Making a mountain out of a mogul
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Shaun Mehaffey
I have to put my two-cents in on Jenny Marder’s May 15th “Sensitive
habitat a secret battleground” and Danette Goulet’s response to the
codes of law as referencing trespassing.
First, I do not condone destruction of sensitive or public
property. But, as a father of four, and a 40-year resident of
Huntington Beach, I sympathize with the kids that are using some of
the last open spaces in this city. My father moved to Huntington
Beach in 1943 and was able to grow up on “the hill” of this town.
I was able to visit the cows at Ed’s Dairy or go to the old
bunkers at the end of Bolsa Chica and ride my stingray down beaten
paths without having to worry about environmentalist or
weak-backboned local politicians screaming for the police to write
stiffer fines. We’d fall, we’d limp home, we’d get our share of
stitches. It was part of what was great about growing up here. It
wasn’t Long Beach or Los Angeles where all the playgrounds were
asphalt. It was good old dirt.
I do think that there are too many environmentalists who preach
their moral high ground after they have driven their environmentally
wrenching cars to their locations of protest to do so. Or, in your
case, used the vast resources required to print a newspaper with your
(and my) opinions.
Such as the paper mills, utilities, delivery methods (cars -- no
longer kids on bikes. Have to get it to the consumer faster.) We have
a tendency, as we grow older to jump right up on that soapbox and
condemn others while blindly looking the other way when it comes to
how we ourselves live or justify why we should be able to do what we
want at the “accepted” expense of our Earth.
In Marder’s article, the emphasis is placed on the environmentally
sensitive area that these hoodlums are destroying. Yet in that same
article, it references that the area may be harmful to kids playing
in the area because of PCBs that might be in the area.
In Goulet’s article, her stance is “if it’s trespassing, it’s
trespassing” therefore they should be punished. Yet again in Marder’s
article it talks about Mark Bixby making his rounds in the area. Has
he been given the right to walk around that area or is he too
trespassing? Or is that OK, because it’s for a just cause? Orange
County Sheriff Sgt. Mark Levy states that, “It’s an attractive area
for someone who wants to do something illegal” It’s an attractive
area for those that just want to be kids, too. Away from the concrete
jungle we have created in our community.
At the end of Marder’s article there is a quote from Bolsa Chica
Environmental Zen Master herself Adrianne Morrison: “There’s a lot of
damage going on,” said Morrison, who estimates the activity has been
occurring for the past two to three years. “You can see that where
they are [building] moguls, they had thrown dirt on top of plants.
They’re decimating vegetation in the area.”
I know my father used to ride his bike back there in the ‘40s and
‘50’s. I know I used to ride my bike back there in ‘60s and ‘70s.
Let’s get real here. Then she goes on to end her rally call by
saying, “The package of paintballs may say it’s biodegradable, but so
is my car.” How fitting. The No. 1 reason for global decimation --
our cars. But let’s throw kids in the clinker for making moguls for
their bikes or playing paintball in the area.
I do understand that we need to preserve our land for our
children, but lets not do it at the expense of our children at the
same time.
* SHAUN MEHAFFEY is a Huntington Beach resident. To contribute to
“Sounding Off,” e-mail us at [email protected] or fax us at (714)
965-7174.
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