Capital flights could be lift for all...
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Capital flights could be lift for all of Orange County
A brief story in the Daily Pilot March 10 (“Congressmen back
nonstop flights to D.C.”) described the coordinated effort among Rep.
Chris Cox, Rep. Dana Rohrabacher and the entire Orange County
congressional delegation requesting Transportation Secretary Norman
Mineta and the Department of Transportation to approve a request from
Aloha Airlines to add direct flights between Washington D.C. and the
John Wayne Airport.
Such a flight arrangement would certainly improve the efficiency
in conducting official governmental business between Orange County
and the national governmental offices. While it might appear that our
representatives are just being self-serving in improving that
cross-country connection, it should be remembered that that route is
an important business and tourist corridor, which needs to be
nurtured for the financial and cultural health of Orange County.
As the article pointed out, Orange County is the second-largest
county in the state and the fifth in the country. With a population
of more than 3.5 million and the level of business per capita wealth
here, Orange County is generating potential business and tourist
flyers, especially in South County.
The Washington contingent is seeking relief from the
transcontinental flying inconvenience, which is a reasonable
complaint. As the flying population increases, JWA will not be able
to accommodate the increased demand. Trying to handle additional
passengers, not able to fly from JWA, may well produce similar
inconveniences for those additional passengers requiring long
distance ground transportation.
I hope this new found spirit of cooperation will enable a
resolution of the problems involved with reopening El Toro, so that
travel will be convenient for new air passengers in Orange County.
WILLIAM KEARNS
Costa Mesa
School’s expansion would create neighborhood gridlock
A recent issue of the Daily Pilot featured a letter to the editor
about expansion of Our Lady Queen of Angels School and Church in
Newport Beach. (“Condo owners say churches disrupt neighborhood,”
March 10.)
This neighborhood is already oversaturated with traffic on Mar
Vista Drive, Domingo Way and Amigos Way (where we live) and Eastbluff
Drive from the schools, churches and residential density. Students of
Our Lady Queen of Angels School are dropped off and picked up,
resulting in hundreds of individual daily trips into the
neighborhood.
Expansion of the school would make a bad situation even worse for
this densely populated little area.
There are 225 families on Amigos Way alone.
Corona del Mar High School is our neighbor too, with a student
population of 2,160. Staffers and students drive cars in and out of
our neighborhood daily, adding to the congestion.
Since the city cut off through traffic on Bison Avenue from
Jamboree Road to Eastbluff Drive, traffic to and from the schools and
churches must funnel through the intersection of Jamboree Road and
Eastbluff Drive, which is Ford Road on the east side of Jamboree
Road.
If the city permits expansion of Our Lady Queen of Angels in this
location, we will have a traffic congestion problem impossible to
live with -- threatening the safety and well-being of our
neighborhood.
PATRICIA KRONE
Newport Beach
Proceeds of station’s sale should used in the classroom
It is shocking to read that the Coast Community College District
wishes to sell its TV station “to use the money to fund education.”
What a surprise. We taxpayers have assumed all along that the
District’s primary responsibility was to provide students with a
college education. Does this mean that for decades the district has
been spending over three million dollars a year to subsidize a
television station at the expense of student and faculty needs?
Why has there not been some expression of concern from students
and faculty when academic standards are being jeopardized, classes
cut, class sizes maximized, tuition increased, and teachers’
contracts and benefits weakened?
KENNETH CARTER
Laguna Beach
Arts program spiked for political reasons
In regard to the rejection of the $300,000 plan for an arts and
music program, as voted on by the Costa Mesa City Council in regard
to the Theater Arts District: What is more important -- landscaping
improvements or our children?
The City Council told us loud and clear when they decided to
reject an awesome proposal set forth by Planning Commissioner Katrina
Foley. The plan offered schools $300,000 toward an arts and music
program.
It would be so nice to see a council that cares enough and is
willing to put some money into a positive learning program, which
offers creative alternatives to the growing pressures of drugs and
violence that our youth deal with on a daily basis.
Councilman Allan Mansoor asks what will we do when funds run out?
Hello?
Have more faith in your community and take a chance. Get out there
and find more funding, I know Foley would. She has proven herself
very competent and maybe that is the problem. It seems as though
there might be an alternative reason for the decision of the council.
Could they not want Foley to have such a successful program in
which she might get a lot of positive public support?
I would like the council members who opposed to this plan to come
up with some better excuses than the ones they have given -- or not
given.
JESI PEARCE
Costa Mesa
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