Logic remains faulty on Westside bluffs Most...
Logic remains faulty
on Westside bluffs
Most of the arguments put forth by the industrialists to keep
Costa Mesa’s Westside bluffs in their lowest and worst state are
factually and logically challenged. There are four basic arguments.
Argument 1: The area has been industrial for a long time.
Answer 1: So what? Times change. Also, just because something has
been done doesn’t make it the right thing to do. The bluffs once also
had herds of goats. In the year 2003, they’re as inappropriate on the
bluffs as many of the industrial buildings.
Argument 2: The industrialists have property rights.
Answer 2: And so do all the rest of us in the city. When someone
pumps toxic chemicals into our air, soil and water, those chemicals
don’t stay within the four corners of the industrialist’s property
but affect all of us in Costa Mesa. This is especially true regarding
air pollution. Because of the unique location of the Westside bluffs
industrial area -- upwind of most of the rest of the city -- and the
almost constant ocean breezes, dangerous airborne chemicals put in
the river of air flowing from the ocean over the bluffs quickly blow
over most of the rest of the city. Maybe this is why most of the
industrialists don’t live in Costa Mesa but prefer to live upwind of
the toxic cloud in places such as Newport Beach. Anyone who wants
unfettered property rights should move far away from other people.
The old saw, “Your right to swing your arm stops where my nose
begins,” applies to our situation. No one has a property right to
cause citizens of Costa Mesa to develop cancer or other illnesses or
to cause children to be born with birth defects.
Argument 3: The industrial area creates jobs.
Answer 3: Many of the jobs pay little, and many of the people who
fill them have been attracted to the city by the jobs. They then make
ends meet by using the infrastructure that has grown up around the
industrial area to help these “working poor.” This includes our
ever-expanding charities that provide free food, free medical and
dental care, free clothes, money for paying rent and utility bills
and day care. The city also provides a Job Center, paid for by
residents, to help many workers hook up with many employers from
Newport Beach who own factories on the bluffs of Costa Mesa. All of
this is causing the flight of citizens out of the city.
I could go on, but the above pretty much sums up most of the
arguments being used to try to fool Costa Mesa residents into
continuing to accept inappropriate uses of our land and which present
very real health and safety risks to the residents, and especially
the children, of Costa Mesa. These industrialists would never
tolerate these conditions near their own homes.
Argument 4: The government is trampling on the rights of the
industrialists
Answer 4: Actually, Costa Mesa’s city government has been
protecting the industrial properties by looking the other way and by
allowing improper zoning and land-use regulations. The present move
to improve our city is coming from average working-class residents
who are fed up that Costa Mesa is being treated as the city dump of
Newport Beach. Some “uppity” residents don’t believe that our city
should be sent to the back of the bus. Where some arrogant
industrialists see and want to keep a garbage heap that makes them
money, these residents see and hope to build a shining city on the
hill.
Part of the struggle in Costa Mesa is about who controls this
city. Is it controlled by the voting residents of the city, as is
normal under our form of government, or by rich out-of-town
industrialists who use their money to keep our city mired in
down-scale uses for their personal profit and who may figure they can
buy elections? And, if it is the voting residents of this city who
are in control, don’t we have a right to fix up our city as we want?
Can’t we decide what type of city we want? Or, are the residents of
Costa Mesa something like slaves to the rich industrialists from
Newport Beach? Are we simply helpless victims of a history that first
put goats on our bluffs, then oil wells and now industrial buildings?
What must we accept next? Nuclear power plants? Dynamite factories?
Massive plating plants? Huge pig farms? Isn’t it our right to take
charge of our own city and make it a better place to live and raise
our children?
Some of us have offered what we believe is a reasonable,
free-market compromise to scraping the bluffs of industrial uses.
We’ve suggested that a fairly painless and incremental step along the
way to deindustrializing the bluffs would be to develop an artists’
village within the present industrial area and to encourage artists
of all types to take up residence in live/work spaces. With some help
from the city this could become a unique alternative to Laguna Beach
and could become a tourist attraction for our city. One can imagine
art galleries, small theaters, coffee shops and all the other things
that spring up in an area frequented by artists to develop. The
artists would coexist with some clean industrial uses, which would
keep the area from becoming too antiseptic, and thus, anti-art.
However, instead of trying to work with Costa Mesans in creative
ways to make a nicer, safer city, many of these out-of-town
industrialists are responding with arrogance and are telling the
residents of Costa Mesa to love it or lump it. Some apparently figure
they can buy off local politicians so they can continue to pollute
and drive our city down ever lower. And, what do they care? It’s not
their kids who are breathing the toxic chemicals. It’s not their kids
who are attending Costa Mesa schools. It’s not their home values that
are less than they should be. It’s not the quality of life of their
families that is impacted.
Watch, as the political season that we are now entering really
takes hold, to see which Costa Mesa City Council candidates get the
most donations from these out-of-town industrialists.
M. H. MILLARD
Costa Mesa
Don’t judge all
seniors by one driver
I am now 82 years old, and I am afraid to drive my automobile on
the freeways in this state due to the young drivers that cut in and
out, changing lanes, talking on phones in large SUVs. With hardly
room for a car, over they come.
So I drive only where I am comfortable and try to avoid the young
speeders. I have driven since I was 16, have never been in an
accident and had just one ticket in my life. I have driven many miles
across the U.S. and in cities east and west and also in Canada. My
one ticket was in Tennessee, where I was caught on radar (with
others) for going 70 in a 65 miles per hour zone. I paid my find and
was surprised when I received and letter from Tennessee, thanking a
Californian for being honest; this was some years ago.
However, not long ago, I took my driver’s test. The young man
right behind me was in a hurry, and when we finished and were turning
in our tests, I passed, missing only one of the questions. The young
man failed the test, missing 11 of the questions.
My other concern is young people running stop signs in residential
areas at high speeds. I have seen this, and if by chance anyone had
been in one of the intersections at the time, they would have been
killed.
Now, my reason for writing is that I hope everyone will take into
consideration that we can not be judged by one senior’s mistake, and
we do not all fall into the same category as drivers.
JEAN CARSON
Newport Beach
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