Removing Marinapark homes is a worthy sacrifice...
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Removing Marinapark homes is a worthy sacrifice
I am angered by the fact that some of the people who are writing
negative letters to the editor about the proposed Marinapark resort
are current Marinapark Trailer Park tenants.
These people have had the privilege of keeping their trailers on
this waterfront, city-owned land at greatly discounted rents for
decades. Across the bay at the Lido Peninsula Resort, those tenants
are paying and they have to look across a parking lot and large boat
docks before they even see water.
Now, what is worse is the fact that the majority of Marinapark
tenants are people who have their main residence in cities other than
Newport Beach. Therefore, they don’t even pay property taxes in
Newport, yet Newport taxpayers are basically subsidizing their summer
vacation homes by putting up with this current use.
I am a 50-year resident of Newport Beach, and I strongly support
the proposed Marinapark resort. Newport Beach taxpayers have a right
to the highest and best use of this property.
LARRY MORGAN
Newport Beach
Grant is greatly helping the area
Jeff Benson’s article “College contracts fund surge,” July 13, in
the Pilot could, if updated, include a National Science Foundation
grant of $14 million to UC Irvine for a program that should help
greatly in improving science, mathematics and education instruction
in the Westside schools of Costa Mesa.
The program, which is called FOCUS (Faculty Outreach
Collaborations Uniting Scientists, Students and Schools), will also
include Compton and Santa Ana schools. UCI will oversee the operation
of this project, which seeks to unite math, science and education
faculty and researchers from the university, community college and
preschool-kindergarten-through-
12th-grade districts and schools by focusing on math and science
teaching.
Needless to say, this is a most promising program, one that
appears to have the enthusiastic support of the local school
district.
LEFTERIS LAVRAKAS
Costa Mesa
Phantom passenger demand shows self interest
I was struck by both the continued regurgitation of erroneous
information regarding airport issues and the unexpected candor
regarding the Airport Working Group’s motives that letter writer
Florence Stasch contributed July 23 (“Working Group part of solution,
not problem”).
Stasch asks someone to share their “real solution to the air
travel problem that we now face” while ignoring the fact that Orange
County does not face an “air-travel problem.” Our county is nearing
build-out and we have an airport operating at only 75% of its
capacity. Any alleged “air-travel problem” will not be taking place
in Orange County. Stasch goes on to stipulate that any solution to
these “problems” cannot cost taxpayers billions of dollars or take
decades to build, apparently forgetting that the now dead El Toro
airport plan was going to “cost taxpayers billions of dollars and ...
take decades to build.”
But perhaps Stasch’s greatest contribution was verifying what most
of Orange County has suspected all along. After nearly a decade of
hearing ever-changing reasons from Newport Beach special interests
that pushing for a second Orange County airport only seven miles from
the first one was about solving some mythical crushing passenger and
cargo demand, doing our fair share for the region, and planning for
Orange County’s economic future, Stasch reveals that the “Airport
Working Group is an organization whose sole purpose is to save
Newport Beach and surrounding communities.” Thanks for verifying that
the real agenda has always been all about saving Newport, even at the
expense of everyone else.
DOUGLAS K. BLAUL
Trabuco Canyon
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