MAILBAG - March 16, 2000
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As the parents of a Costa Mesa High School athlete, Autumn Smith, we have
enjoyed and appreciated The Pilot’s outstanding coverage of the local
sports scene.
Hats off to Barry Faulkner, Richard Dunn and the entire Pilot team for
their professional coverage of the triumphs and tribulations of our youth
teams. Speaking for many local fans and boosters, it’s a big thrill after
a big game to wake up in the morning and read all about it in the Pilot.
Keep up the fine work.
CONLEY and NANCY SMITH
Newport Beach
Why can’t Irvine Co. help Newport Coast?
Instead of squeezing the city, Newport Coast residents should look to the
Irvine Co. and the developers of their housing tract for remedy (“Water
negotiations stagnating,” March 13).
If the Irvine Co. has enough profit in the last few years to take the
company totally private, it should plow back part of the profit toward
maintaining and improving Newport Coast’s infrastructure. In other words,
it should act more like the Irvine Co. of yore.
Until we are certain as to how much and who will bear the cost for the
basic maintenance of this new community’s already ailing infrastructure,
any annexation proposal is premature. The residents of Newport Coast may
well be deserving of the entire $25 million.
The question is: from where will the future millions come?
JOHN T. CHIU
Newport Beach
We don’t need results of bogus survey
As a reader of the Daily Pilot I really have to wonder, just what is your
agenda? In today’s edition you devote Page 3 to publishing selective
results (“Newport survey reveals few surprises,” Feb. 23) of a citywide
poll from 60 residents -- 60 residents in a city of more than 70,000.
Does this truly represent your concept of responsible reporting?
Of course the 800-pound gorilla on the horizon is resolution of the El
Toro airport; but come on, give me a break.
Ten thousand citizens signed the Greenlight petition. That is about half
the number of citizens who vote in typical elections. And you’re devoting
Page 3 of today’s edition to answers from 60 residents, selected by
Deputy City Manager Dave Kiff (“People said they really appreciated being
asked”) on seven questions, out of an undisclosed number of questions,
many of which appear to have a built-in bias.
Please give us some responsible reporting.
STEPHEN TITUS
Newport Beach
OCC students didn’t deserve tongue lashing
While it is good to see that Holocaust revisionism is front-page news,
(“Students criticized for running anti-Semitic ad,” March 9), the Daily
Pilot’s characterization of the advertisement that appeared Feb. 2 in the
Orange Coast College Coast Report is incorrect.
The ad, “Holocaust Studies: Appointment with Hate,” placed by Bradley
Smith’s Committee on Open Debate of the Holocaust, nowhere claims or
implies that “the Holocaust never happened”; nor, in its critique of
one-sided “Holocaust studies,” does the ad contain any language that may
reasonably be regarded as anti-Semitic.
While the Pilot’s story says next to nothing about the content of Smith’s
ad, it does make clear that the ad caused no anti-Semitic manifestations
at OCC.
Instead, students were exercising their right to inquire or not to
inquire into the revisionist position on the Holocaust.
All the more reason for freedom-minded persons to deplore the
intervention of Joyce Greenspan, of the Anti-Defamation League; and Stan
Brin, editor of Jewish Heritage, who scolded and chastised student
editors and university officials weeks after the unoffending ad appeared.
And all the more reason to condemn OCC President Margaret Gratton’s
acquiescence to the bullying.
If the standard version of the Holocaust is as unshakable as its
proponents say it is, why does it require such intimidating bodyguards --
on campus, of all places?
TED O’KEEFE
Newport Beach
I’m sure that general sympathy on our school’s conditions lies with
the students and teachers and, not much, with the governing board of the
Newport-Mesa Unified School District. Steve Smith’s article (“Board:
accept responsibility before we accept bond,” March 4) that appeared
almost editorial-like, brought up the question of the board’s
accountability during these past years when conditions were allowed to
deteriorate, requiring so huge a monetary transfusion.
I join Steve in posing the proper question to the board and other
responsible officials in saying, “Accounting for the state of the schools
is not too much to ask.” I, too, “have a problem with politicians who
neglect their duties, allow public facilities to fall into a state of
extreme disrepair, then ask taxpayers for a loan to bail them out without
one word of accountability.”
I trust that the board will, instead of going on the defensive, make
an honest effort to inform the people as how things really happened and
why. I’m not encouraged, however, that the board will respond; I well
recall how little attention the board paid, some years back, when a
“whistle-blower” in the district chose to bypass district officials and
board members to report a $4.2 million embezzlement to the Orange County
Grand Jury.
Hardly a vote of confidence for the board.
LEFTERIS LAVRAKAS
Costa Mesa
Home development, park mean more than airport
While I am a homeowner and resident of Mesa Verde who enjoys the
environment of Costa Mesa, I am not convinced that the city governments
of either Costa Mesa or Newport Beach are committed to maintaining that
quality of life.
Recent actions by the Costa Mesa City Council and Newport-Mesa Unified
School District Board of Education have convinced me they do not care
that Costa Mesa will soon look like urban L.A. County.
I am becoming more and more convinced that if I wish to maintain my
quality of life, then I should move to South County. As such, if I should
wish to move to South County, then I would want the John Wayne Airport
expanded and the El Toro Airport project killed.
The building of Standard Pacific Homes’ Mesa Verde Collection, at the
corner of Adams Avenue and East Mesa Verde Drive, and the school board’s
proposed sale of Balearic Park negatively affect the quality of life in
Costa Mesa.
In proposing the sale of Balearic Park, the Newport-Mesa school board has
reneged on its 1977 promise to never sell the property and actively
demonstrates that Costa Mesa and Newport Beach governments cannot be
trusted. That the city council members of Costa Mesa and Newport Beach
sit idly by and permit this destruction of Costa Mesa to take place,
demonstrates their complicity and lack of caring in these matters.
If they want the support of myself and my neighbors in the airport
matter, then they must first demonstrate a willingness to preserve the
quality of life in Costa Mesa by killing the Mesa Verde Collection
development and killing the sale of Balearic Park.
RICHARD T. MANN
Costa Mesa
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