Baugh deserved honor, not bashing I agree...
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Baugh deserved honor, not bashing
I agree that Scott Baugh is deserving of the title “Newsmaker of
the Year.” However, I am disgusted that the Independent chose to
bestow this “honor” merely as a means to bash Baugh and the district
initiative.
I do not know Baugh or his reasons for launching the petitions
that propelled the Fair District Initiative onto the ballot, but I
thank him for allowing me and my neighbors the vehicle for change and
improvement to our city government.
Thank you, Baugh. You deserved better from the Independent.
CARL WRIGHT
Huntington Beach
Baugh must answer tougher questions
Jenny Marder’s “happy face” treatment of Scott Baugh (“Drawing new
battle lines,” Jan. 1) and the entire districting issue was
journalism at its most lightweight.
If ever a subject cried out for greater depth of inquiry
concerning the “Newsmaker of the Year,” Baugh and his motivation for
the districting measure is it. As Jonathan Pryce’s newspaper mogul
villain in the James Bond movie “Tomorrow Never Dies” explains, it’s
not the who, what, when, or where, but the why that is truly
important to a good story.
Marder sought no responses from Baugh to the tough questions
regarding districting and his motivation for pursuing it that the
author has successfully dodged since his initiative qualified for the
ballot.
Marder seemed blissfully unaware that her subject has steadfastly
refused to publicly debate or defend his own creature that has
“proven to be a political tinderbox.” And yet, this is the heart of
what is qualifying Baugh’s status as “Newsmaker of the Year.”
There was no mention of any of Baugh’s law clients or corporations
like AES that have contributed heavily to the districting cause or
the political advantage being sought by these contributors to further
their own agendas.
Doubtlessly, Marder would claim that this piece was not about
investigative journalism, but shouldn’t the “Newsmaker of the Year”
be shown (dare I say it, exposed) in both lights as a “mover and
shaker?”
Hopefully, the Independent will be a little more “inquiring” when
it runs cover stories like this in the future, because we really want
to know.
TIM GEDDES
Huntington Beach
Let’s just enforce laws against littering
In regards to banning smoking on the beach, the big problem is the
cigarette butts. We already have a law it’s called littering. All we
have to do is just enforce the littering law and that will take care
of all the cigarette butts in the world.
JOHN GLOWACZ
Huntington Beach
Restrict smoking to an area in parking lot
I believe smoking on the beaches should be banned along the water
and all over the sandy area. It should be in a restricted area in the
parking lot away from the traffic areas so that the oncoming ocean
breeze doesn’t blow it in someone else’s face. A restricted area in
the parking area back away from all traffic areas wold probably be a
reasonable place for smokers to smoke.
ARMIDA BRASHEARS
Huntington Beach
Banning smoking on beaches excellent
I think it’s an excellent idea. Before moving to Huntington Beach
I lived on Treasure Island in Florida, and I lived on the beach and
anybody smoking, the breeze always wafted it toward me. The beach
should be a relaxing place and not a place where you’re irritated by
smoking.
YVONNE SCANNELL
Huntington Beach
I strongly support banning smoking on the beaches. The fact that
smoking is a filthy and unhealthy habit notwithstanding, the
practical side of a ban is that beaches would be much cleaner without
the thousands of cigarette butts that smokers carelessly discard
after finishing a cigarette. The sooner the ban occurs, the better.
BERNIE TORBUK
Huntington Beach
Let’s look at AES’s track record here
So let’s review what AES has done for the city of Huntington Beach
over the past several years. First, AES convinced city voters through
a huge ad campaign and hundreds of thousands of dollars that it
should be exempt from paying city taxes like all the rest of us do.
Then, it took advantage of a state energy crisis (either real or
imagined) to get huge concessions from the State Energy Commission to
modernize its plant without the normal approval process that would
take years to complete. AES got those approvals in months rather than
years and thus the citizens of Huntington Beach that we will be
looking at that dinosaur for at least another 10 years. Then, most
recently, the State Board of Equalization changed the way its
property is assessed saving them millions of dollars and all but
killing the long-awaited Southeast redevelopment. I wish I had that
kind of clout regarding my property taxes.
Now AES is putting up tens of thousands of dollars in support of
the measure to cut the city up into five districts. I would hope that
the citizens of Huntington Beach are wise enough to see the
districting measure for what it really is and to see that those who
are backing it are not looking out for the best interests of the
city. It is simply an attempted power grab on the part of those like
AES. Their reasons for their interest in districting are clear. Money
and control of the City Council.
DAVID GUIDO
Huntington Beach
Good for AES being reassessed
As far as that AES property reassessment, I think it’s just
wonderful the way they reassessed it and the city ought to just suck
it up and forget about it, because those people down in the city hall
don’t have any better sense than to sue somebody.
DONALD LIMBOCKER
Huntington Beach
Huntington is fine without districts
No to districting for Huntington Beach. In the first place most of
the signatures were collected fraudulently. I argued at the markets
while the gathering of signatures was in process. The petition
carriers were saying “Sign this petition if you want term limits for
City Council?”
The truth was what I told them, “The City Council already had term
limits.”
They were paid for each signature by special interests and
gathered enough signatures to put the measure on the ballot. Voila!
It isn’t about term limits, it’s about districting.
The ballot measure is trying to change our City Council to five
members instead of the seven council people we have now and only
allow us to vote for the one nominee in our district. We in
Huntington Beach can vote for all of them instead of this cockamamie
district idea where you can only vote for your district nominee.
Leave us alone, special interests.
Huntington Beach is doing fine without voting by districts.
EILEEN MURPHY
Huntington Beach
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