Green starts with a prayer
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Incoming Mayor Cathy Green kicked off her first meeting on Monday
with an invocation, a move some have been waiting years for and
others criticize as unconstitutional and divisive.
City watchdog Mark Bixby contends the prayer is an act of
exclusion rather than inclusion.
“Invocation proponents are fond of citing the religious roots of
our country’s founders,” Bixby said. “But they always neglect to
mention that many of those founders fled their homelands because
their governments had deemed certain religions to be acceptable and
others to be unacceptable. By choosing who gets to deliver the
reinstated invocation, this city will be going down the road of
implicitly deciding which religions are the acceptable religions.”
Green said the prayer, which was given by her father, Thomas
Clary, a bishop of the Free Catholic Church, was intended simply to
be uplifting, a way to start off on a positive note.
“I don’t see how saying prayers and thanking God for our blessing
and asking for guidance is exclusive,” Green said, adding that she
plans to work closely with the interfaith council to make the
invocation as pluralistic as possible.
Councilwoman Debbie Cook did away with the prayer when she took
office as mayor two years ago. Outgoing Mayor Connie Boardman chose
to leave it off the agenda again last year.
Cook contends the city runs the risk of intruding on people’s
beliefs by introducing prayer into the political arena.
“I believe so firmly that government should be inclusive rather
than exclusive, and there are so many ways that you can cross that
line,” Cook said. “I think we should go out of our way to make it
comfortable for all.”
During the invocation’s two-year absence, resident Debbie Borden,
or an occasional stand-in, has stood and said a prayer during public
comments.
Before the prayer, Boardman ended her mayoral term with the annual
state of the city address.
Boardman spent her final minutes in the mayor’s seat touting a
list of the past year’s accomplishments.
Storm drains installed along the coast to reduce ocean pollution
caused by urban runoff and two new sewer lift stations were on her
list as was the Hyatt Regency Huntington Beach Resort & Spa, which
opened in January, creating more than 350 new jobs. Construction
underway on the Bella Terra shopping center and Waterfront
residential housing were also on her list of the year’s
accomplishments.
Boardman also lauded the new sport’s complex, the Surf City credit
card and the cleanup of cancer-causing chemicals from nine
residential yards.
“Despite losing members of our staff, the city has continued to
provide a high level of service to our citizens,” Boardman said.
Before Boardman stepped down, Cook praised her tenure as mayor
with a quote by Martin Luther King Jr.
“Martin Luther King once said that ‘the measure of a man is not
where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he
stands at times of challenge and controversy,’” Cook said. “The mayor
is a target of so much controversy and challenge, and I have not seen
anyone stand taller than you in the moment of conflict and do it in
such a fair and thoughtful manner.”
Water district educates the community
Orange County Water District officials are embarking on a
countywide campaign to educate residents about the its new wastewater
treatment project.
The district is trying to educate as many parent teacher
associations, community organizations, religious groups, hospitals,
school boards, business and environmental associations as they can
about the Groundwater Replenishment System, which is under
construction and expected to be finished in 2007.
“We’re trying to really just reach out to everybody in the public
and everybody who lives in the north and central Orange County to let
them know what’s going on here,” water district spokeswoman Jenny
Wedge said.
So far, they have provided PowerPoint presentations to about 600
groups.
The system will take treated sewage water from the county’s
sanitation district and, using a micro-filtration system, reverse
osmosis and an ultraviolet light disinfection process, purify it to
levels that meet state and federal drinking water standards.
Half of the purified water will be pumped into the saltwater
intrusion barrier. The other half will be pumped through a 13-mile
pipeline to percolation ponds in Anaheim, where it will sink into
county aquifers and blend with the groundwater. The system will
produce enough water to provide for an additional 140,000 families in
the county.
“It meets our drinking water standards, it’s safe and high quality
and helps us meet our future drinking water needs,” Wedge said.
To schedule a presentation, call (949) 583-2621. For more
information on the groundwater replenishment system, log on to
https://www.gwrsystem.com.
Surf City’s concert band plays Christmas
The Huntington Beach Concert Band will present an evening of
traditional holiday songs at its annual holiday concert, on Dec. 14.
The 65-piece brass, wind and percussion ensemble will play a
selection of pieces including “A Canadian Brass Noel,” “Fantasy on
Coventry Carol,” “Home for Christmas,” “Christmas in Europe,” “A
White Christmas,” “A Sussex Carol” and “A Holiday Prism.” They will
also invite the audience to sing along to a medley of traditional
Christmas carols.
The Huntington Beach Concert Band is a self-supporting group that
exists on donations and membership funds. The band holds a dozen
concerts annually throughout Orange County and hosts the Summer
Concert Series in Huntington Beach Central Park.
The concert will be held at 4:30 p.m. Dec. 14 at the Huntington
Beach Central Library Theater, at 7111 Talbert Ave. For more
information, call (714) 891-6856 or (714) 963-3681.
Land Trust gets grant for restoration
The National Fish and Wildlife Service has awarded a grant just
shy of $20,000 to the Bolsa Chica Land Trust.
The money will be put toward restoring habitat at the Bolsa Chica
Mesa. The Land Trust, with the help of the Bolsa Chica Stewards, will
use the funding to enhance the four acres of coastal sage scrub
habitat, renovate the two information kiosks and upgrade existing
trails on the mesa to prevent erosion of the bluffs.
Flossie Horgan, executive director of the Bolsa Chica Land Trust,
described the Bolsa Chica Stewards as “the gardeners for the Land
Trust.”
“The money is going to go for their continued work on coastal sage
scrub habitat restoration,” Horgan said. “We’re extremely pleased
that we could get this federal grant.”
The Bolsa Chica Stewards have contributed as much as 17,000 hours
of work over the past seven years and planted more than 4,000
California native plants to the Bolsa Chica Ecological Reserve.
To volunteer, contact Kelly Keller at (562) 920-4215 or come to
the Bolsa Chica parking lot at PCH and Warner any third Saturday of
the month at 9 a.m.
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