In Santa Ana Heights, life is plenty...
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In Santa Ana Heights, life is plenty pretty
Thank you, Steve Smith, for denigrating both the people in Santa
Ana Heights and the neighborhood itself (“Rasputin keeps on trying to
fly high,” Jan. 26). It’s clear you haven’t spent much time in our
neighborhood or talking to us since 1992, or you’d have a much
different picture.
Yes, we live under the flight path. And it’s irksome at times. But
in this small neighborhood, the streets are so traffic-light that
kids ride their go-karts on them. Because the homes are so large and
(formerly) affordable, there is a high percentage of families with
stay-at-home mothers. Dozens of kids in these few blocks all know one
another and traipse from house to house. Birthday parties are held in
our backyards because they’re spacious. Senior citizens, some of whom
have lived here since the houses were built in 1962, are kind to the
neighborhood kids. There’s an annual potluck block party, and we
watch over one another’s houses while on vacation. People take pride
in their houses and for the most part keep them up well. Steve Smith
is wrong -- life under the flight path is plenty “pretty,” with a
true sense of community that’s rare these days.
Most of us accept the airport noise when we’re outside of our
soundproofed houses because of the character of this neighborhood.
And the truth is, yes, you get used to it and hardly even notice it.
We deal with the same or less inconvenience as residents on
traffic-heavy streets who suffer car noise 24 hours a day, or those
by schools at drop-off time, or a number of other “less than perfect”
locations.
Smith also called us “bitter,” and I wish he would have directly
addressed those he feels are beating a dead El Toro horse, rather
than the entire community. Most of us are already volunteering for
political causes, holding Boy Scout/Girl Scout meetings or serving on
the PTA board, so he needn’t have directed his sarcastic volunteering
advice to us.
As for the airport, of course, we’re staunchly in favor of holding
the flight caps. But I believe that rings true for every Newport
Beach resident who deals with John Wayne Airport flight noise, from
the Back Bay out to Balboa Peninsula. Smith cast too wide a net in
blaming the entire community of Santa Ana Heights. I’m so relieved
that 13 years ago, Smith didn’t move out of his two-bedroom condo and
buy a five-bedroom house in this neighborhood when he had a chance --
he was probably looking at my home.
JUDY DEVINE
Santa Ana Heights
Bell missed numbers and the point
I found Joseph Bell’s column long on unsupported assertions and
misleading arguments but lacking in facts and mathematical
consistency (“Cox brochure offers entertainment,” Thursday).
Bell takes issue with the “Annual Report on the United States
Government” mailer prepared by Rep. Chris Cox, claiming it contains
“creative interpretation of selective statistics.” Bell does not
mention what relevant statistics he believes were omitted or how the
interpretation of the numbers was incorrect and accuses Cox of
“creative spinning.”
The mailer’s budget numbers show that federal revenues in 2004
were $118 billion greater than 2003 revenues and that 2004 federal
expenses (spending) were $156 billion greater than 2003 expenses.
Because a deficit results when expenses exceed revenues, the deficit
grew by $156 billion minus $118 billion, or $38 billion. Clearly, the
fact that spending grew faster than revenues caused the growth in the
deficit, yet Bell disputes that the deficit growth was due to
excessive spending.
Bell mixes apples and oranges when he infers that a 5% growth in
“social spending” (amounting to $73 billion) is smaller than an 11%
growth in military spending (amounting to $35 billion). Clearly,
increases in social spending contributed more than twice as much to
the deficit growth as did increases in military spending.
Perhaps Bell did not even read the figures presented in Cox’s
mailer, or, if he did, he did not understand their significance or
meaning. Cox’s mailer contained actual numbers for the federal
budget. Analysis of the numbers and comparison to Bell’s rhetoric
reveals that it is Bell and not Cox who is guilty of “creative
spinning.”
THOMAS R. DAMIANI
Newport Beach
Buffer zone makes airport a must-go
The El Toro airport controversy is a maze of subterfuge and
misunderstandings.
In 1994 and 1996, Orange County voters approved an airport. In
2000, Irvine’s subterfuge about jails, airports and dumps passed but
was thrown out by a court.
In 2001 Irvine’s “Great Grab,” or Great Park, initiative won by
emphasizing parks and leaving the airport information in the “fine
print.” In that “Great Grab” election, 21 cities saw the fine print
and upheld the airport. Only 10 favored the park.
All regional airport studies favor an airport at El Toro.
The 19,000-acre airport zone protects the neighbors well from
airport problems. This is not a matter of just 4,700 acres.
El Toro flight paths are over open and wilderness areas, not
cities, as is John Wayne. An airport at El Toro can be a “joint”
operation and continue to team with Camp Pendleton in meeting the
nation’s security problems.
John Wayne is the smallest commercial airport in the nation. The
El Toro airport zone is the second largest in the nation. Job
estimates in the El Toro region range from 60,000 to 80,000. El Toro
and John Wayne should be able to function together. They are seven
miles apart. Let’s all study and see what valid regional studies
indicate to us rather than let our air-travel future be decided by
the city of Irvine. Orange County is not an island; we are part of a
large population and economic area; part of a nation; pathway to the
Pacific Rim!
We need an effective plan into the future.
KENDALL NEISESS
Fullerton
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