Preserve Marinapark ‘bay-front treasure’ I am strongly...
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Preserve Marinapark ‘bay-front treasure’
I am strongly opposed to approving the general plan amendment for
the Marinapark resort on the grounds that it will inevitably and
irrevocably remove this parkland from public access and place it in
private hands, subject to lease terms with the developer. In my
opinion, the project doesn’t pencil without ultimate conversion to
timeshares, with far greater increases in traffic than the developer
would like the public to believe.
C’mon. This one little bay-front treasure ought to be preserved.
JOHN BUTTOLPH
Newport Heights
Knowing the dealmaker as important as knowing deal
There have been many letters published lately (including one of
mine) regarding the proposed Marinapark hotel/timeshare project, but
I feel something has been left out.
There has been much “talk-talk” around town about Stephen
Sutherland, this proposed project’s developer, none of which has
really been addressed. Why is the city in such a hurry to pass our
public land to a hotel/timeshare developer-type? Who is this guy? And
who is behind this guy? Years ago I learned to ask a very valid
question in regards to business situations: “Don’t tell me what’s in
the deal; tell me who’s in the deal.” Well?
SARAH PEDERSEN
Newport Beach
Films follow partisan lines but maybe not always facts
As the film “Fahrenheit 9/11” now sits poised to enter the
glorified status of “blockbuster,” I can’t help but think of the
irony of that other film, whose audience -- not unlike “9/11” --
divided itself along partisan lines of liberal and conservative.
What I find of interest is the fact that the majority of the
people who condemn “9/11” as being historically inaccurate are many
of the same people who genuflect in reverence to the film “The
Passion of The Christ” and its perceived historical accuracy.
I’m no theologian, and I may be going out on a limb here, but I’m
guessing “The Passion of The Christ” most likely contains less
factual information than does “9/11,” if not only in part due to the
time discrepancy and method of reporting. Don’t get me wrong; faith
and myth play a very important role in the human experience, but
unfortunately, when it comes to a certain president using faith and
myth with zealous invocation as a reason to go to war, sorry, but it
just doesn’t fly.
BILL MADDEN
Costa Mesa
Meetings about church growth should be open
Many of the residents of Cliffhaven and Newport Heights have signs
in front of their homes that say: “No to St. Andrew’s
35,000-square-foot Expansion Plan.” The signs do not say, “Let’s have
an unannounced, by-invitation-only meeting,” where people gather and
come up with some ideas and call it a neighborhood-church
representation of what the community wants and hope that such a
process prompts the Planning Commission into believing that the
community has been consulted.
To rephrase an old saying: “What part of ‘no’ doesn’t St. Andrew’s
understand?”
It has been published in the Daily Pilot that church officials are
not prepared to postpone another Planning Commission meeting. As
another saying suggests: “The tail does not wag the dog.”
RICHARD AND ELAINE ENGLAND
Newport Beach
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