Alleged park-use citations rile resident I read...
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Alleged park-use
citations rile resident
I read a Readers Response in Thursday’s paper from Rick Campo
about kids using our parks, and it just really upset me. What are our
parks for? Why do we build and maintain them if not for our
residents’ use? Yes, I realize charging rent makes money for the
city, but that’s not reason enough to ticket a team of kids playing
on an empty field. When our city leaders give away millions of
dollars to developers, we have to ticket our kids for using the
parks? Absolutely disgusting.
JOYCE WOOD
Costa Mesa
Looking at El Toro
in a historical context
In his letter published in the Pilot of July 13 Dan Emory shows
both a short memory of the last eight years of El Toro history and an
incomplete understanding of the air transportation in Orange County
as it relates to the entire southern region of California
(“Compliments, not competition, needed in airport discussion”).
Soon after the Navy disclosed that El Toro was to be closed, the
Orange County Board of Supervisors authorized the planning of El Toro
to be a commercial airport as prescribed by law. Fifty-million
dollars was spent and culminated in FAA approval. In two countywide
elections, North County cities supported the airport. Two measures
introduced by South County to overturn El Toro’s reopening were
defeated.
As the population of South County increased, so did their
opposition to the reopening of El Toro. In a third attempt to defeat
the airport, South County, under the direction of Irvine, concocted
Measure W, a scheme to put the Great (Fake) Park on the ballot in an
off-year election. With a profusion of funds, misleading
representation of the Great (Fake) Park, and adroit legal maneuvering
to prevent North County from effectively combating their propaganda,
Measure W was on the ballot. Although opposed by the cities of North
County, the concentrated “get-out-the-vote” effort in South County
was able to get Measure W passed. Emory should note that South County
travelers (who make up most of the increase now occurring at John
Wayne) are willing to fly over the many people living in the noise
zone in Tustin, Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. But they scream at the
thought of planes flying from El Toro, where no one is in the noise
zone.
Emory’s complaint that the Airport Working Group is not reaching
out to all of Orange County ignores that it represents 80% of the
county’s population and is trying to work with other political
entities in the area who are affected by the lack of an airport at El
Toro. As for Leonard Kranser’s observations regarding El Toro, I can
only say that since Kranser is a mouthpiece for the real estate and
building industries, he is not really a Darth Vader but is more like
Willy Loman, in Arthur Miller’s “Death of a Salesman.”
LARRY ROOT
Newport Beach
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