Committee deserves more time to do...
Committee deserves more time to do the job right
Your editorial regarding the Costa Mesa Community Redevelopment
Action Committee and the 19th Street bridge is off base (“Bridging
the gap to reality,” Sunday).
First of all, the committee recommended studying the effects a
bridge would have on the Westside, not a feasibility study for a
bridge.
You also say the bridge is a bad idea because it would make a
“highway.” What if a bridge reduced traffic on Victoria? Or if the
additional traffic caused by a bridge would allow for development of
a first-class market and similar shops along 19th Street? You don’t
know the answer to that or a dozen other important findings that
might come from a study.
You mentioned hundreds of folks objected to a 19th Street bridge.
Compared to the city population, a few hundred is nothing. Therefore,
we feel an impact study for a bridge is necessary before planning a
Westside redevelopment. Otherwise, the planning decisions would be
based on personal preference or knee-jerk reactions, like your
editorial. The committee would also like information on the effects
of development of the Banning property and the rezoning of the
industrial zones to residential, proposed by the city, before making
recommendations. The current problems on the Westside are primarily
the result of bad, or at least slapdash planning. The committee is
trying not to make the same mistakes.
Your editorial also takes issue with the makeup of the committee
and chastises them for taking so long to act. One of the reasons the
committee has been delayed is because the City Council has been
trying to shove the rezoning of the Westside industrial property down
our throats. They have painted that rezoning as “redevelopment,”
therefore, under our committee’s jurisdiction. In fact, that rezoning
has little to do with committee plans for the Westside, as the city
plans to go ahead with it regardless. The committee would need impact
studies for that, as well, before approving, or disapproving, the
rezoning. It has asked for those studies.
So far, the committee seems to want to go slowly, prepare
carefully and not repeat the mistakes of its predecessors. Whether
they will succeed, only time will tell.
Give the committee a fair chance before being so negative.
MICHAEL STEINER
Community Redevelopment Action
Committee member
Until a change happens, the blame rests with voters
There is no question about it: The Newport Beach City Council race
between Councilman Gary Adams, Rick Taylor and Ron Winship was
tainted.
The big question now is: “So what?” Ellis and political
consultants like him have been getting by with dirty campaigning for
years because we let them.
Hey, the public wouldn’t have even heard about this mess if Taylor
didn’t take the time and trouble to find proof. Even with the proof,
it will be interesting to see if anything comes of it all.
Our voting process is compromised in every election because of lax
rules and regulations, as well as the lack of enforcement of the ones
we do have. Until we collectively demand a chance, we have no one to
blame but ourselves.
CASEY MATHEWS
Newport Beach
Dirty political practices need to come to an end
Information that has come forth since the Newport Beach City
Council election, thanks to the Daily Pilot, has made it clear that
voters had incorrect information about local candidates due to
deceptive schemes by their opponents.
How much did the telephone campaign scheme, designed to
intentionally mislead voters, hurt Greenlight candidate Rick Taylor?
How much of an impact did malicious information about Wendy Leece
have on voters? We’ll never know for sure.
What I do know is that dirty politics must stop, and what better
place to begin that right here in our community. Guidelines and laws
should be developed with serious consequences for the perpetrators of
false information. Otherwise, the status quo will continue. Voters
will be misled by unscrupulous people who have little respect for the
integrity of campaigning or our voting system, and candidates who
fought fairly will be at a disadvantage and likely lose a race that
they might have, maybe even should have, won.
ANN SMITH
Newport Beach
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