Newport Beach’s telescope logic just doesn’t...
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Newport Beach’s telescope logic just doesn’t add up
I just read the article about changing our historic telescopes to
some binoculars (“Not seeing eye to eye,” Friday).
1. We live in a historic town, and these telescopes have been
around since I was a little boy, and that is a long time.
2. I have shown these telescopes to my grandchildren and held them
up to see. I also remember how good I felt when I learned how to
focus it. I was also looking forward to showing them to my
great-grandchildren.
3. If you use the city’s logic, we should pay more to get rid of a
known, reliable business and to hook up with an unknown, not to
mention the historical loss. If you use that logic next year, we
could replace the binoculars with video screens.
4. The reason for writing this letter to you is to get other
people to call the city of Newport Beach and voice their complaint.
LEO DEMPSEY
Newport Beach
Costa Mesa’s codes are already quite generous
The Daily Pilot is not doing a good service to the community in
asking the building code question on Wednesday without first
explaining to the readers what the Costa Mesa building codes are
(Question, “Are Costa Mesa’s building rules too strict?”).
I would like to see an article that explains just what our codes
cover and why they’re there, and then to ask that question would be a
little more responsible.
Many of your readers are not going to have any idea what the
actual rules are; they’re just going to know what they’ve heard from
rumor or innuendo, and the truth is that Costa Mesa codes are not
restrictive at all. They’re very generous compared to a lot of other
cities around here.
As was pointed out at the Planning Commission hearing last week,
out of 41 recent plans for two-story additions, only three of them
have been contested.
The new building code has a feature that requires notice be sent
to neighbors who live within 500 feet, and that’s really the only
substantial change to our code in I don’t know how many years, 20 or
something like that.
That notice is served to protect the neighborhood to some extent
because it gives the neighbors a chance to weigh in about whether the
project is or is not compatible with its surrounding area.
ROBIN LEFFLER
Costa Mesa
Coastal commission needs to provide more leeway
I would add my vote to those who have a negative perception of the
California Coastal Commission, and I know many others who would vote
the same, including several who need a little dredging around their
docks (“Survey reveals mixed opinion of commission,” Aug. 10).
You quoted Sarah Christie, of the commission staff, who encouraged
our Newport Beach planners to go ahead and craft their own coastal
plan, with the implication that the commission would approve it.
This is not consistent with the example cited in the article of
Rodolphe Streichenberger’s Marine Forest project.
Streichenberger’s project was approved by the Newport Beach City
Council, and by the state Fish and Game Department. However, after
several years of successful operation with no harm to the
environment, the coastal commission vetoed the project.
Environmentalist Susan Jordan, quoted in the article, mocked
Streichenberger for using man-made items in his marine forest, and
described his operation as a garbage dump on the ocean floor.
However, “man-made” would include:
1. steel and concrete piles used for fishing piers all along the
coast;
2. old rail cars and derelict ships that have been sunk along the
coast to form fishing reefs;
3. aquiculture projects all over the world (from Norway to New
Zealand).
Among other things, I would like to see the California Coastal
Commission give up their micromanaging of dredging in Newport, and
get out of the way of the marine forest experiment.
KEN HOLLAND
Newport Beach
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