MAILBAG - April 25, 2000
What’s unfortunate in the prelude leading up to the June 6 vote on
Measure A is the likelihood that nine out of 10 voters won’t bother
themselves to pick up a copy of the bond resolution or the facilities
master plan and give them a good hard study; won’t invest the mental
calories required to make an informed decision about an important issue.
And that’s too bad. Here’s why.
To his credit, Steve Smith has done what most of us won’t do (“Tossing
bricks at the list of school ‘repairs,”’ April 22). He’s studied the
issue. And it is clear he doesn’t like what he sees. By his subjective
measure, and it is subjective, he opines Measure A to be a pork-laden
litany of school repairs. Therefore, it’s worthy of defeat. It’s his
opinion. He’s entitled to it. But I sharply and deeply disagree with him.
To his discredit, Smith too readily dawns the mantle of mouthpiece for
the rest of the Newport-Mesa community. When he rights dubious statements
like, “This is not the bond you thought it was,” I’m wondering who “you”
is. It’s not me. And it may not be a lot of other folks if only they
studied the issue for themselves.
Which brings me back to my lead thought. That Steve Smith has access
to 25 inches of newspaper space each week to fire broadsides at Measure A
makes him an extremely influential voice in our community. But his is
only one voice.
My concern is that most folks will buy Smith’s reasoning because he’s
adroit at pushing nouns and verbs together; and they’ll do so without
having bothered to study the resolution and the facilities master plan to
form their own opinion. If Measure A succumbs because of the loud
albeit subjective voice of one newspaper columnist, and a gaggle of
people who buy what he says without their own investigation, that will be
a tragedy.
BYRON DE ARAKAL
Costa Mesa
Still safe to eat fish caught in bay
I would like to clarify a statement attributed to me regarding the
impact of insecticides and herbicides entering the bay (“What hazards lie
beneath the surface?” April 20). I was quoted as saying, “It takes 30
years of exposure to these chemicals before there is risk of cancer.”
I want to assure your readers that I do not believe there is any risk
of cancer to bay swimmers or residents eating fish caught in the bay.
Although low levels of the banned organochlorine chemicals such as DDT
and PCB still can be found in the sediments of the Rhine Channel and
several other locations of the bay, chemical analyses of fish samples
taken from Newport Bay and analyzed by Fish and Game in the lab in
Sacramento has not prompted any warnings to limit the consumption of fish
caught in Newport Bay.
Certain chemicals found in the sediments in very low amounts would
only cause cancer from daily occupational exposure of high concentrations
of these chemicals over many years.
Fortunately, monitoring of these banned chemicals by Fish and Game
have documented a reduction of organochlorine chemicals in the bay during
the last 10 years.
JOHN F. SKINNER
Newport Beach
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