Mailbag - April 10, 2001
- Share via
Story nicely captured the spirit of Valinda Martin
Young Chang’s Sunday story titled “Painting a survivor’s picture,”
(March 18) about Valinda Martin was beautifully written, and very
touching and captured Valinda’s effervescent personality.
I imagine your readers gleaned some of this as they read it. However,
you to have to be with Valinda to appreciate how strong, wise, courageous
and gorgeous she is, and how well she maneuvers from one place to
another, in and out of a car, the market, how she runs her fascinating
art store on Balboa Island and how she makes her long distance trips to
make purchases for it. Wherever she is, she radiates charm and warmth.
The fact she cannot walk doesn’t enter your mind. You instantly become
captivated with her exuberance, her beautiful smile and the joy she
creates.
I am her neighbor and friend, but she makes everyone feel as though
you are her friend. She is a treasure in today’s world and an inspiration
to everyone who is fortunate to know her. Thanks for the story. WINNIE
ROSS
Corona del Mar
Nearby cities need affordable housing, too
The Westside of Costa Mesa is an area of very high-density living.
High-density living creates a great strain on city services and the local
environment.
More single-family residences and lower density townhomes are needed
in this part of town, with fewer high-density apartments.
If our neighboring cities offered more affordable, low-income housing
opportunities, it would take the strain off the resources of one small
part of the coastal area and make the issue more manageable for the whole
area.
One outcome of the city-sponsored workshops regarding the
revitalization of the Westside was the appreciation of our diversity.
If we do not want “communities for only the wealthy,” as stated by a
Balboa Island resident, and if that concept is “unacceptable and
undermines the very concept of our great democracy,” then the people she
is championing need to have choices.
Please tell us, where is the low-income, affordable housing on Balboa
Island and in Newport Beach?
DIANE LADUCA
West Costa Mesa
Reserve Steve Smith’s column for South County residents
This is about Steve Smith’s column on March 10 (“Want to see the El
Toro airport fly? Here’s how”). With his usual effusion against El Toro
airport and particularly against Newport Beach, why has he been chosen to
print this in a paper that reaches Newport Beach and Costa Mesa
residents?
This tripe belongs in a South County newspaper not in this area.
Smith is clearly opposed to the vital interests of both Newport Beach
and Costa Mesa.
His column is an insult to the readership of this area that cares
about the future of the two cities most affected by the environmental
impact of John Wayne Airport.
Please stop printing Steve Smith’s column.
BARBARA BROOKS
Newport Beach
Human relations commission should hold awards banquet elsewhere
I’m curious as to why the Orange County Human Relations Commission is
holding its annual awards banquet in Costa Mesa. If memory serves me
correctly, Costa Mesa withdrew from the commission a couple of years ago
-- the only city in Orange County to do so. What else would you expect
from a city that refuses to honor Martin Luther King Day?.
Shouldn’t this organization hold its awards banquet in a city that
actually believes in and abides by its principles?
BOB GURAN
Costa Mesa
EDITOR’S NOTE: The city of Costa Mesa indeed does not belong to the
Orange County Human Relations Commission, but since 1987 has had its own
Human Relations Committee.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.