Mailbag - Aug. 26, 2000
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My letter is in response to yesterday’s article (“Raising Thomas,”
Aug. 16). As a parent of a child with Down’s syndrome, I feel empathy for
Thomas’ mother. Parenting a child with significant challenges is not
always easy, and the way to navigate through the system in order to
access the appropriate educational supports and services for your child
can be perplexing.
As a veteran parent, and also a professional in the field, I would
like to share with your readers some of the many resources they can reach
out to for help. Team of Advocates for Special Kids is the
parent-training information center in Orange County funded by our federal
government. It provides free telephone support and advocacy to anyone who
has a question regarding educational rights and opportunities and they
offer many other services to help educate and support parents and
professionals.
Each school district also has a community advisory committee that
meets on a regular basis during the school year to discuss issues of
concern to both educators and parents of children with special needs.
There are also parent support groups representing a wide range of
disabilities throughout Orange County that hold regular meetings and
provide networking opportunities. Many times mentor parents can be
connected with parents in need here as well.
I can’t speak for other districts, but it has been my experience that
Newport-Mesa has worked hard at being responsive to parent’s concerns and
students rights. The 1997 reauthorization of the Individuals Disabilities
Education Act strengthened students’ options and the parents right to
participate. While the system itself is still not perfect, and
educational timeliness incredibly frustrating to work with, it has been
my experience that the administrators and educators in Newport-Mesa want
what is best for its students. Finding the perfect recipe for success is
not a simple process. It takes time, creativity and most of all
communication.
It’s nice to know that we parents of children with disabilities are
not alone. The answer, support or solution is not always easy to find but
it is out there. I wish Terry Meek and all other parents luck in their
search.
SANDI AMES
Costa Mesa
Please leave the American Legion alone
Apparently nothing is sacred anymore. To relocate our American Legion
Post 291 for the accommodation of a new hotel on the peninsula is
inconceivable (“Decision time? Not any time soon,” Aug. 22). Besides the
obvious fact that the peninsula doesn’t need any more traffic, people or
chaos, no one deserves that piece of property more than the people at the
American Legion.
JULIE MATTSON
Balboa Peninsula
Halloween banners aren’t as ugly as other things in city
Who makes the rules in our city? The powers that be are whining about
some Halloween banners in a parking lot (“Halloween spirit or advertising
hook?” Aug. 22), while the Car Gallerie on Harbor Boulevard (which used
to be Hollister’s Nursery) just painted it’s roof to look like a circus
tent.
DAVID JAMES
Costa Mesa
Dunes resort could ruin the look of the bay
The proposal to build a large hotel on the Dunes property brings to
mind what took place at Port Ludlow in the Puget Sound area in Washington
state. For years we thought this was a scenic, charming and attractive
place to visit. But then a huge hotel was built on a spit of land out in
the bay, and it completely ruined the entire scenic atmosphere of Port
Ludlow.
We now face a closely similar option at the Dunes. A large high-rise
hotel at the Dunes is aesthetically as ruinous of the attractiveness of
that part of Newport Beach as that monstrosity is at Port Ludlow. It
would be like putting a shark in a goldfish bowl. Now is the time to
bring this folly to a halt before we are confronted with the miserable
consequences of mindless expansion.
DAVID H. WALLACE
Newport Beach
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