Fireworks and fairgrounds fueling debates
If Steve Smith lives in Costa Mesa and only believes that fireworks
are used for four hours, once a year, then he must be out of town the
whole summer or living in an underground concrete bunker.
On the Eastside, firework aficionados started with the bottle
rockets on April 16. I know, as I reported it to the Costa Mesa
Police. The response was that the department just doesn’t have the
personnel to monitor these things because they go on forever. For the
last three nights, I have listened to them.
Smith then talks about how it is not fair to keep a hold on the
fairgrounds just because we have had it so long, yet he is more than
willing to keep the city hostage over fireworks for the same reason.
Do these youth groups deserve help with funding? Absolutely.
But let’s consider all the residents who live here, not just those
with kids. I will volunteer to be on a committee to come up with an
alternative method of funding. (Other cities seem to do fine.) How
about Smith? And I am willing to be the city’s first contributor by
opening up my wallet.
HELEN EVERS
Costa Mesa
I frequently agree with Steve Smith’s positions. However, he
occasionally indulges in lapses of logic that are truly amazing. In
his “Family Time” column he supports moving the Orange County Fair to
the Great Park in Irvine because “it makes more financial sense.”
And then he fantasizes about what a great addition the fairgrounds
would make to the city of Costa Mesa’s park system, particularly
baseball fields.
Assemblyman John Campbell proposed the sale of the fairgrounds for
about $300 million to help offset the state’s budget mess. Before the
fairgrounds become a park, the city of Costa Mesa (which is
addressing its own budget issues) would have to find $300 million for
the purchase and additional money for the razing of buildings and
park development. The city would also suffer the loss of sales tax
revenue from the weekly swap meet, the Orange County Fair and other
exhibitions that take place on the grounds. It is much more likely
that the land would not be sold to the city, but to developers.
The state gets the money from the sale and then some entity,
state, county, city, or fair board, will have to spend millions on
the Great Park site to build the necessary exhibition halls and
infrastructure to house the fair.
In summary, if the fair is moved to the Great Park site, the state
will get a quick $300 million. The city of Costa Mesa will lose
significant sales tax revenue. Whoever is responsible for the fair
will have to find millions to build exhibition halls at the Great
Park site and the residents of Costa Mesa will not only lose a local
tradition, but also will no doubt gain higher density and the
corresponding degradation of quality of life.
JEANNE TARAZEVITS
Costa Mesa
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