Residents of Surf City want districts The...
Residents of Surf City want districts
The districting of the city of Huntington Beach is the proper way
to represent the citizens of the city. We are governed by the consent
of the governed. Two hundred and fourteen years ago we established a
representational style of government, where citizens gather together
and elect an individual to enact their will. That is the only purpose
of a government. Government is not a debating society established to
pontificate upon the cause celeb de jour.
This city has important issues that need special attention because
the citizens are of that opinion, not because a special interest
group can raise enough money, and convince a minority of the voters
to support their candidate. This city has been in a decades old
malaise ricocheting off one issue to another, creating a city
government with no accountability to the people.
The opponents to the districting plan speak of the necessity of
qualified experts to lead the city. It seems these arguments could be
used in favor of a benevolent dictator, to kindly rule over the land.
This is the exact opposite of what is required. Issues arise from
the citizenry, and stem from the genuine concerns of the same.
Similarly, if a citizen has a concern, it shouldn’t require the
resources of a special interest group to be heard.
Districting will make the council members more accountable, and
that is the real fear of those who oppose the idea.
WILLIAM G. PRESCOTT
Huntington Beach
I hope everyone will vote for the redistricting plan as it will
put the cost of a councilman within my reach. Admittedly, the cost of
an individual councilman or councilwoman will go up because of the
competition, but I can handle it.
And please, those of you who support the redistricting plan, do
not bring [Scott] Baugh or [Rep. Dana] Rohrabacher into it. As for
Rohrabacher, not only is he the guy who voted himself a pay raise in
the face of our ever-mounting deficit, he voted on the federal level
to overturn California’s anti-pollution laws. But then, he spends
most of his time traveling, probably at taxpayer expense.
PHILLIP GOOD
Huntington Beach
No wonder 22,000 people signed the petition for district
elections. Anybody watching the City Council debate districts will
come away believing districts are better for the city. Anything that
changes our current council is an improvement.
JAMES COWAN
Huntington Beach
Cook’s tirade was an embarrassment
Council member [Debbie] Cook embarrassed herself and the entire
City Council with her tirade last week concerning districts. Cook
apparently believes that her opinions are worthy and those who
disagree should go to hell. We should have a healthy public debate
about districts and then let the voters decide. Disparaging people
because they disagree with you is childish.
MIKE GUEST
Huntington Beach
City underestimating its district opponent
I am insulted when the opponents of districts say people who want
them do not understand what they have signed. Then the opponents
discount the initiative signatures. I read all documents before I
sign and for anyone to assume your opponent is just too naive to
understand the issue is an insult. I hope opponents of the initiative
keep this “thought process,” underestimating your opponent is a
brilliant approach. Another concern from the council was maybe a
district would not have a qualified person in that area. You mean out
of a district of 28,000 people we could not find someone with the
leadership and vision as our current council, how arrogant they are!
Simply Amazing.
What we the people see now are one group of people with one
similar agenda, attempting to dominate city politics. Maybe it is
time for everyone in the city to have their issues represented by
someone they know and won’t insult them if it is not their idea.
JEFF RULON
Huntington Beach
Our “good” Mayor [Connie] Boardman is still complaining about the
voters’ right to petition. She thinks that the only reason why 22,000
people signed the Fair Districts petition is because they were lied
to and didn’t know what they were signing.
Boardman please don’t save us from ourselves. We signed the
petition because we want to hold our council accountable to the
people with district elections. Why are you so afraid to let us vote
on it?
HUGH MCGLYNN
Huntington Beach
Council districts are a no-win for the city
In my opinion, districting is a no win way for the city to go. If
anyone has tried to have county supervisors help you for things in
Huntington Beach you know I’m right.
The other district supervisors say “That’s in District 2 and you
have to ask [Jim] Silva your district supervisor.”
The city now has seven council people elected at large and any one
of the seven can help you with problems you have in the city.
Why Scott Baugh, a lobbyist, wants to change the way our city is
run is beyond me.
Just vote no on any ballot measure that wants districting whether
it’s five or seven districts.
EILEEN MURPHY
Huntington Beach
Guilty employees should forfeit money
It is outrageous that government employees -- whether it be the
city, county, or state level -- who are found guilty of wrongdoing
are allowed to keep their administrative leave with pay. There would
seem to be an easy solution to this problem: employees who collect
salaries while being investigated would not take home the pay
themselves, instead it could go into a trust fund. If the employee is
found innocent, then the trust is released to them at that time. If
guilty, then the pay is revoked and the trust returns to the
government.
JULIE BIXBY
Huntington Beach
El Toro airport could provide some relief
Frank Alvarez of Dana Point theorizes (“El Toro won’t be more than
a park,” Nov. 6) that El Toro International Airport may have stopped
the D.C. sniper, kept the New York ferry from crashing, spared Laci
Peterson’s life and prevented Kobe [Bryant] from spending the night
in Colorado. Well, despite the wishes of park true believers, the
airport is not quite that miraculous.
However, turning on the lights at El Toro will instantly provide
relief to victims in other cities, including Huntington Beach, who
are impacted by other airports. That alone is a good reason to open
it. No one is in the noise zone if we created an El Toro
international airport, and it will provide 126,000 jobs and $18
billion of income every year.
It took the fires, [“Another good reason to use El Toro,” Oct. 30]
and the illusion of a great park in Orange County to galvanize public
opinion against the city of Irvine’s federal land grab for the
benefit of housing developers.
DONALD NYRE
Newport Beach
Recently a couple South County letter writers weighed in with
rebuttals against El Toro. Much to the Independent’s credit, they
allow a diversity of opinions from folks in different cities, which
makes for a healthy discussion.
On the other hand, in a South County paper, a letter writer
suggested using the Seal Beach Naval Weapon Stations as an
“alternative” to El Toro.
Since I live in North Huntington Beach near the base, I fired off
a rebuttal letter that was never published. So, why is there not a
two way street between North and South County papers?
REX RICKS
Huntington Beach
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