Mesa North home does not fit...
- Share via
Mesa North home does not fit with zoning
We also suffer from the very same circumstances in our R-1 zoned
neighborhood (“City approves two-story plan in Mesa North,”
Wednesday). There is a home for developmentally challenged children
directly across from our front door. Six to eight cars are parked in
front of various houses along the street. Plus constant activity --
employees coming and going, loud voices, slamming car doors, gunning
their engines, etc.
Five days per week, four school buses arrive -- the first at 7
a.m. All return again mid- to late afternoon. The drivers honk their
horns until a staff member finally brings out or takes in the
children. Not to mention the fumes and pollution produced while these
vehicles are idling.
In addition, there is also a home for senior citizens across the
street. This leads to numerous emergency visits by the paramedics and
refrigerated food delivery trucks, running their loud engines up to
30 minutes while unloading. This is R-1 zoning?
The present situation is certainly unfair to homeowners in the
area. Our formerly quiet neighborhood is under siege.
With all the traffic and noise, it’s like living in downtown New
York City.
MARYALICE WILSON
Costa Mesa
Health clinic shouldn’t be in neighborhood
Want to win an argument -- just bring up all the helpless,
vulnerable children who will suffer. That’s just what Patrick Kunody
(husband of CHOC marketing director) did in his letter to the Daily
Pilot (“Health clinic can better prepare children for school,” Aug.
27). Who dares to debate the issue now? I do.
A school in a residential community is not an appropriate place
for a health clinic. If it is not there, that does not mean the
health of that neighborhood’s children will suffer any more than the
children of any other community. In fact, it could actually increase
harmful risks.
The additional cars on streets unprepared for increased traffic
could create a safety issue. Also, inviting sick and contagious
children to a school environment invites potential contact with well
students. That too is an unnecessary health risk.
There is a reason hospitals, clinics and doctor’s offices are in
areas zoned for them. Residential neighborhoods are inappropriate
environments and the Costa Mesa City Council should make no
exceptions.
JUANITA PEREZ
Costa Mesa
Dog laws are treated unfairly in Newport
The judges are not the problem (“Newport can tighten leash,” Sept.
5). Their legal interpretation that the leash law does apply to the
public surf is just rote. The real culprit is the pettiness of law
enforcement by a bureaucratic administration. Such rigorous follow
through by the dog catcher must certainly make Newport Beach a better
place to live without danger of lawsuit or any nonconforming
behavior. Meanwhile, coyotes must be protected and allowed to
threaten family pets in the canyon areas. This dual standard must
make sense to someone, but not me.
DWIGHT RYAN
Newport Beach
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.