MAILBAG - Aug. 3, 2000
As a member of the Church of Christ in Huntington Beach, I would like
to thank you for the coverage you have given us after vandalism was done
to our building [“Vandal destroys carpet, not church,” July 20].
We don’t know why someone put a hose in the window and turned on the
water in order to flood the building, but we are all praying for whoever
did it. What started out being a negative experience has turned into a
blessing in many ways. God always turns curses into blessings.I would
like to take this opportunity to invite everyone to come and worship with
us at 301 Huntington St. We meet at 9:30 a.m. Sunday for worship and 5
p.m. Sunday and 7:30 p.m. Wednesday for Bible classes for all ages. SUE
DODD
Huntington Beach
Singing the praises of the parade panel
We have been so busy with the alleged corruption in City Hall that we
have forgotten to praise the accomplishments of the Fourth of July parade
committee and its dedicated chairwoman, Patricia Stier. They put together
a great local parade with a small-town feeling.
I am not a child, but I could see that the kids and their parents
loved it. Some of us old-timers enjoyed the tributes to war vets and
their families. It was the best of Americana in our proudest moments.
Bravo! Good, clean family entertainment. Do it again, Pat. The only
thing I missed was a Marine Corps band. Maybe next year. Please?
RICHARD McGRATH
Huntington Beach
Problems with city trees strikes a familiar chord
I read with amazement and amusement the letter from Dorothy V.
Nalbandian [“A long wait, still nothing,” June 29]. I was sure it was
written by my neighbor, Joe Bernardo. He has the exact circumstance at
his house -- he has standing water in front of his house that sometimes
covers half the street.
As for myself, I had to have my sewer dug up shortly after moving here
in 1986, at a cost of nearly $800. At the present time, the roots [of
city trees] are lifting my concrete driveway, causing it and part of my
garage floor to crack.
We too have collected the names of our neighbors on a petition in July
1993. Since then, we have waited patiently for work to begin, but nothing
has been done. Joe and I have made repeated phone calls to Don Noble and
Chris Gray. The only response has been from Don Noble, who told Joe not
to worry about the water in front of his house because this year was
going to be a drought.
I left five messages with Chris Gray’s office but never received a
return call. Also, I personally wrote and hand-delivered letters to each
City Council member, as well as the mayor and City Administrator Ray
Silver. The only response I got was from Mayor Dave Garofalo on May 23,
who passed on my concerns to Ray Silver and Robert Beardsley with a
promise of being contacted in three weeks. I have heard nothing.
If they had money to fix the problem streets, why not start with the
streets that had been on the waiting list the longest? That is what we
were told in 1993 when we got our petition together. We played the game
according to the rules, and now someone has changed the rules.
To all the City Council members as well as the mayor -- remember
Nalbandian, Joe Bernardo and myself, as well as our neighbors, are all
probable voters in the next election. You can bet we will all remember
your non-response.
ROGER HUGHES
Huntington Beach
City should help, not hinder wildlife center
I am shocked, saddened and outraged that the city of Huntington Beach
is forcing the Wetlands and Wildlife Care Center to close [“Wildlife care
center closes doors, except for emergencies,” July 20].
The city should take great pride in having the only such center in
Orange County and do everything possible to keep it open. Instead of
contributing its fair share to the center, the city is demanding that the
center follow bureaucratic city codes that may not even apply to a
wetland, which is where the center is located.
Paving over a parking lot that rarely holds more than five or six cars
will do more damage than it’s worth. It is this type of mentality that
contributes to the toxic urban runoff into the ocean and to diminishing
the water table. There is too much pavement as it is.
Give me a break. The city is telling the center to pave a
25,000-square-foot parking lot for a place that has no visitors or tours;
it just serves injured animals. Volunteers have no time to accommodate
tourists. They are helping to save the animals, which is more than the
city is willing to do.
MARINKA HORACK
Huntington Beach
* EDITOR’S NOTE: The Wetlands and Wildlife Care Center reopened its
doors to animals last week after receiving funds from community members
and businesses.
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