Pink problem not about fashion but safety...
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Pink problem not about fashion but safety
One of the hardest jobs that exists is being a school principal.
Every day decisions are made; interventions are done, many times at a
moment’s notice, with the ultimate goal of keeping the school safe.
That is exactly what the principal of Ensign Intermediate School was
doing when he made a decision to keep a few students out of a
picture. What ultimately has happened has the potential to put the
school at risk. Instead of support for the principal’s decision,
there is protest.
The unfortunate truth is if we want to keep our campuses safe,
certain freedoms must be compromised. A principal cannot discriminate
between a safe color pink from a bad color -- “gothic black.” Not so
long ago people all over the country accused the Columbine principal
of incompetence for allowing school shooters to wear trench coats to
school day after day, they called their gang the “trench coat mafia.”
So what do we do now? The pink incident has been blown out of
proportion as a means of entertainment and the real issue has been
lost. A principal made a decision based on safety concerns. The
community should support him and let him know he has their trust and
respect. The real tragedy would be if principals start second
guessing themselves and are not proactive in dealing with safety
issues on campus.
CYNDIE BORCOMAN
Newport Beach
Readying for revenge from South County residents
Letter writers Dan W. Emory and Michael A. Glueck (“Orange County
we have a problem,” Community Commentary, March 28) wrote “In the
future, the powers that be will most likely decide that the only
solution is to enlarge John Wayne Airport. We must be ready ahead of
time so as not to fail this time.”
Unfortunately, the battle will not be limited to just taking on
the Federal Aviation Authority and the airline industry, come 2016.
Mark my works, vengeful South County “NIMBYs,” hellbent on revenge,
will literally throw jet fuel on the fire and cheerlead for a
24-hour-a-day, seven-day-a-week JWA.
If El Toro is no longer hanging over their heads, they will have
nothing to lose at all. Forget trying to threaten to add another
reactor at San Onofre as a way to ward them off.
I am basing my observations on several years of reading the
residents’ letters and the message boards on anti-El Toro websites.
Now, I can very well understand someone in South County having a
problem with an airport that will service 38 million air passengers,
with flight paths going over residential areas. I sure wouldn’t like
it either, as I reside under the final approach for Long Beach
Airport.
Yet, a much better solution for El Toro would be for a southern
takeoff with a 30-degree bank and passing over the wide swath of the
Laguna Coast Wilderness corridor, which is free of homes and schools.
However, the most hard-core, fundamentalist NIMBYs even oppose a
layout that would never impact them in a million years. Why? Because
if El Toro becomes a reliever airport, then the pressure for future
JWA growth would cease. Well, that’s certainly no good to them.
Now if one thinks I make these charges based just on some idle
message board chatter, there are also some elected officials who
think JWA growth is fine and dandy as well. In fact, the El Toro
Reuse Planning Authority (consisting of 10 south county cities)
passed a position paper calling for greater utilization of JWA.
The most prominent pro JWA growth politician out there would be
“Great Park” visionary, Irvine Mayor Larry Agran. He was on an Irvine
City Council that in 1985, voted to sue to gut the existing
protections on JWA. The painful truth is, the die hard anti airport
people could care less about what kind of “Great Park” they will
have, if one at all. By blocking even the most non-intrusive aviation
uses at El Toro, they know they can have the satisfaction of payback
to the Newport-Mesa community come 2016. Never mind what will happen
to their anti El Toro allies, such as Tustin and Orange, as a result.
They will simply be written off as mere “collateral damage.”
Now should the day come when El Toro’s runways are removed, and
there’s not one peep afterward to blow JWA wide open as payback, then
I will personally eat a plate of hot steaming crow and crushed
runway.
REX RICKS
Huntington Beach
Arst cartoon was a real kick in the pants
I have worked as a political and editorial cartoonist and
illustrator for the past 25 years. We in this field have a unique
goal in our art in terms of what we consider success. The product
should combine humor and a personal editorial perspective. If we are
successful it will be done with skillful art all in one panel. It
will make some laugh and pique ire in others.
The Community Commentary by Richard Taylor on March 25 (“Cartoon a
disservice to paper’s credibility”) is evidence of what we consider a
smashing success. But it wasn’t until the next day, March 26, that I
realized that Bolton’s cartoon, “Pain in the Arst” was a home run.
That was the day I received a Greenlight mailer. In it, a lawsuit
is threatened, city employees are insulted and black helicopter
conspiracy theories are tossed about. The humorless leadership of
Greenlight just proved they truly are a pain in many parts of the
anatomy. When I see Phil Arst now, I envision the old Marx Brothers’
movie “Duck Soup,” where Groucho Marx, as leader of Freedonia, sings
his platform response to everything, “I’m against it.”
One more point regarding Steve Bolton’s cartoon -- I wish I would
have thought of it.
STEVE LEACH
Newport Beach
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