Pageant belongs in Laguna Beach I feel...
Pageant belongs in Laguna Beach
I feel that the Pageant and Festival of Arts are uniquely Laguna
Beach. They belong in Laguna Beach and not in Las Vegas or touring
other cities or countries. That would be for money, which should not
be the principal motive, in my estimation.
Don’t go flirting with other beaus, keep faithful to the city that
loves you.
JACK MEALER
Laguna Beach
Anti-gay sentiment is unfounded
The Supreme Court’s wise decision granting equal right to gays and
lesbian should be celebrated.
We are equal to anyone and have never, as Dan Huston intimated,
asked for special rights -- merely to be treated equally in all
aspects of society. I had to laugh at first when I read of Huston’s
ignorant rant that he saw many of his young players “recruited” by
gay residents, then I felt sad for him.
Gays do not “recruit.” Homosexuality is a born trait, much like
eye color and hair color. As to his assertion that “it lessens morals
and social guidelines” I was puzzled. Does divorce strengthen morals?
Does pretending to be something you are not strengthen society? There
is no place in modern society for such homophobia and bigotry. Does
Huston also believe that African Americans should still live in
bondage?
Lastly I did have to laugh out loud when Huston called Laguna
Beach “headquarters for the gay community.” If he is so offended and
is afraid of being “recruited,” why doesn’t he simply move? I and
many friends will gladly offer to help him move to a more homophobic
area where his prejudice will be welcomed.
SKIP HOUSTON
Laguna Beach
Story missed important point
Your story regarding the recent Supreme Court decision on the
Texas sodomy case was anything but fair and balanced.
To have chosen only those with unfavorable views of homosexuality
to speak against the decision showed the obvious bias of authors of
the story. It is entirely possible to hold that the court’s decision
was wrong while not believing that the practice of sodomy in the
privacy of your own home between adults should be illegal.
If given the opportunity to vote I would cast my ballot to throw
out laws regarding sodomy. But I believe that this was a bad
decision. The court has once again invented a “right to privacy” that
does not exist in the Constitution much as they did in inventing the
concept that women had the right to abortion. These issues should be
decided by our duly elected representatives, not five judges whom we
did not elect and who never have to face the voters.
If the legislature in Texas wanted to pass a law that sodomy was
illegal, let them do so. If the people of Texas don’t like the law
they will vote the offending legislators out of office. Moral issues
such as abortion and sodomy and gay marriage should be decided by the
people, not five judges who will never have to face the wrath of the
voters. We the people should be deciding issues of such moral
significance to our country not some activist judges.
JOYCE HOFFMAN
Laguna Beach
No reasoning with dogmatic believers
Sonya Versluys bemoaned the loss of her 4-year-old daughter’s
innocence in her letter last week (“Shame on protesters for graphic
display,” Coastline Pilot, July 4).
She was probably too preoccupied with caring for her children,
driving safely and the shock of seeing the displays to notice that
the protesters themselves were barely 10 to 15 years older than her
daughter. The greater shame is on the elders of these protesters for
exploiting them and turning them too into zealots.
Nice try, but trying to use reason with people of dogmatic faith
doesn’t work.
NIKO THERIS
Laguna Beach
Thanks for making event great
More than 60 people attended the American Legion and the Veterans
of Foreign Wars Fourth of July Independence Day Celebration at the
American Legion Post in Laguna Beach.
The program included all four verses of the Star Spangled Banner,
a reading of the Declaration of Independence, the telling of the fate
of the signers of that document and a ringing of bells to celebrate
it, the “forgotten war” 50 years ago in Korea and a flag folding
ceremony.
After the ceremony, a picnic lunch was served to all. This was
made possible through the efforts of the ladies of the Legion
Auxiliary and the generous support of food and donations from the
following merchants: Center Meat Co., Ralphs, Albertsons, Pavilions
and Wild Oats markets.
We thank these supporters and everyone for making the program and
picnic a great success.
