. Along the boulevard we
have a playground, four public tennis courts, a basketball court, the
Neva B. Thomas Girl Scout House, a community services multiuse building
and a public parking lot. Along the bay, there is a wide beach, which is
accessible to the public from 16th, 18th and 19th streets, and in
between, from a public walkway along the entire length. The beach is home
to the so-called 16th Street Sailing Base, a newly christened 18th Street
Sailing Base and a public restroom and storage building at 19th Street.
Between these two public and very accessible strips is the site of the
unobtrusive and equally accessible mobile home park.
The city needs revenue for salaries and benefits and, if there’s any
money left over, for repair of the decaying infrastructure all over town.
We don’t need more space for the nonspending public, nor do we need to
give up reasonably productive resources such as Marinapark or the
American Legion Post 291, which make no demand on city services. Both of
these uses provide or do not obstruct use by the public. Moreover, we
don’t need a 16-building, two-story, 157-room resort, with bar and
restaurant and a pie-in-the-sky business plan on the site.
TOM HYANS
Newport Beach
Two cities show their money priorities
Your Dec. 14 front page was a striking example of the contrast between
Costa Mesa and Newport Beach.
In Costa Mesa, mothers are shown lined up with their children to receive
a Christmas toy from the Share Our Selves Social Services Agency. The
agency was delighted that this year it was able to hand out gifts to 208
families after turning away 100 families last year.
In Newport Beach, the City Council voted to give another $1.25 million to
pro-El Toro airport activist groups so that they can throw more money
into the endless pit aimed at selling the county on the merits of an
airport at El Toro.
Merry Christmas, Citizens for Jobs and the Economy and Airport Working
Group.
MARTIN A. BROWER
Corona del Mar
Library articles miss the real story
Something very critical has been overlooked in the flurry of articles
about the “feud” between the Board of Library Trustees and the Library
Foundation, and that is the extraordinary contributions made by the
foundation (“Library foundation says agreement is lopsided,” Jan. 4). The
public enjoyed four wonderful evenings with fascinating speakers like
Dominick Dunne during the fall Manuscripts Lecture Series. The foundation
in partnership with the library has presented the Distinguished Speakers
Series that featured Andy Rooney, George Plimpton and other great
speakers. Teens’ lives are being changed by the new Teen Center funded in
part by the foundation. The CD-ROM databases funded by the foundation are
in constant use. The foundation-sponsored book discussion groups are
well-attended every month.
All of this happens because of our good donors and because of a dedicated
and professional board of directors. The truth is, libraries have
foundations to better raise funds for critical programs and materials
that benefit the public.By law, our audited financial statements are open
to inspection by anyone in the community. These financial statements
reflect spending ratios that are proper and well within the guidelines of
other nonprofit foundations. The claims of spending 50% to 70% on
operating costs are simply false, and the origins of these figures are
still unknown to anyone at the foundation.
Now is the time to focus attention on the real story. The real story is
that a passionate, forward-looking foundation board established an
endowment fund to support the library’s materials budget in perpetuity.
The real story is that committed volunteers organize programs and ask
their peers to give to the library. Their hard work could go to many
causes, but it doesn’t. It goes to the library because they believe in
it. The recent press is undermining those efforts.
On behalf of the foundation, I would like to personally thank each and
every person who contributes precious time and money. It is gratifying to
know you believe in what the foundation gives to the library on your
behalf.
TRACY KEYS
Administrative Director
Newport Beach Public Library Foundation
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.