Mailbag - March 21, 2002
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The political cartoon by Steve Bolton in the Independent on March 14,
did not reflect my opinion and many of the people who wrote in the
Mailbag regarding Chief Lowenberg’s retirement. Perhaps Bolton should
move to East LA or some other crime-ridden area where the chief of police
is not so strict. That is what the cartoon is saying to me. At one time,
Huntington Beach was the safest city in the U.S., under Lowenberg’s term.
DOLLY SLATER
Huntington Beach Cartoonist Steve Bolton left out a few “nono’s” on
his Lowenberg roast. No Gangs. No Drunks No Fires and No Murders.
BILL BORDEN
Huntington Beach
Lowenberg did this city proud
I had the pleasure to work for four Huntington Beach police chiefs
during my 29 year career at the Huntington Beach Police Department. Ron
Lowenberg’s years of service to the people and City of Huntington Beach
have been extremely positive, for the most part, for all involved. Like
any chief, Lowenberg was only as good as the people who worked under his
command.
While I enjoyed working with him as one of the managers of the
department I would also say that he would not have been nearly as
effective without the cooperation and dedication of the men and women
doing the daily tasks to make the citizens of the community safe.
Lowenberg had the foresight and the ability to realize that without
the working “folks” he would not get the job done. Lowenberg has
excellent people skills and he used them to make our city the best place
in Orange County to live. He should be commended for taking a very
difficult position and making the best of it.
Our community owes him and every other police department employee our
thanks for their commitment to Huntington Beach.
CURTIS J. COPE
Retired Lieutenant
Huntington Beach Police Department
Parents need to teach children tolerance
All attacks on people are cause for concern. It is interesting that
the Huntington Beach mayor and the City Council think that the schools
and community leaders are failing to teach tolerance. When has moral
behavior become the exclusive responsibility of the schools?
Missing in the article was any reference to the parents who have the
responsibility of raising their children to respect others. There were
probably some signs of this type of behavior before this incident
occurred.
Mayor Debbie Cook, who rebuffs requests for moral guidance at City
Council meetings, now wants the government to teach those things she
rejects.
However, she is not the first self-serving politician to promote the
idea that schools should raise children and be responsible for their
behavior.
By doing so, she encourages parents to abdicate responsibility for
their children’s moral education and ultimately, their behavior.
CHARLES OSTERLUND
Huntington Beach
In regards to the 99 Cents store hate crime, I’m curious as to why it
becomes the responsibility of the schools to raise our children? Why
aren’t the parents of those children responsible for their behavior and
their attitudes? I don’t believe the school is responsible for the
children’s morals and behavior. They are responsible for their education.
I believe we need to check the homes of those children and find out
what is going on in these homes that they are being raised this way and
behaving this way. I don’t think the principal of a school or the
superintendent is responsible. We as parents need to take responsibility
for our children.
MARY OSTROWSKI
Huntington Beach
When parents fail, we look to school and church
Preventing hate crimes by juveniles begins at home where children are
controlled by the parents. How parents respond to a child’s ideas, as
well as the simple fact that parents decide where and when a child can
go, reinforces learning values. Parents are the key to teaching tolerance
but when they fail, the next choice is to ask schools and churches to
help.
Do you know if your neighbor’s children have anyone except their
parents in their lives teaching them their values? Children see you. Are
you a good role model? You live right there. Do you say hello to them
when they see you? Do you know their names?
Parenting classes are the first step. What about giving out parenting
class information at a child’s six-week checkup? We cannot chose the
temperament a child receives but we can learn to deal with what is there.
Not all of us have a family and friendship network in place,
especially in an upscale community where both parents work. We need all
the help we can get to cope with those short attention spans, and even to
learn how to praise our kids, not just discipline them. They must get
recognition for positive actions.
We have many volunteers in our city and many positive ways tolerance
is already being taught, but learning where tolerance starts and is
reinforced at home and must be continuously reinforced.
The Children’s Needs Task Force is trying to establish a Family
Resource Center at the library, alas “you can take a horse to water but
you cannot make him drink.” Volunteer in your city and teach values
through example. Volunteerism also saves taxpayer money for positive
programs.
The Huntington Beach Human Relations Task Force and the Interfaith
Council provide ongoing events that support multicultural understanding
but if the parent will not take the child there, the only frontier left
is in the school. The last step is to go to the courts and ask them to
mandate that juveniles and their parents go to parenting and behavior
modification classes as part of their sentencing. We need parenting
classes for the families of juvenile offenders.
KAREN JACKLE
Huntington Beach
Disrespect needs to stop
Your article in today’s Independent [March 14] asks “What should be
done to halt hate crimes in Huntington Beach?” The No. 1 priority must be
to promote respect for others as human beings, no matter what their
language, culture or ethnicity might be.
In your article about the most recent attack, you mentioned the case
that triggered the formation of the Huntington Beach Human Relations Task
Force, the attack on George Mondragon, an American Indian. In the same
issue, there’s a report on a Little League team called the Indians.