RICHARD MOORE
Commander,
Laguna Beach Post 222
Approval of Mar Vista unbelievable
At the recent City Council meeting where the “Mar Vista Mansion”
was approved, several council members commented about “11th hour
presentations” and that the information should have been presented at
the Design Review Board level. On the other hand, council members had
also recommended that only new information be included in testimony
for an appeal such as this. It is pretty difficult to adhere to both
of these conflicting instructions.
The South Laguna Civic Assn. would like to make it clear that
there were people from the community, including representatives from
the civic association, who testified, that 60% of people had
previously testified before the Design Review Board, and that new
information was presented -- in addition to making some of the same
pertinent points as had been made to the review board --
specifically:
The house is too big and does not fit the character of the South
Laguna Village neighborhood. More than 11,000-square-feet of living
space, nearly 4,800-square-feet of garages, along with over
2,000-square-feet of decks and accessory buildings cannot be called
anything but excessive -- especially because the structure will be
highly visible and the project creates severe impacts.
The access is difficult and constricted to a very long, very
narrow driveway and not appropriate for large numbers of vehicles.
Construction impacts, especially from removal of large amounts of
excavated material (10,000 cubic yards, 1,000 truck loads), will
create severe hardships on people living near the house and along the
haul routes.
The impact on the globally endangered Southern Maritime Chaparral
is too great and could be lessened by reducing the footprint and the
areas of grading, decks, pavements, etc.
At the Design Review Board meetings, with all the comments and the
obvious lack of conformity to the city’s recently adopted
mansionization policies and ordinances, we thought that the review
boardwould respond by instructing the applicant to reduce the size
and impact of the project -- as the review board has done with many
projects of much less impact. We were frankly astounded that the
board approved the project with only board member Eve Plumb thinking
that it was too big.
We believed that the appeal of the review board decision would be
welcomed by the council as an opportunity for them to reaffirm their
recent stance on mansionization. Thus we were even more astounded and
terribly disappointed that the council allowed this mansion to go
forward, with only Mayor Toni Iseman seeing the excessive nature of
the project in our small scale neighborhood.
It is vital that council members back up their words and policies
with appropriate actions at crucial times. And voters should insist
that anyone who serves on the Laguna Beach City Council live up to
their promises and public positions.
BILL RIHN
President, South Laguna Civic Assn.
I am writing to voice my strong opposition to the inclusion of Lot
4 in the Driftwood Estates proposal.
This massive, 50,000-plus-square-foot lot, situated on a prominent
knoll above South Laguna, is a major threat to our village
atmosphere, aesthetic views and the overall environmental health of
our hillsides.
The future estate on this property would tower over the
surrounding neighborhood, whose homes rarely exceed
1,500-square-feet, and would be a prominent example of
mansionization. In addition, it would destroy crucial habitat,
protected under the City General Plan and would utterly eliminate a
beautiful public view shed into Aliso / Wood Canyon open space.
Because Lot 4 is situated on a major South Laguna promontory,
building envelope restrictions are not enough to protect this
valuable parcel. Any home on Lot 4 would be visible from dozens of
vantage points in South Laguna and the impact on the surrounding
environment would be significant.
Seeing the council majority’s consistent record of approving major
development projects, even in the face of massive public opposition,
I have become extremely disillusioned with this council’s supposed
representation of our community interests. Their handling of the
Driftwood Estates proposal will be the ultimate litmus test to
determine whom they represent -- the community, or out-of-town
developers.
The 50,000-plus-square-foot Lot 4, which can legally feature a
home in excess of 25,000-square-feet and is situated on a prominent,
open-space knoll, is so obviously incompatible with our village
community that its approval would be laughable. Yet the
18,000-square-foot mansion approved above Mar Vista proves that
apparently no mansion is too large for the council majority’s rubber
stamp. It is time to stop degrading our village community with
obscene mansions. Let’s start by getting rid of Lot 4.
KEVIN KILLACKEY
Laguna Beach
The Coastline Pilot is eager to run your letters. If your letter
does not appear, it may be because of space restrictions, and the
letter will likely appear next week. If you would like to submit a
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at 494-8979; or send e-mail to [email protected]. Please
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