Council’s acts were standard procedure I would...
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Council’s acts were standard procedure
I would be remise if I did not respond to Danette Goulet’s column
(“Retiring or leaving for greener pastures” April 7.) Ray Silver has
been in public service for 32 years.
During this time he has developed highly valued skills and
experiences. That he would want to retire, but still use his skills
and experiences to benefit the public, does not come as a surprise to
those who know him. While his retirement will give him more time to
do the things he and his wife enjoy, he is also not one to stop using
the skills he has developed over a working lifetime. Silver gave the
council ample notice, and his retirement a few weeks earlier than
planned is in no way harmful to the city.
The council did appoint Assistant City Administrator Bill Workman
as acting city administrator effective upon Silver’s retirement. It
is not at all an unusual for councils to appoint the assistant city
administrator to an acting position. As assistant city administrator,
Workman has the broad-based experience necessary to allow for a
smooth transition regardless of which candidate the council selects
as the new city administrator.
Final interviews of candidates for the job will occur on April 23,
and a new administrator will be on board early this summer. Due to
the importance of the city administrator, the council is wisely
allowing enough time to do a thorough search for the best candidates.
Despite the concerns expressed in Goulet’s column, the council is
acting in a timely and appropriate manner to fill the vacancy left by
Silver’s retirement.
CONNIE BOARDMAN
Huntington Beach
* EDITORS’ NOTE: Connie Boardman is a member of the Huntington
Beach City Council.
Close Main Street and make walkway
Yes, close Main Street to traffic and make it a pedestrian walk.
It is an idea that should have been put in place years ago and
probably would have had it not been for a few deep thinkers on the
City Council.
I have lived in Pot Hole City for about eight years and had the
misfortune of visiting Main Street five times in that period of time.
l now drive out of my way to miss Downtown and l darn sure would
never go there to eat or shop there for the same reasons stated in
the column (Editor’s Notebook, “A plea for a pedestrian walkway,”
April 15.)
Look at it this way, give it a try and if it does not work out,
the street can always be reconfigured back to it’s original use.
As for Pacific City: If the projects meets all the required
conditions yes, approve it. Why not? Or is Steve Bone concerned about
competition?
JIM BARRY
Huntington Beach
I think it would be in the best interest of the city, community
and its tourist industry to close Main Street to cars and make it a
pedestrian walkway. I love the area, but when visiting Main Street
with everyone else who comes from out of town there is barely enough
room to walk on the sidewalks with everyone else who has come from
out of town to visit. Blocking off the street to pedestrians will
allow for more foot traffic and make it more pleasurable to visit.
SYLVIA SANCHEZ
Newport Beach
I think closing Main Street to traffic and making it a pedestrian
walkway would be the greatest thing to happen to Huntington Beach.
FRED LOCARNINI
Huntington Beach
I think closing Main Street to traffic is a great idea. It’s long
overdue, and to go along with it there should be a walk overpass over
Pacific Coast Highway so that they wouldn’t have that stop signal
there that totally screws up the traffic and causes all kinds of
congestion. But anyway, it’s a step in the right direction. I am for
it.
RON HEFNIDER
Huntington Beach
I am in favor of closing Main Street and making it a pedestrian
walkway.
EVELYN BLAIN
Huntington Beach
I believe that they should close Main Street to traffic. It’s very
congested here on the weekend, it’s just a lot of people who want to
cruise Main Street in their cars and it just causes more traffic and
headaches for existing neighbors.
DENISE SANTA CRUZ
Huntington Beach
Main Street walk good, Peace pole bad
Closing Main Street to traffic and making a pedestrian walkway is
just a terrific idea, which I heartily endorse. Excepting the peace
pole was a stupid idea and should never have been done, probably
opening us up to lawsuits.
CHLOE MIECZKOWSKI
Huntington Beach
Goulet is wrong, Downtown is fine
In the April 15 Editor’s Notebook (“A pleas for a pedestrian
walkway”) Danette Goulet asks the question “Why does anyone choose to
drive that section of Main Street?”
Well, the answer is cruising, a time-honored and a unique American
(not to say Southern California) tradition.
While a pedestrian mall does have a certain ambience, an elegance,
a feeling of upscale maturity, that is not the heritage of “Surf
City.” The feel of Huntington Beach is youthful exuberance, not
mature elegance.
My wife and I ( in our early 60s ) would not like to see it
changed.
While Goulet and her friends deride the cruisers, I and my friends
go Downtown specifically for the enjoyment of seeing well-maintained
and meticulously cared for cars.
There is enough mature and elegant shopping malls and I would hate
to see Huntington Beach morphed into another.
BENJAMIN AND WILIMENA WISE
Huntington Beach
Daystar getting KOCE would be bad
The sale of KOCE to religious broadcaster Daystar is a winning
proposition for these televangelists who pay no taxes and reap huge
profits from selling God. The losers are the viewing public that will
have yet another station like Trinity Broadcast Network’s dog and
pony show.
The air ways belong to the public, not the highest bidder.
JOHN BOAG
Huntington Beach
KOCE belongs to the public. I thought that was already decided. We
do not want or need another religious group taking over public TV.
The religious right have enough influence in this country already.
Religion is nothing but big business and should be taxed as such.
This country is being run by a group of born-again religious
fanatics, and look what that has got us into, an illegal, immoral,
insane invasion in Iraq and destruction of an ancient civilization.
KOCE must not be sold to Daystar. There are more important things
than money. KOCE belongs to us.
MAUREEN SHRUBSOLE
Huntington Beach
Environmentalists against building
During the Huntington Beach City Council meeting on April 19, one
of our infamous naysayers cast gloom and perhaps doom on the proposed
Pacific City development. If our police chief will look the other way
for a time I am willing to take bets on, not if, but when the
environmentalists discover artifacts on this former oil field, such
as strange cobble stones that will bring down our states plentiful
tear-jerking you-can’t-build-here crowd. Any takers?
BOB POLKOW
Huntington Beach
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