Catching up on news
- Share via
JOSEPH N. BELL
Here are some of the things I discovered in the piles of unread
newspapers awaiting me when I returned from a holiday trip:
First, on the high side, just a few weeks after my daughter, Patt,
and I bought a 20-game package to Angel games in the upcoming
baseball season, the Angels’ new owner, Arte Moreno, thanked us by
acquiring outfielder Vladimir Guerrero, certainly one of the best
hitters in the game today. With their earlier free agent signings,
the Angels are loaded.
I know we’ve been down this road before -- notably when Gene Autry
tried to buy a pennant by signing a passel of high-powered free
agents and, years later, with the disastrous signing of former
Newport Beach resident Mo Vaughn -- but this feels different.
And for frosting on this new cake, Edison Field became Angel
Stadium when Southern California Edison withdrew its name sponsorship
-- a misnomer that has been hanging around the Angels’ neck ever
since baseball teams took to grubbing for money by selling the names
of their stadiums to corporations that think a double steal means
hiring a new tax lawyer. I always choked when I had to write Edison
Field, especially when I remembered the $400 electric bill I got when
Enron and its pals were gouging us through Edison. But now it is
Angel Stadium, spring is coming, and I’m thinking World Series
tickets.
Then, our governor released a budget that was bound irrevocably to
his campaign promise to repeal the car tax and not to raise other
taxes. He got around the latter promise partly by calling taxes by
more acceptable names. And he compensated for losing the $4-billion
car tax revenue principally by sticking it to what a Los Angeles
Times headline called the “poor [and the] ill.”
We learn in Economics 101 that there are three ways to attack a
deficit: reduce expenditures, increase taxes and both. But Arnold
added a fourth: borrow -- $15 billion. This would put off a day of
reckoning by inducing slow bleeding, thus avoiding immediate
increased taxes -- except those disguised, for example, as fees at UC
Irvine.
Arnold may have serious trouble schmoozing this program through
the state Legislature, although he has proven himself masterful at
this by somehow convincing the California Teacher’s Assn. to support
a temporary $2 billion hit in state school funding, which our local
union president, Jim Rogers, told a Pilot reporter seems like a
marriage of “oil and water.”
Don’t tell me, please, that this deficit is all ousted-Gov. Gray
Davis’ doing. It isn’t. It’s a combination of a good many complex
problems to which Davis certainly contributed. But if Arnold is
looking for a quick fix instead of slow bleeding, he might want to
remember the words of his first economic advisor, Warren E. Buffett,
who said that reform should start by restructuring Proposition 13.
Buffett hasn’t been heard from on Arnold’s behalf since.
Then, in one of those compulsory journalistic
look-back-at-the-past-year reflections, Newport Beach Councilman Dick
Nichols -- who, like former Dodger pitcher Kevin Brown, isn’t
speaking to the press -- offered some e-mail answers to questions
from Pilot editors. He predictably blamed his problems with the City
Council on the Pilot for taking his comments about Mexicans “out of
context” and making “my remarks racist” by not including his
description of the differing uses of the multiple grassy areas around
Corona del Mar beach.
If I read him properly -- and that isn’t easy -- Nichols is saying
that it is OK for him to blame a specific racial group by name for
what he sees as a generic public problem as long as the writer
reporting the charges identifies the right patch of grass being
contested.
I also read that Costa Mesa has apparently settled -- again --
with former City Atty. Jerry Scheer for the ham-handed treatment he
got from city officials after allegations made against him in a
closed meeting led to his suspension. By the time an independent
investigation cleared him, the suspension had been made public, along
with the city’s violation of the Brown Act that apparently topped a
list of other bumbling decisions that didn’t require rocket science
thinking to avoid.
The final gaffe was almost blowing a $750,000 settlement because
one of the six city officials being sued wouldn’t sign off on it.
When Scheer, angry at the delay, re-filed his claim, the city got it
done, reportedly at the same rate. But a lot of misgivings remain.
Most important of all, the people who elected the council members
involved in Scheer’s treatment -- and who ultimately pay the bill --
are apparently going to remain outside the loop, denied the details
that would allow them to properly judge the performance of city
officials who ran up a $750,000 taxpayer tab.
Then there’s the upcoming Robert Dornan-Dana Rohrabacher primary,
which brings to mind columnist Art Buchwald’s comment when Richard
Nixon resigned the presidency. Buchwald said that even though he was
on Nixon’s enemy list, he hated to see him go because Buchwald could
mine an endless supply of humor by just reporting Nixon absolutely
straight.
That’s the way I feel about Dornan. On slow days when I was
writing a column for The Times, I could always look to Congressman
Dornan for instant material, sobered only slightly by the recognition
that we had actually elected him to public office. In return, he sent
several letters to the editors suggesting that they help me into some
other line of work.
So it’s rather like Old Home Week for me to know that he’ll be
operating so close by during the primary campaign -- and turning his
invective on another Republican who thinks global warming is a
liberal conspiracy. That’ll be almost as much fun as baseball spring
training.
Finally, there is the Park Newport lady who sees coyotes as a
“danger to our communities” because one of the critters almost did in
her cat, and she’s worried about attacks on other pets “and infants,
children or even adults.”
She wants local authorities to take action, although it isn’t
clear what action she suggests. Perhaps open season on coyotes? While
the authorities figure this out, we will continue to see an
occasional coyote when we walk in the Back Bay, because that’s where
they live. So I’ll keep in touch with this problem for you.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.