Mailbag - May 16, 2002
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Outfall is the sanitation district’s Smoking gun
So there’s 240 million gallons of sewage a day released 4 1/2 miles
offshore, with repeated beach closures of unknown source of
contamination? There are 16,000 U.S. sanitation districts and only 30 or
so have waivers to not fully treat the sewage (Orange County is the
biggest and hardly poor compared to the Alaskan villages that have the
waivers). Gosh, maybe it’s the bird droppings in the wetlands that’s
causing the problem (as if the birds were cleaning up after themselves
before 1999). Are these people dense or what?
Steve Bolton’s Orange County Sanitation District smoking gun cartoon
(Community Forum, May 2) fits oh, so perfectly.
Thank you for summing up our thoughts to a tee. That picture was
awesome.
BRUCE WAREH
Huntington Beach
Districting will give voters an even playing field
Recent letters submitted by readers, question who ispaying for the
signatures to place districting of the City Council on the ballot.
To those posing this question I can easily assure them it is not the
same group that paid signature gatherers to put the anti Wal-Mart issue
on the ballot. Two of our current council members, Connie Boardman and
Debbie Cook, went absolutely ballistic to secure and encourage others to
sign petitions to put the defeated Measure I on ballot. Their argument
was to preserve “open space,” which was grossly misleading. If Wal-Mart
had been defeated, a housing project would have taken its place to
further burden our city’s support services.
Are these two council persons, joined at the hip, afraid that Scott
Baugh’s proposal to have representation by district might erode their
backers control of our city, the Bolsa Chica groups and Huntington Beach
Tomorrow.
It is well known that they were steamrolled into their council seats
by these well-organized groups that want Huntington Beach preserved for
the birds and completely ignore our city’s sad infrastructure and
economic future.
Representation by district will give all the voters an even playing
field and wrest control of our city’s future from these special interest
groups.
Who cares who is paying for the effort to put this issue on the
ballot? The voters, just as we did on the Wal-Mart issue, will have the
final say with their ballots. Could certain groups be running scared?
BOB POLKOW
Huntington Beach
Enough with the studies let’s stop polluting
County officials should act on combating the gross pollution of the
Pacific Ocean.
Five years ago is not too soon. This scenario requires no training in
rocket science. We the public, now know Orange County Sanitation District
officials prefer saving a buck to protecting the public’s health.
Dumping 240 million gallons of half-treated sewage 365 days per year,
finally amounts to billions of gallons of pollution -- all deposited
barely five miles off shore. This is criminal, in my opinion.
Cognizant county officials responsible for this disastrous condition
on our beaches have earned their day in court. Grand juries should
recommend individual indictments. County health officials could be
empowered to take over the sanitation operations immediately. Their
mandate would be to upgrade the discharge, the effluent, into the ocean
is which is clean, clear and clarified. Nothing less will do.
A.J. SPIEGEL
Huntington Beach
Sanitation district and city officials should stop studying the
contaminated ocean water and start actively combating it.
On my daily walk to the beach, as soon as I hit Main Street, I get
this awful smell permeating from the gutters. After I settle down with my
morning coffee down there it smells like the sewer. I just wonder where
is it coming from and why, after all these years, we still have this
problem? I wish they would hurry and fix it.
ICEY CINOCCO
Huntington Beach
I am calling about the Orange County Sanitation District’s failure to
take care of the contaminated waters off of Huntington Beach.
It’s pure negligence on their part to not do something about it, and
to continue stonewalling us with study after study when it’s clear that
the access release of untreated bacterial waste into the ocean is causing
this.
Soon we’re going to have the same problem with Bolsa Chica with the
PCBs that are going to be floated out into the ocean as they dig up and
restore the Bolsa Chica. There just seems to be a complete disregard for
the ocean in this city, yet the city wants to continue calling it Surf
City and capitalize on the ocean.
DAVID MCGORRIN
Huntington Beach
A fond farewell to a friend
I would like to wish my friend, roommate, and 75-year Huntington Beach
resident, Ruben J. Alvarez a happy farewell. He passed away April 30,
2002, in his sleep. His service was held Friday, May 10th at 11:30 am at
Saint Bonaventura Catholic Church with a grave site service to follow at
Good Sheppard Cemetery.
A. JEFF JOHNS
Huntington Beach
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