Environmental extremes are dangerous There are three...
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Environmental extremes are dangerous
There are three natural dangers in California: wildfires,
earthquakes, and flooding. We know they will occur, but we live here
anyway, figuring the benefits outweigh the risks. We mitigate the
risks, with insurance, building and fire codes, wild land abatement
programs, and flood control channels.
Every person wants a pristine environment, but it takes balance.
The environmental extremism view that Jan Vandersloot pushes forward
leads to unreasonable risks. We need look no farther than the current
wildfires to see how poor wilderness management and the unrealistic
protection of various creatures has led to overgrown wild lands.
Now, Vandersloot would like to protect the nesting and feeding
area for the least Bell’s vireo, an endangered bird, at the expense
of clean beaches and the danger of dangerous flooding. This clog in
the river at Adams Avenue is a snag that catches debris and sediment
that washes down the watershed.
The sediment, or urban runoff, builds up in the river until it
blocks the channel or explodes out into the ocean when a large winter
storm hits. The Army Corps of Engineers and the country is trying to
take the corrective steps necessary to prevent flooding and control
the debris that will end up on the beach. They do this by maintaining
the flood control channels. The Santa Ana River is lined with
concrete from the Coast Highway Bridge to the Arrowhead Pond in
Anaheim.
Most of Orange County, and large sections of Riverside and San
Bernardino counties, rely on this channel to effectively evacuate
rainwaters during storms. In the event flooding takes place, not only
does it jeopardize lives, but sends sewage and various contaminants
into the river and into the ocean.
It is interesting how Vandersloot interjects himself and his group
of the day, such as the Ocean Out Fall Group, into various
improvement projects that have been planned for years, only to cause
confusion and delay. The next thing you know, his
save-the-Balboa-ficus-tree group, which delayed another well-planned
project, will want to plant ficus trees in the river bottom.
Will Vandersloot be forming the clean-the-crap-off-the-beach group
when a winter storm causes flooding and deposits all the trees,
bushes, sludge and trash that is now clogging the river bottom on to
the beach?
We live in Newport Beach to be near clean beaches, enjoy views of
the Pacific and enjoy the harbor. We live in Newport Beach to be
safe. The residents here generally care about the environment and
want the city and county to take reasonable steps to protect it.
However, we do not live here to look at overgrown trees that block
views or to have unruly ficus trees tear apart our plumbing. And we
certainly do not expect to jeopardize public safety and the potential
contamination of the ocean and harbor over a vocal group’s
unreasonable concerns.
To quote Vandersloot, “I don’t understand why they have to have
such a huge concrete capacity in the Santa Ana River as it goes
through Orange County and why they can’t do things like create a soft
river bottom so that water has a chance to seep into the river.”
That’s right you do not understand. So until you understand, maybe
you and your over vocal activist groups should take a seat. The river
is lined from the Orange Crush down to the ocean to keep urban runoff
from seeping into the water table and to maintain the flow of storm
runoff during large winter storms. I suggest you go look at the river
during a heavy rain or look at the historical photos of the last few
floods. The Army Corps of Engineers, the county and various Orange
County cities have been looking at this problem a long time and
determined that the risk outweighs the concerns.
BRENT JACOBSEN
Newport Beach
What’s Newport’s
stake in a bridge?
A bridge over the Santa Ana River at 19th Street is not an issue
for Newport Beach because it goes directly into Costa Mesa and
Huntington Beach.
The city of Newport Beach should have absolutely no say in this
matter as very few of its residents are affected compared with Costa
Mesa and Huntington Beach. Victoria Street almost never has any
significant traffic on it -- I can easily get where I need to go with
no wait with the only exception being in the morning around 7:30 to 8
a.m. and I must use Victoria between the Costa Mesa Freeway and
Huntington Beach daily. The rest of the day, traffic is fairly light.
I see absolutely no reason to create a bridge at 19th Street,
which will significantly and negatively impact nearby residential
neighborhoods, wildlife in the protected areas and the environment.
Since Costa Mesa is interested in revitalization of that area, the
city of Costa Mesa should vehemently oppose any bridge in that
location, as well as oppose any involvement of Newport Beach, upon
whom the existence or non-existence of a bridge will have little
relative impact.
LISE F. SLACK
Costa Mesa
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