Parkside should be restored as wetlands...
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Parkside should be restored as wetlands
I believe that area should be restored to the wetlands.
Personally, I’m a very big believer in that, and I don’t think we
need more homes. I think we need to keep the beauty in Huntington
Beach. I think it would be a real shame if we lose the wetlands and I
know that little parcel there is important and necessary to make that
whole wetlands work, so I really hope that no buildings go in there
because it’s not going to work. It will work for some people to make
some money, but it’s not going to help that eco-system down there.
PAM VALLOT
Huntington Beach
My wife and I purchased our home on Kenilworth Drive in 1987. We
purchased it, in part, because of its proximity to open space and the
Bolsa Chica wetlands.
We felt assured with the then-designation of the Shea/Parkside
site as wetlands/conservancy on the 1976 County Land Use Plan. We
were aware of the low elevation of our property and the surrounding
areas of approximately 90 acres. We were also aware of the potential
flood hazard for which flood insurance was mandated. Nonetheless, we
were comforted that, in case of flood disaster, the approximately
50-acre wetlands-designated area (i.e. Parkside) would provide an
open-area buffer for flooding in all but the most extreme of events.
Now, 15 years later, I find out that not only is the 50-acre
wetlands open space going to be developed, but the development is
going to be raised/filled substantially and surface drainage will be
toward the existing Kenilworth neighborhood.
Because water seeks the lowest level, my neighborhood, in essence,
will then become Parkside’s buffer in case of severe flood or any
failure of its drainage mitigation measures.
Drainage and flood mitigation measures are supposed to lessen the
casualty hazard for my home and reduce the need for flood insurance
according to published promises by Shea Homes. Contrary to Shea’s
stated promise, I have confirmed that flood insurance premiums for my
home will neither be eliminated nor reduced as a result of Parkside
“improvements.”
At best, I might see a premium reduction if and when the county
completes its improvements on the Wintersburg Channel together with
Parkside “improvements.” This combination is unlikely to occur within
my lifetime. Shea’s promised benefits are dubious at best. At worse,
its written statements are deliberate equivocations.
All in all, I feel betrayed by local governmental processes that
can arbitrarily re-designate land use. I feel betrayed by city
government that treats conservation as a fleeting concept. Instead of
a fire station and open-space wetlands in perpetuity, Huntington
Beach residents will get 170 more McMansions built on a half-million
cubic yards of fill. Suburban planning that forsakes existing
neighborhoods for the dubious benefits of future developments is not
real planning but evidence of the laissez-faire attitudes of
entrenched planning departments that have self-serving agendas. The
same could be said for at least four members of our present City
Council.
DAVID E. HAMILTON
Huntington Beach
Kudos to the City Council for circus ban
Thank you so much for your recent article regarding banning
circuses from Huntington Beach. I think it is about time the city
stands up for an animal’s rights. In many cases, circus animals are
beaten and often injured as a result. I am so glad the City Council
passed this law. As an animal rights activist, the article really
made me smile. Now all we need to do is convince other surrounding
cities to do the same. Thanks again.
LAURA FRASSO
Huntington Beach
Banner law should definitely be repealed
Huntington Beach’s ban on airplane banners certainly should be
repealed. It was a classic example of special-interest politics:
asking the whole city to (potentially) pay the cost of satisfying a
few crybabies.
BILL GIBSON
Huntington Beach
I wholeheartedly agree that the aerial banners are not worth the
legal fight. In fact, I was shocked when this issue even came forward
at the council meeting. There are several of us Southeast residents
who actually like the planes ... it’s part of the ambience of living
by the beach.
I can think of better ways to spend our city’s time and dollars
that would be far more productive (keeping the DARE program alive and
infrastructure improvements, to name a few).
SUZANNE BEUKEMA
Huntington Beach
As much as I oppose the methods the anti-choice Bio-Ethical Reform
Center is using to present its viewpoint, I don’t see that our city
can legally restrict the center with a law against aerial
advertising. I do believe it is clear that the Federal Aviation
Administration will ultimately prevail in any legal contest. I don’t
want our city to spend scarce resources in a fight we can not win.
ARMIDA H. BRASHEARS
Huntington Beach
City shouldn’t back down on banner law
FIGHT! FIGHT! FIGHT! The banner-towing planes are a noise and
sight nuisance. Every city should have the right to stop the
pollution of their environment.
These planes have nothing to do with national security or
interstate travel. Your article states that the federal government
can regulate “airspace.” Just what is the definition of airspace? At
what altitude does the airspace come under the control of the federal
government?
As a homeowner, how much of the airspace above the ground level is
under my control? My title policy does not show any aviation
easement. Could the home owners in the downtown area become part of
this action and therefore have an affect on the FAA’s decision.
Possibly, the title companies could be brought into this action, if
all the effected homeowners file a claim against their title
policies. I hope the city does everything within its power to keep
this ban in place.
PAMELA CHAVEZ
Huntington Beach
Well, I believe those who like the banner-towing planes speak for
the minority in Southeast Huntington Beach. The banner-towing planes
are a noisy nuisance. The excessive noise occurs as the planes
traverse over my house on their return trip back up the coast.