Come on now, this has been an unacceptable practice for years. Would
the team use as a mascot a man with a turban and beard, as an Asian
Indian? What kind of reaction would that produce in your Task Force?
American Indians find this kind of use (abuse) of their identity
offensive, just as Asian Indians would.
I read an article sent to me via e-mail about a school with mostly
American Indians, Latinos and whites. In a turnabout on this type of
mockery, they named their team “the Fighting Whites.” Their motto,
printed on their shirts, is “Every thang’s going to be all white.” (AP,
Greeley, Colorado, March 11).
Get with it, Huntington Beach Task Force.
LINDA LIGHT
Huntington Beach
Intervention and change are the answer
As a founding and current member of the Huntington Beach Human
Relations Task Force it is my opinion that, for the most part, local
schools have special programs that address diversity and are doing a fine
job given the resources available. Our Task Force has active
representatives from almost all the city high schools and some of the
middle schools in the city. Many students have taken advantage of field
trips to the Museum of Tolerance.
The Task Force has held communitywide celebrations of diversity every
year of our existence. The Orange County Human Relations Commission has
helped organize youth events and special days dedicated to the message of
tolerance for diversity and yet we still have youth committing violence
on persons of color. It is shameful, but unfortunately we cannot
legislate against ignorance or prejudice.
The excuses presented in the news from the parents of the perpetrators
of the latest hate crime incident were pathetic. Shouldn’t a child with a
shaved head or a shirt with a swastika tell them something is horribly
wrong no matter what the victim allegedly said or did? Perhaps the
sickness attributed to these adolescents is home-grown. Children are the
low hanging fruit. We, for the most part know where and how to find them.
It is the intolerant adult that is real problem. I do not believe
children are born intolerant and hateful. They are taught.
What we can do as a community is be vigilant to the early signs of
hate. Parents must take responsibility for who their children associate
with and what their children read or access via the Internet. Parents
must be responsible to speak up when they see their children with
swastikas or skinhead style dress or talk. Immediate intervention is the
only way we can prevent our children from acting out hatred and
intolerance learned.Parents must be held accountable for hate crimes done
by their children and should be prosecuted as well. Both children and
their parents should be directed by the courts to participate in
tolerance programs together.
I would like to see diversity incorporated into the standard
curriculum of Huntington Beach schools. Teacher intervention should be
supported to include student, parent and teacher conferences as a tool.
Teachers should receive increased training and bonus pay for efforts to
increase their effectiveness in early intervention.
The community challenge is to develop programs that will help families
rehabilitate and heal. Everyone has the capacity to learn and change. It
is going to take some tough love to halt hate crimes in Huntington Beach.
JEFF LEBOW
Huntington Beach
A letter to Aris Gadduang
I am writing on behalf of the City of Huntington Beach Human Relations
Task Force to express to you our outrage at the terrible attack
perpetrated upon you.
Hate crimes are not acceptable or tolerated in our city. We decry all
bigoted and vicious actions. Please know that this attack does not
represent the thinking of the majority of the residents of Huntington
Beach. Most of us take great pride in our community and enjoy it’s
cultural diversity, which enriches the quality of life for all of us.
Many of us devote much of our time and effort to celebrate that diversity
and to encourage the support of human dignity for all people.
Through the work of our human relations task force, we have made
progress in Huntington Beach. This shameful event is a wake up call that
our work is far from done. We will continue efforts to make Huntington
Beach a community in which people live together in peace, understanding
and mutual respect.
FRED R. PROVENCHER
Huntington Beach
chairman, City of Huntington Beach Human Relations Task Force
Swept away by those numbers
Re: Somebody’s cleaning up on these sweeping jobs [March 14]
I enjoyed your article.
Thanks for the enlightenment about the sweeper drivers and prevailing
wages. Another disgusting situation for the Surf City taxpayer. Who’s
looking after us?
MARLEM MASON
Huntington Beach
Paying double what another qualified contractor would cost for street
sweeping or any other contract service is unconscionable.
Thanks for revealing this inappropriate use of the citizens’s tax
dollars.
The reason we are a charter city is to make and enforce laws that
benefit the citizens of the city. Let’s hope the City Council will pass
an ordinance that awards contracts to the lowest qualified bidder without
a prevailing wage clause attached to it.
ED KERINS
Huntington Beach
Good riddance to you Lowenberg
I would like to thank Huntington Beach Police Chief Ron Lowenberg for
his decision to retire later this year. As a member of the infamous
$100,000 club, he will retire with a pension of well into the $100,000
arena. Not a bad deal for someone who did not do his job.
As I understand it, even the militant police union did not like him.
This in part explains their blue flu protests, public demonstrations and
unprofessional behavior at City Council meetings.
And of course, we have the famous Fourth of July ineptitude of police
beating innocent citizens with batons, including breaking the jaw and
knocking out the teeth of a 17-year-old girl.
I hope that they use better judgment when choosing Lowenberg’s
replacement.
To date, the city has exercised very poor judgment. It is high time
for some intelligence at City Hall.
JAMES H. BRIDGES
Huntington Beach
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