Fair concert entertainment goes to all...
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Fair concert entertainment goes to all the scalpers
What happened to our local county fair? The concert stage has
turned into an L.A.-style concert venue complete with scalpers
charging outrageous prices and where does the profit go? Not to the
city of Costa Mesa but to some greedy scalper (“A million reasons to
go to the fair,” July 9).
It used to be a pleasure to get your dinner and walk over to the
Arlington Stage, grab a folding chair seat, watch the sun set and
munch on your dinner while watching the mime and waiting for the
concert to start. Then the concert morphed into the Amphitheater that
still wasn’t too bad because the scalpers hadn’t caught on, but
Friday night was a bust. If you arrived at 6:30 p.m., the only seats
available were at the top of the grandstand. If you went out for
food, you couldn’t return because the Fire Marshall determined that
the area was too crowded.
However, I had the best revenge. After waiting at the gate and
hoping that the Fire Marshall would find extra space, I finally gave
up and walked over to the ice cream stand. I bought a dip top cone,
sat under a tree and watched Huey Lewis and the News on the big
screen with a completely unobstructed view. No one stepped on my
toes, spilled beer on me or poked me in the back as they twirled in
time to the music and I walked out to the exhibits without being
crushed by the crowds as they exited.
Hope next year is better. Let’s bring back a kinder, gentler
Orange County Fair.
JANET ROLEK
Costa Mesa
Some are working against Costa Mesa committee
The Human Relations Committee exists to heal wounds in our
community, to help us to understand and get along with one another,
not to change, and certainly not to attack, individuals, cultures or
other groups (“Tackling Costa Mesa’s difficult topics,” Friday).
When individual members speak of Latinos as being dirty and not
like “real Americans,” when they say homeless individuals choose to
be this way and when they say that gays are missing the ‘’moral
link,’’ and are more likely to be child molesters, they are working
counter to the committee’s mandate.
Allan Mansoor and Jan Davidson, in particular, seem to believe
that the committee exists to debate the appropriateness of cultural
and lifestyle issues. Their public statements wound the community
rather than heal it. If they cannot accept and celebrate our
diversity while contributing to our community health, then they must
leave the committee.
Currently, the Human Relations Committee does not have oversight
on its membership. All appointments are made by the City Council.
Membership oversight must be in the hands of this wonderful
committee.
ROSLYN MANLEY
Irvine
A Triangle pie is in order
I would love to see a Polly’s restaurant put over in Triangle
Square (“Changes on tap for Triangle Square,” July 11). We have to
drive all the way to Huntington Beach to eat there at least once or
twice a week. So a Polly’s restaurant in that area would certainly be
appreciated.
VIRGINIA OSHSNER
Newport Beach
City representatives should be booted
The chances of a significant expansion of John Wayne Airport have
never been more likely and the largest share of blame should be
charged to the Newport Beach and Costa Mesa City Council members and
officials: not for what they did, but for what they did not do
(“Supervisors, council extend JWA limits,” June 26).
If those people, who acknowledged that the El Toro airport was a
top priority, would have contributed even half as much effort to
procuring the airport as South County councils did to fight it, we
might have been booking flights out of El Toro within a couple of
years.
They were all talk and little action over the most important issue
ever confronting our cities. When their meager efforts were swallowed
up by the overwhelming and successful campaign produced by their
opponents, they saw defeat in the horizon and looked for a way to
salvage our cities and their reputations.
They plotted a new course of action, one that required far less
thought, action and money. By dropping all of their efforts to fight
for El Toro airport, they got even their oppositions, supervisors Tom
Wilson and Todd Spitzer, to agree to a new John Wayne Airport
Settlement Agreement. Why, the public would probably think they were
heroes. After all, the vast majority of citizens would not know that
the new agreement wouldn’t be worth the paper it’s written on -- that
the various airlines, FAA and other federal agencies could simply sue
and supersede their feeble effort.
By the time our cities are ruined by double the air traffic
fanning out all over them and ground traffic has become intolerable,
when property values have plummeted and the quality of life gone,
they counted on people not remembering how it all went wrong, what
might have been and who should be blamed.
I hope our memories are at least long enough to replace these
officials with others who have the ability and determination to keep
their campaign promises.
CAROL WRIGHT
Newport Beach
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