Leave the kids alone to play as...
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Leave the kids alone to play as they want
I am not afraid to say it. My name is Chris Ganz, and I guess I am
one of the so called “illegal trespassers” who dares to enter the
dirt field that the naturalists call the wetlands. I guess I have
been “trespassing” in that field for about 27 years now. I have also
been doing it right alongside of them, but since they don’t have a
BMX bike, that makes it OK.
That field has served as a place of joy for thousands of
Huntington Beach kids over the years. I began playing there in 1976,
and almost 30 years later I go out there with my son and share with
him a place that holds many memories of a great childhood. Back in
the day, it was called the Dirt Place and I still can clearly
remember getting the gang together and riding our bikes down there to
see who could jump the farthest off the Cherry Bomb or the highest
off of the Bump Jump.
I am all for saving the environment, but at the same time I think
we should be able to use it also. The thing that really irks me
though is how it’s always the kids being picked on for daring to go
where there is still a small portion of undeveloped land that they
can build a couple jumps on.
[Cartoonist Steve] Bolton has once again shown his ignorance by
portraying the BMXers and paint ball players as bad kids. How are
they any different then the grouchy old man on his mountain bike with
his dog?
They are in violation of the same laws as the kids, even more so
actually as most of them have their dogs unleashed and leave piles of
waste behind. I say let the kids play and quit harassing them. If it
is illegal, then Huntington Beach’s finest can surely take care of
the problem.
It must be very easy to challenge them when you get to decide what
gets printed and what doesn’t. And if one of these kids takes the
time to write you, anonymous or not, accept it with open arms. At
least they made an effort. There are a lot of kids that can’t read or
write at all, so please don’t ever discourage it. As a person who
writes for their profession, I would think you would be able to
appreciate that.
CHRIS GANZ
Huntington Beach
Editor’s note: We encourage letter writers to submit their
opinions on all topics. But the Independent, as a matter of policy,
will not publish anonymous letters to the editor.
Keith Bohr did need to step down
Yes, [Keith Bohr] should step down. No one believes that he did
not mean to influence or intimidate city employees for his clients.
We love our city but we probably have one of the worst City Councils.
SONIA MARKWALD
Huntington Beach
City should appeal award in case
The Wersching award was outrageous as are so many awards handed
down these days. Please appeal this decision. The story in the
Huntington Beach Independent newspaper described an officer doing his
duty and a suspect challenging him. He did what I would expect him to
do. Huntington Beach should spend the dollars needed to rectify this
ludicrous award.
JACK MOSSLER
Huntington Beach
Paying the award money means accepting the fact that the police
officer handled the incident improperly. As the same time, we, the
public, encourage our law enforcers not to do their job. Appeal the
case.
GEORGE LEE
Huntington Beach
City needs to pay up to Saldivar’s family
Rather than appeal the jury’s verdict awarding [Antonio]
Saldivar’s family $2.1 million, the city should do the right thing by
paying the victim’s family for their loss, and by firing Officer
[Mark] Wersching.
It is shocking that after a jury found his actions unreasonable
and violative of Saldivar’s civil rights, that Wersching would be
allowed to continue working as a police officer. How can the police,
who are supposed to protect and serve, expect the community to have
trust and confidence in them when they look the other way when an
officer kills an unarmed young man?
Criminal defendants who are convicted by juries are always urged
to accept those verdicts, the city and the police should do the same.
There will be no second chances for Saldivar, and there should be no
more chances for Wersching. Not only can’t the city afford to
subsidize the violent misconduct of such officers, but from a moral
perspective it shouldn’t.
DEREK BERCHER
Huntington Beach
Problem is from path and altitude
The increased incidents of large, low-flying commercial jets over
Huntington Beach are a fact. The reason; added commercial flights
into the Long Beach Airport. The neighboring residents of that
airport have been locked in a battle with the city over what they
call a “quality of life issue” caused by noise from low-flying
aircraft. That noise “footprint” is now impacting the city of
Huntington Beach.
For many years, I have lived in the Huntington Beach Meadowlark
Golf Course area directly under the straight-in approach to runway
30, the runway used by all large commercial aircraft headed for the
Long Beach Airport. Never in the past has it been a problem. The
airlines coming into Long Beach have been relatively few and
consistent in their flight path altitudes over our city. Noise has
never been an issue.
In the last few months this has changed. JetBlue, has arrived.
JetBlue is the new low-cost airline operating out of Long Beach. The
problem for the residents of Huntington Beach is not so much the
increased number of flights but rather the approach and altitudes
many of these airplanes are maintaining.
Rather than straight-in approaches from the south/east, as has
been customary for American Airlines and other carriers flying over
our city, some of the JetBlue flights are arriving from the west then
banking sharply over our city to align themselves with Long Beach’s
westerly runway 30.
In doing so, they must increase power due to inherent loss of lift
in a turn (the greater the bank, the greater the loss of lift and
resultant power increase). Combine this increased power with
inadequate altitude and you have a noise problem for those living
under the flight path. I would estimate that many of these flights
are crossing Huntington Beach at barely, if not even below, 1,000
feet. Also, keep in mind that these particular flights are at an
all-time high and increasing. By the end of July, there will be
something like 41 commercial flights a day (mostly JetBlue) operating
out of Long Beach. That’s approximately one flight every 20 minutes
during the Long Beach Airport’s normal operating hours.
Holding a commercial pilot’s license with the ratings of
multi-engine, instrument flight and flight instructor, I am not
anti-aviation. Nor am I airline bashing. Having a low-cost airline
like JetBlue flying out of a nearby airport will benefit us all --
let’s all hope that they succeed. This far away from touchdown at the
Long Beach Airport, large aircraft should create no noise problem for
Huntington Beach residents.
The answer lies in coming over the city at a slightly higher
altitude thereby maintaining a constant descent at reduced power
settings. Large commercial aircraft should be at 1,000 feet or above
at a point three to four miles from touchdown -- not over our city.
CHARLES DILDINE
Huntington Beach
Plant should not be approved
I say no at this time. The desalination is fine in some
circumstances but at the meeting of the Planning Commission Tuesday
night the desalination people said they only wanted the cleanest
ocean water.
That ocean water by the AES plant is contaminated most of the
year. They also said that their discharge wouldn’t affect the
contamination problem we have now because we don’t know what’s
causing it. I don’t feel that’s the proper answer. This thing needs
more study.
EILEEN MURPHY
Huntington Beach
NO to the desalination plant. We already have AES. We do not need
another privately operated industrial plant, totally free of local
control on our beach front. The issue of ocean pollution may yet be
laid at the door of AES and the sanitation plant with one pushing it
out and another pulling it back in. Let’s not compound it further.
CECE MCCOURT
Huntington Beach
We wish to express our strong opposition to the proposed
desalination plant projected for Southeast Huntington Beach. It is
the wrong facility in the wrong place. The Planning Commission should
not approve this plant.
JOSEPH AND JOAN ONGIE
Huntington Beach
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