School should have waited to fire coach...
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School should have waited to fire coach
My opinion concerning the firing of the Huntington Beach High
School cheer coach is one of shock that the firing couldn’t wait
until after national competitions (“Squad loses coach, chance to
compete,” March 25).
They had three years of practice and dedication going into this
competition and it seems to me very insensitive that this firing
couldn’t wait until after the much-anticipated event. I know this
coach personally to be committed to coaching other cheerleaders and
helping them to be the best they can be. It seems this could have
been approached with much more thoughtfulness.
MELINDA PITCHER
Huntington Beach
I am a graduate of Huntington Beach High School and friends with
some of the cheerleaders that currently attend.
These girls are some of the nicest girls I have ever met and they
pour their life into cheer. When I found out that Huntington fired
their cheer coach and left the girls high and dry before the
competition, I was shocked. I am involved in competition myself (I
race cars at Irwindale Speedway) and I know how it is to prepare for
a big event and when that hope of competing gets stripped away, a
piece of you gets stripped away. So to answer your question, yes, the
high school should have waited till after the competition, and in all
fairness, they should not have fired the coach at all.
MICHAEL MAY
Huntington Beach
In my opinion, Huntington Beach High School should not have fired
the coach (“Squad loses coach, chance to compete,” March 25) whether
they were going to finals or not. I go to that school and I
personally think it’s very messed up what they did to her.
I think they should have never even have fired her. From a
student’s point of view, and I also know the coach personally, she
would never curse at those girls. And all because a student went home
and complained to her mom. I know many girls on the team and they all
have said that she would never do such a thing! Huntington Beach High
School hasn’t been to finals in four years. Then they get a shot at
it when Sarah Ettinger comes and they take the opportunity away from
the girls when they could have let them go to finals with the coach’s
mother, Becky Ettinger. I totally disagree with what they did to the
team and what they did to Sarah Ettinger.
BRITTANY RENEGAR
Huntington Beach
New electronic voting booths a snap
I did not have any problem whatsoever with voting. I thought it
was a very good new system and I am not that much informed on using a
computer. I just followed the instructions that day.
VIRGINIA BOWMAN
Huntington Beach
I think the new voting booths are absolutely great. There were
several workers at the polls and all that was necessary was to punch
the help button on the machine and someone came to show you exactly
how everything worked. The whole process was very fast and efficient.
VIRGINIA WHIPPLE
Huntington Beach
New voting booths were just OK
I thought that the new voting booths were OK.
I think that the way that it was setup for people to go through
the lines, get their name, get their location, get their number, get
into the lines for the computer, it was all very cumbersome. In
addition, I live over at the harbor and my husband and I usually go
to the fire department on Warner by Pacific Coast Highway, but our
polling place was moved to the community house over by the park,
right behind Huntington Harbour. We were not told and that was
disorienting. The fire department was quick and easy and organized.
Even when we went there and were told that we were at the wrong
place, they had no lines and people ahead of us, there were a couple
of people, they were going right in and right out, not going through
15 different lines. So, I don’t know if it was just over at the club
house, people weren’t organized, or if it was the system that you
people had set up for them, but, that’s the big thing. I had mixed
feelings on the computers and I’m very computer literate.
SHARON COYLE
Huntington Beach
Fourth of July parade too expensive
We, at First United Methodist Church, want to express our
disappointment and concern about the extreme demands and high expense
to participate in the Fourth of July parade in Huntington Beach.
Our church is celebrating 100 years of ministry this year and we
were hoping to include a tasteful representation in the parade. We
cannot justify spending $500 for such an experience, nor can we meet
the demand of nothing less than a professional grade float.
These two requirements communicate to us that it is no longer a
pleasant local event easily shared by the whole community, but is now
something bigger and more professional. This is a great
disappointment to us. We find we are excluded from celebrating our
place in the great city of Huntington Beach.
STEVE ISENMAN
Huntington Beach
Note: Steve Isenman is the pastor at First Methodist Church in
Huntington Beach.
School cuts should start at district
I think Huntington Beach City School District Supt. Gary
Rutherford should consider closing some of his people down in his
Downtown office, eliminating 28 positions down there that have
nothing to do with schools and leave the teachers in the schools.
WALTER LAZAR
Huntington Beach
Pacific City will be a good fit for the city
I wanted to let you know that I think the Makar Properties project
is an excellent project. Good for the city, good for everyone.
CAROL SPEAKER
Huntington Beach
I certainly agree with the Planning Commission’s approval of the
Pacific City environmental report and think we need to have the Makar
project in Huntington Beach.
DON MACALLISTER
Huntington Beach
A thank you to park’s neighbors
To the many residents near Bartlett Park (also known to locals as
Hidden Valley Park), a special word of thanks from the city of
Huntington Beach. Once again, your volunteer participation has made
the Bartlett Park Spring Cleanup event a huge success. More than four
tons of trash and debris were removed from the undeveloped park site
on March 20, bringing the combined weight of collected trash to about
10 tons for this calendar year.
About 70 volunteers met in the morning, taking bags and litter
sticks, and proceeded to scour the park site for debris that ranged
in size from huge to minute. Items as large as shopping carts and
mattresses and as small as gum wrappers and soda bottles were strewn
about the 30-acre park.
We appreciates the participation and continued support.
ART JENSEN
Crewleader,
City of Huntington
Beach Parks Program
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