Caps needs; so are other forms...
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Caps needs; so are other forms of commuting
I feel the John Wayne flight caps should be extended. I live close
enough to the airport that I know the problems involved but a quality
extension and airport facility is needed until an alternative is
arrived at. If needed, I feel that a general tax on both aircraft and
or automobile travel should be put into a general fund to expedite
and improve rail transportation or bus transportation or other
high-speed modes of transportation so that we have alternatives to
airplanes and/or automobiles.
BILL NYHOLM
Costa Mesa
El Toro airport is a must-have for the county
Everything is not being done to ensure the extension of the John
Wayne Settlement Agreement. We need El Toro airport, and that’s all
there is to it. It’s the biggest scam in the history of Orange
County, what they did to us with El Toro. We should make the Navy
take it back and rebuild it and then give it back to us as a full on
international airport.
JO BLACK
Costa Mesa
Study of 19th Street bridge
just makes good sense
Your Tuesday question regarding the 19th Street bridge issue is
misleading. The question that was being asked in the Community
Redevelopment Action Committee was whether or not to do a study on
how having a bridge would affect the area from several points of
view, including traffic, not whether to build a bridge.
As a person who lives near enough to be impacted by this bridge,
and who has another family member who lives even closer to the
designated study area, I vote a resounding “yes.” However, what I am
saying “yes” to is a study to see what the impact would be on our
area, with a decision to be made from knowledge. Right now we do not
have this knowledge.
While I do not live on 19th Street, if I did I would want to be as
fully informed as possible. Right now a lot of these folks are living
in limbo not knowing whether to “flip to fly.” Should they improve
their properties or give up and move to Irvine? Certainly the study
shouldn’t be shouted down by those who have an agenda or preconceived
notion pro or con regarding a bridge. How about just letting us have
a look at the facts.
KATHLEEN ERIC
Westside
Time has come to do
nothing at Fairview Park
It has finally happened. Our city, Costa Mesa, has moved forward
with its “improvements on our last vestige of open land -- Fairview
Park.
I suppose I shouldn’t complain. When my wife and I moved here more
than 12 years ago, there wasn’t much more space than there is now.
But, soon the Segerstrom bean field will give way to a housing tract,
and our natural progression seems to be toward Fairview Park. It is
sad, because I enjoy open space, even if it’s a dirt field. But
mankind has a pathological disdain for undeveloped land, and this
attitude has pushed us past environmental suicide.
At a recent City Council meeting, a speaker stated the most
reasonable suggestion I’ve heard -- “do nothing.” Where man
interferes with nature, there is always negative impact. Even when we
are creating positive environmental changes, it is always in response
to damage we’ve already created. We don’t need any new trails,
parking lots, bathrooms or other alterations in Fairview Park’s
existing habitat; anything we do from this point forward will have
negative environmental impacts.
The only action that needs to be taken in regards to Fairview Park
is the action of inaction.
J.B. LITVAK
Costa Mesa
Estate tax is gift to the rich
In a recent letter, Newport Beach’s U.S. Congressman, Chris Cox,
wrote that the “Death Tax” (he prefers the pejorative term for
“estate tax”) typically is paid by “small business owners, family
farmer and ranchers.”
How can this be true? Most of the wealth created during the past
generation came from gains in real estate and common stocks. And
since these assets grew in value tax-free, the estate tax is not
double taxation.
The estate tax is one of the oldest and most common forms of
taxation. Let’s call repealing it what it really is: a gift to the
rich.
RICHARD ALEXANDER
Eastside
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