Mailbag - June 27, 2002
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I agree with Danette Goulet’s concern about destroying a football
fields length of beach for a tidal inlet for the Bolsa Chica.
Also, the concern that the breakwaters of an inlet might cause severe
beach erosion problems along the coast has not come even close to being
answered to my satisfaction.
I agree that ocean water is needed to restore the Bolsa Chica. But I
ask the question: Why do we have to destroy one priceless resource to
save another?
Several years ago on a trip to represent the city in Washington DC, I
asked the assistant secretary of the interior: Why can’t we build a huge
tunnel under the beach to do the job?. He replied, “That sounds like a
good idea.” His aide immediately said, “But sir, I think it would be too
costly.”
Yes, it would be costly. But in evaluating the cost we need to factor
in the cost of what would be lost. What is the value of a football field
length of beach serving a metropolitan area of 10 to 15 million people?
What is the cost of annually moving thousands of tons of sand to
restore eroding beaches?
To those that say it can’t be done, I remind them that this is a
country that put men on the moon. To those that say it’s too costly, I
ask them to factor in the cost of what will and may be lost.
DAVE SULLIVAN
Huntington Beach
Sea is life -- inlet is needed
After reading Danette Goulet’s recent article reflecting her opinion
of the unfortunate location selected for the Bolsa Chica tidal entrance,
all I could do was groan, “Oh no, not again.”
The battle to restore the Bolsa Chica wetlands to its former viable
self seems to have a life of its own, which keeps popping up like a
target at a skeet-shoot.
Fortunately, the lowlands restoration has been approved. Pacific Coast
Highway improvements and the location of the ocean entrance at the south
end of the wetlands has been painstakingly studied and approved by most
all of the necessary permitting agencies.
Anyone questioning the need for the ocean entrance needs only to have
seen Councilwoman Shirley Dettloff’s recent “Your City, Your Issues”
program on HBTV3 where she interviewed Jack Fancher the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife biologist who heads up the restoration committee.
Fancher says it all in four short words, “The sea is life.”
ADRIANNE MORRISON
Huntington Beach
The real inlet problem will be water quality
The inlet for the Talbert Marsh did not improve the area’s surfing
waves. To be fair, it didn’t particularly harm the nearby surfing,
either.
The process of sandbar creation Vic Leipzig describes does
occasionally occur a few hundred yards down the beach in front of the
Santa Ana River mouth, but only after heavy rains, and we know what that
means. Thus, the focus of the debate regarding the Bolsa Chica inlet
should focus on water quality -- the real issue here.
The question is not whether we’ll lose a few yards of beach, but
whether miles of ocean will become unsafe. Although some claim water from
the Wintersburg Channel, which drains over 28 square miles, will not
reach the wetlands, this smacks of the standard Amigos public relations.
Moreover, if the wetlands are connected to Huntington Harbor, we’ll be
swimming in boat discharge and bird feces.
MARK MACKINDER
Huntington Beach
Police should clean up its own mess
The Huntington Beach Police Union should stop dodging and bite the
bullet.
It seems the city’s sweetheart lease of the old gun range property to
the Huntington Beach police for a mere $1 per year for 30 years wasn’t
generous enough. The police union was the sole beneficiary of all profits
generated at the range and used the site for its corporate headquarters.
Now that it is time to clean up the lead contamination generated by
their gun range business, the union refuses to pay and wants the
taxpayers to pick up the tab. I think this is outrageous.
The police union ran the business that caused the contamination and
they should show some integrity and clean up the hazardous waste site
they created.
The city should put any thought of a new multimillion dollar regional
gun range on hold indefinitely. The taxpayers can’t afford this luxury
for the few.
JIM MARTIN
Huntington Beach
Let’s see some action -- treat the plume
Regarding the sewage plume, our feeling is that the study leads to
more studies.
It’s time to stop the studies and treat the sewage. Even though the
current studies have not shown conclusively that the plume is the primary
source of pollution that doesn’t mean it isn’t the source. We would like
to see some action.
MERLE AND MIKE MOSHIRI
Huntington Beach
Is our ocean dirty? As far as our ocean goes -- yes, it is filthy as
long as the “sanitation” district dumps sewage in it. The Bush
Administration now acknowledges global warming, but doesn’t know what to
do about it.
We all acknowledge smog, despite those who inform us that the air is
healthy. And I’m thankful to Mayor Debbie Cook for informing me about the
waiver and daily sewage plume.
Now we can all consistently voice and vote to get rid of that plume.
SUE DOMINQUEZ
Huntington Beach
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