Readers Respond -- City trying to put the boot on RVS
I am still in a state of disbelief regarding the city of Costa
Mesa’s decision to restrict RV parking. It is my understanding that there
is already a law that restricts RV parking to 72 hours. This seemed
reasonable to us and we subsequently obeyed this law by moving our RV off
our street within this 72-hour time limit.
If enforced properly, this law should work to keep degenerate RVs off
public roads for extended periods of time, which seems to be the core of
the problem. It is not the law-abiding RV owners that are creating this
problem, yet we are the ones who are being punished with the city’s
restrictions.
Forcing us to register every time we take a trip is so unbelievably
restrictive. I can only imagine the bureaucratic nightmare we will have
to endure in order to register.
Will we be forced to wait in lines to get this done (Images of the DMV
come to mind)? Will we have to pay to register? Do we lose the freedom to
decide to take a trip the day before we leave? Should we wear armbands in
public to identify us as “RV owners?”
Unlike the bad press we seem to be receiving these days, the majority
of RV owners are decent, hard-working, family-oriented, law-abiding
citizens who enjoy the RV lifestyle and the freedom it offers to go
anywhere we want, any time we want.
The city of Costa Mesa obviously does not understand this and feels we
need to be punished for choosing this type of vacation lifestyle.
More restrictions should not be the answer, but rather proper code
enforcement. Do not punish the hundreds (if not thousands) of law-abiding
RV owners for the unlawful actions of a handful of people.
ROBIN BENHAM
Costa Mesa
In voting against a law that places restrictions on RV owners Costa
Mesa Councilman Gary Monahan remarked: “There’s a lot of things that I
don’t like the looks of, but I’m not trying to outlaw them.”
I agree with him, but there is a much more important reason for
restricting recreational vehicles from parking on our streets than just
“looks.”
A huge RV is parked on the corner of a quiet street I often visit.
Whenever I leave that street to turn onto one that has a great deal of
traffic, I am forced to inch out very carefully in order to see oncoming
traffic.
By the time I can see around the RV, I’m already at a point an
incoming car could hit me, which has almost happened.
I couldn’t help but wonder about the children playing ball behind me.
That same RV would block the view of cars turning onto that street, and
the driver might not see the children until it was too late to miss them.
I’m writing to say there is far more at stake than the “looks” of RVs.
Restricting their parking on our streets is all about safety.
JANICE WHITE
Costa Mesa
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