Dornan’s reasons to run don’t make sense...
Dornan’s reasons to run don’t make sense
Bob Dornan says that in the moments following the World Trade
Center attack that he knew that he must run for Congress again
(“Terror, security compel Dornan to run,” Dec. 25.) But his
explanation doesn’t hold up.
Sept. 11, 2001, was well before the candidate filing deadline for
the 2002 election. As a veteran congressman, Dornan was no stranger
to the filing requirements and how to verify the schedule. If he was
so galvanized to run on that day it is not credible that he did not
take action to file in a more timely fashion. As those watching have
come to expect, Dornan’s talk doesn’t match well with reality.
MARK SHELDON
Huntington Beach
Poseidon’s offer was good for the city
We live in a desert and our water supply is drying up. Our Orange
County aquifer is overdrafted by over 100-billion gallons. But to our
west lies an infinite supply of water. We now have the technology to
desalinate it to bottled water quality.
Poseidon proposed a project to desalinate 50-million gallons of
water a day and every reputable scientist that studied the project
found there were no significant environmental impacts. Despite that,
four of our seven council members were swayed by the rantings of the
Green Party leaders who offered idle speculation of gloom and doom to
combat the city staff’s scientific consultant’s studies.
Now the Orange County Water District says they may put a
desalination plant in that same spot. And the water district doesn’t
need the approval of the City Council or Planning Commission. Of
course, water district won’t provide a dime of tax revenue to the
city either. So in the end we’ll get a desalination plant, but thanks
to the anti-business atmosphere that permeates our City Council,
it’ll be a public agency that builds it and Huntington Beach will get
none of the benefits that Poseidon had offered.
ALLISON STANLEY
Huntington Beach
Water district should look elsewhere
A desalination plant owned by a government entity like the Orange
County Water District is an improvement over a private entity like
Poseidon owning a commodity like water for profit. But unfortunately,
the Orange County Water District is planning on using the same
polluted water from the AES plant just as Poseidon planned to do. A
requirement for desalination is to start with the cleanest water
possible. The ocean water the AES plant uses is from Huntington
Beach’s most contaminated water in the whole city area, the Magnolia
site. That beach is closed most of the year and no one knows for sure
what is causing the pollution.
Until we find the cause for the pollution the water district
should find another source of ocean water or wait until the cause of
the contamination is discovered.
They also should try to pencil out if it is affordable before they
go any further.
EILEEN MURPHY
Huntington Beach
We’ve heard this request before
I received a two-color flier in the mail promoting the Marina High
School improvement bonds, which will appear for voter consideration
on the March 2 ballot. It seems to me that we were asked to approve a
similar measure less than two years ago. At the time, we were led to
believe that it would take care of the exact same problems that this
bond. It is obvious from the mailer, that the district has retained a
political marketing firm to put together a campaign to convince the
voter to support this initiative. How much is this costing and where
is this money coming from?
Does the school district think the voters have such short memories
that they won’t remember. I would like to know what happened to the
money that was allocated from the last go-around. There are other
ways to raise revenue and budget for the repairs. The state
government has increased fees to users, and that approach should be
considered here. Are there parking fees for students and facility?
The students seem to drive better cars than I do. Does the school
practice recycling? Why should others reap the rewards from salvaging
cans and bottles from school trashcans? How about raising fees for
outside use of school facilities? Let’s get creative instead of gong
to the taxpayer every time.
I would hope this letter will bring forth other comments and
suggestions, as well as a response from school officials.
PETER M. CLARK
Huntington Beach
Baugh isn’t a tireless worker for voters
Your “newsmaker” piece about Scott Baugh undoubtedly left many
readers with the impression that he was a tireless worker for the
public. Unfortunately, Baugh has also been tireless in representing
the likes of AES and others as a paid lobbyist; a fact your article
overlooked. Moreover, it ignored the $47,900 in fines he paid the
Fair Political Practices Commission for campaign “irregularities,”
related to his political activities, when the reporter took on face
value his statement that he was cleared of everything; a convenient
spin.
Baugh is anything but altruistic in his desire to get
representation by districts for the citizens of Huntington Beach.
Unfortunately we can only speculate about his real motives. Long
before Baugh appeared on the scene, a real servant to this community,
Jack Green, led a selfless campaign for a seven-member council
(elected by districts) to better serve the citizens. While he was not
successful, his efforts drove the then five-member council to form a
charter revision committee which proposed a seven-member at-large
council among other things. That measure passed in 1965 and resulted
in the citizens of Huntington Beach having increased representation
(in 1966, not 1968 as reported). Now Baugh wants us to turn back the
clock. According to him, we’ll be better represented by five council
members instead of seven. Yeah, right. Who is he kidding?
They will go for anything that removes a council that they so
intensely dislike as they disregard the downside. My impression is
they are mathematically challenged. They’ll give up seven votes every
four years for one. How desperate can that be?
MARK PORTER
Huntington Beach
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