Costa Mesa Police Department deserves kudos A...
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Costa Mesa Police Department deserves kudos
A tip of the hat and a well-deserved thank you to the Costa Mesa
Police Department.
Costa Mesa is the only major city in Orange County with such
outstanding performance in reducing crime. The next time you see one
of Costa Mesa’s finest on the street, give the officer a “thumbs up.”
JOHN T. HAWLEY
Costa Mesa
Costa Mesa on the way to becoming an ant hill
From Goat Hill to “Ant Hill” ... a short history of Costa Mesa.
Once upon a time, it was a few buildings at a rural crossroads.
There was a school, a bank, a hardware store and even a drug store.
More buildings went up, and as the population increased, Goat Hill
incorporated and became Costa Mesa.
As Costa Mesa ventured into the snares and illusions of city
government, the City Council and residents struggled to find a
balance as shopping centers, large apartment buildings and light
industrial complexes proliferated. Not many years ago, the City
Council, the staff at City Hall and many dedicated residents hammered
out the 1990 general plan for the city. It was a trial of contrasting
visions in which residents sought assurances of an agreeable and
comfortable environment while others sought to build a sales tax base
that would support an adequate level of government services for the
residents. It was intended to be Costa Mesa’s “Constitution” for land
use in the future.
That general plan provided that for land south of the San Diego
Freeway, which was zoned for high-density residential use, the
maximum number of units per acre was to be 20.
Now, the City Council is considering the desirability of approving
a condo development at 1901 Newport Blvd. with 45 units per acre and,
in the process, creating a four-story escarpment across the street
from a few bewildered homeowners and further congesting the already
failing intersections along the north side of Triangle Square. The
general plan is being ignored. It might as well be torn up if this
development is approved.
That, my fellow citizens, is how Goat Hill is becoming an “Ant
Hill.”
If you want to live in an “Ant Hill,” do and say nothing. If you
want the City Council to observe the provisions of the 1990 General
Plan, show up at City Hall the evening of July 7 and tell the council
that you don’t want to live in an “Ant Hill.”
DAVID J. STILLER
Costa Mesa
Internet flight guides seem a bit unsafe, unsound
It would seem to me, after reading your article on Saturday
regarding the patterns of flight and schedules of airlines taking off
and landing at John Wayne Airport, that we will be providing
potential “terrorists” with much needed information (“JWA tracking
its planes for residents”).
The article is frightening to me, and made me wonder, “What are
they thinking?” To have real-time Internet information for the public
on the flight patterns is asking for disaster. Let’s go back to the
old-fashioned, less-costly method and safer way of reporting traffic
... . “Oh, I hear another plane overhead!”
ARLENE WEINER
Newport Beach
This Greenlight position does not make sense
I just read yesterday’s Daily Pilot regarding the Pelican Hill
resort. My concern really is with Greenlight, which I supported in
2000. But I want to see if this is correct. The Greenlight leaders
oppose a 110-room resort on the Balboa Peninsula, even though the
developer has agreed to go to a vote of residents. On the other hand,
Greenlight states that it is too early to tell that the Pelican Hill
resort will draw any serious concerns, even though the Pelican Hill
project is three times larger and bypasses a vote altogether.
If this is the way Greenlight works, it is time to say goodbye to
Greenlight.
JACK DAVIDSON
Newport Beach
Smith’s comments a reverse slight to Orange County
Steve Smith says “Only now [Orange County] is being thought of as
something other than a haven for rich, white Republicans” (“The
decent thing is to resign,” June 21).
That sounds like the race card in reverse; how dare you? I’ve been
in Orange County and Newport Beach since 1923. There was a time when
Orange County was mostly white and mostly Republican. It was a very
good time and we were very proud of Orange County. I’m not rich, but
I am white and Republican and proud of it. How dare you?
I think Nichols was very wrong. You want him to resign, fine. I
agree. I want you to apologize for your reverse race remarks. Please
do it now.
GEORGE GRUPE
Newport Beach
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