Not only are they low, but are fighting a head wind as they tow
their banner. They make a slow diagonal pass, from the beach, back
over the houses. Sitting in our backyard, enjoying the pool, spa, or
barbecue, becomes routinely, rudely interrupted and disturbed by the
loud roar of the planes engines, straining as they tow the banners
against the head winds above my home.
Then both my and other neighborhood dogs begin to howl and bark,
running around in tight circles, they too are irritated by the noise,
only to add to the noise pollution caused by the planes. The noise
infuriates and angers both me and my guests. It is a distraction that
we do not, should not and will not continue put up with.
As the planes travel down the coast, along the beach, as one sits
on the sand the sound from the planes is not so bad; it blends in
with the noise of the surf, the planes are offshore and are not
fighting a head wind. It is the return flight, over our homes, that
should be the issue of focus.
Keep the planes from crossing over Southeast Huntington Beach and
my home. Let them make their return flight over the ocean.
BRYAN VISNOSKI
Huntington Beach
Airplane propellers beating the air and roaring engine exhaust are
not expressions of free speech. The residents who complain about the
banner planes are most annoyed by the noise. If I drove my car around
town without a muffler I would be stopped and ticketed. Having an
advertisement posted on the side of the car would not elevate my
conduct to a constitutional free speech issue. Imagine for a moment,
the anti-abortion zealots flying their planes low around the
perimeter of Disneyland, keeping up that distracting incessant drone,
dragging their horrific images of aborted fetuses around and around
just like at the beach. Why not? Because those flies know not to bite
the corporate tiger. The Federal Aviation Administration would revise
its regulations in order to restrict such flights, just as the FAA
has revised its regulations to undercut our city ordinance that
banned the banner planes. Small municipalities do not have the
financial and political muscle to protect their commons from
exploitation when that protection intersects the interests of
business. The FAA in the service of the citizens it ostensibly
serves, should serve the public’s general welfare and restrict banner
plane flying.
ROBERT LINDSEY
Huntington Beach
Cook should resign if she can’t be nice
After watching last night’s Nov. 6 public comments during the City
Council meeting, I was struck by the same feelings I had during the
bitter and protracted dog park debate. I voted for Debbie Cook in the
last election, and I am now wondering about that vote.
It is interesting to watch our mayor control the action when it
comes to the public comments segment of the meeting. Last night, many
people from Huntington Harbour came to express concerns over action
taken by the council that could impact their way of life, and
negatively impact their property values. Mayor Cook greeted these
speakers with nasty looks, dismissive, insincere “thank yous” and
generally acted as if she was late for a cocktail party later that
evening.
At one point in the proceedings she impatiently blurted out, “How
many more speakers do we have?”
Upon being informed that there were at least 20 more speakers to
go, eagerly awaiting their opportunity to comment on their particular
issue, Cook let out a pathetic sigh that suggested she wished she
could be anywhere else but at this meeting.
Cook’s patronizing, condescending form of governance does not
flatter her or our fine city. Many citizens are concerned that she
was instrumental in having a religious invocation eliminated from the
beginning of the City Council meetings.
I would settle for her merely keeping civility alive in a forum
where too often personal attacks are prominent. I am concerned that
her curt, paternalistic and arrogant attitude displays her real
feelings for her constituents. And worse, when public speakers who
disagree with our mayor hit their three-minute limit, she
aggressively cuts them off mid-sentence, where she usually lets those
that agree with her finish their thought.
As our city’s ultimate leader, she has set a political tone in our
city that is unacceptable, and she should resign from her position as
mayor if she is not up to the task of treating her political
opponents with dignity and respect.
KEVIN CARLIN
Huntington Beach
Praise Christian will fight for churches
In response to Virginia Simms letter “Praise Christian Center is
all wrong” First, let me say Virginia, you are all wrong. You say
first that Chief Michael Dolder knows what he is doing. Is that why
he allowed Fire Marshall Charles Burney to issue a cease and desist
letter to the church simply because people were meeting to pray?
The building had a current occupancy permit for 81 people to be in
that building for manufacturing, metal working, wholesale
distribution and a machine repair shop. That’s 81 people in a
building with 10 exits with nothing in the building, no work benches,
no machines, no materials nothing but people and chairs. That in the
chief’s opinion is not as safe?
Or how about the fact that the notice given to the church did not
include any description of any violation, which is required by the
city code? The law of the land still gives broad protections for the
free exercise of religion. If there can lawfully be 81 people in a
building doing anything, they can lawfully assemble for worship. If
there can be 81 people talking about landscaping, there can be 81
people talking about God.
The fire chief in this matter has become part of a bigger problem
that has to do with what he personally said to me the day I met him
at the interfaith council’s Procession of Light event. When I asked
him what the problems with the building were, he replied, “It’s a
planning issue.” The city is not saving lives, they are preventing
lives from being saved.
As far as your Bible knowledge goes, sister, you are “all wrong.”
You ought to get back to church yourself and do a lot more studying.
Nowhere in the Bible does it say to do what Caesar says. Your
response reminds me of how Satan misquoted scripture when he was
trying to tempt Jesus in the wilderness.
As far as the church “doing what they want,” you’re wrong again --
we want equal treatment and equal protection under the law. To set
the record straight, the city has treated the churches of Huntington
Beach on less then equal terms with other institutions. Someone has
to stand up for what is right. Praise Christian Center will take that
stand.
DEREK ANUNCIATION
Huntington Beach
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