Restrictive ordinance is poorly written I attended...
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Restrictive ordinance is poorly written
I attended the Jan. 20, Huntington Beach City Council meeting and
spoke in opposition to this wide-open,
subject-to-broad-interpretation proposed demonstration ordinance.
I carried with me a homemade peace sign (made of pipe foam
insulation with a 4-foot long, 3/4 in diameter wooden dowel as the
standard.) I have carried the emblem in peace marches in San
Francisco, Los Angeles (three times) and San Diego. I find it
incredible that they are trying to pass a law saying I cannot carry
this emblem down Main Street in the city where I live.
The Huntington Beach Police chief was surprised I wasn’t arrested
in Los Angeles as apparently the dimensions of my emblem violate Los
Angeles ordinances. I would guess I wasn’t arrested because I wasn’t
using it to assault anyone. It was obvious to me, a veteran of many
protest marches, none of these people had ever marched or walked a
picket line. When preparing for such events, common sense dictates
you use the lightest but sturdiest support for your message. One does
not carry an iron pipe or two by two-- too big, too many splinters --
for a mile or so in a march or for six to eight hours on a picket
line.
This ordinance is poorly worded and insufficiently researched, as
admitted by the city attorney. And this woman got her law degree
where?
If she is providing legal services to the city pro bono then I
will temper my criticism. If she is receiving income from taxpayer
money, she needs to be fired.
I see this proposed ordinance as an extension of the current
federal administration’s flawed policy of preemption. Because I could
or might use something as a weapon does not mean I will.
Will Lowe’s, Osh, True Value Hardware or the Home Depot collect
the names and addresses of every person buying PVC pipe, wooden
dowels, lath strips or molding, exceeding 3/4 of an inch, so the
police chief can keep them under surveillance? Will majorettes lose
their batons? Will an American flag, with a shiny brass eagle perched
on the top, be banned from the parade? Will banners, supported by
PVC, carried by Boy and Girl Scout troops disappear from public? This
is how poorly this ordinance is written.
A greater insult to all the residents speaking in opposition,
there was not one word of support, was when the council members
supporting this ordinance found a way to postpone the vote. They were
quick to wiggle out of embarrassing themselves in front of residents
opposed to their lack of vision and laziness. Pathetic bunch of
cowards in the end.
ROSALIND FREEMAN
Huntington Beach
Ordinance would take our freedoms
The Huntington Beach ordinance against protest signs is another
attempt to suppress dissent in this country. The police have argued
that a sign mounted on readily available materials from Home Depot,
like PVC pipe, present a threat to the community. I think the real
threat is not the plastic pipe, but the sign mounted on it, and this
is what they really want to control. With a news media that only
covers sex scandals and car chases, local issues often only have a
voice as a sign carried at a protest march.
The founders of this nation placed freedom of speech, freedom of
assembly and freedom of religion together in the First Amendment to
our Constitution. It is the heart of the Bill of Rights that ensures
the fundamental liberties that make this nation great.
They did not qualify our rights to “petition the government for a
redress of grievances” based upon not using PVC pipe. I marched in
last year’s Fourth of July Parade carrying a banner, mounted on PVC
pipe, that celebrated our freedom. Will this be illegal this year? Or
will the law be selectively enforced only against those persons or
viewpoints that are considered undesirable? If we allow freedom to be
selectively denied, then none of us are truly free. If the government
can control what we say, or how we say it, then how can “We the
People” hope to control our government.
RICHARD GILLOCK
Costa Mesa
Our children deserve yes on Measure C
As concerned parents and community members, my husband and I
believe that making our schools and classrooms the best environment
for learning is a vitally important element in the quality of
education. Today, the schools and classrooms are not where they
should be. Our district has tried to keep up campus standards by
doing as many of the necessary repairs and upgrades as possible, but
with funding shortfalls, unkept promises from Sacramento, and a
constant rise in operating costs, only those repairs that are
critical to safety can be addressed. Others must wait, contributing
to the deterioration.
Measure C, the Huntington Beach Union High School District bond on
the March 2 ballot, is the only reasonable answer in this time of
state and federal budget cuts. Every year that we put off repairs,
our costs will increase. Our children should have the opportunity to
learn in a safe, healthy and stimulating atmosphere. We want our
local schools to be the pride of our neighborhoods. Please vote yes
on Measure C.
DEANNE AND DAVE KEEFER
Huntington Beach
On March 2, those of us who reside within the Huntington Beach
Union High School District boundaries (Huntington Beach, Westminster
and Fountain Valley) will have the opportunity to assist our aging
schools with critical and long overdue repairs. I have been a parent
in this district since my oldest child entered Huntington Beach High
School in 1994. My youngest will be graduating this year and will not
directly reap the benefits if Measure C passes, but our entire family
strongly supports this measure for the sake of the continuing and
future students at all of our local schools.
A support vote for Measure C means our children can count on
toilets that flush, functioning water fountains, an updated fire
alarm system, and a feeling of assurance that walls will remain
standing in an earthquake and roofs won’t leak on them in rainy
weather. The heating system will work in cold weather. The
ventilation system can run without spewing dust and mold spores into
the air that children are breathing. Students can be assigned
permanent, adequate, comfortable classrooms -- not temporary crowded
spaces hoping in vain for the replacement of a sinking building.
These concerns are not exaggerations. I have been an active
volunteer in this district for 10 years, and have had occasion to
visit all of the schools. Ask any student on any campus. Ask any
librarian, teacher or office secretary. They can all provide long
lists of the unsuitable conditions they have had to put up with. The
state of California has never seen fit to provide adequate funding
for any student in any of our districts. And in recent years, our
local schools have continued to be seriously hurt by both state and
federal budget cuts. Prices of operation go up, but funding goes
down. There is simply no extra money to do the necessary renovations,
repairs and equipment upgrades.
Please consider your vote carefully on March 2. There are no
alternatives. If Measure C does not pass, there is nothing but
continuing deterioration to look forward to on our high school
campuses. As a concerned parent, I urge all voters to vote yes on
Measure C.
ROSEMARY SAYLOR
Huntington Beach
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