Where’s the outrage over El Toro? The...
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Where’s the outrage over El Toro?
The attempt to let El Morro residents stay in their seaside homes
by Assemblyman Chuck DeVore, who received $66,000 in campaign
donations, affects relatively few people. His actions generated a
number of letters to the Daily Pilot.
Christopher Cox’s successful efforts to prevent an airport at El
Toro negatively affects millions of people. His bragging that the
U.S. government received $1 million per acre ( red herring ) means
nothing. I don’t care if they got $50 million per acre. I’m not
saying that he has been paid off, but why would he work so hard to
prevent El Toro Airport to the detriment of so many people?
What other logical conclusion can be offered? Where are the
letters of outrage in this sad case?
JAMES PECK
Newport Beach
Many will be hurt
by Job Center closure
I am outraged by the shortsighted, and frankly, bigoted vote to
close the Costa Mesa Job Center. On the usual 3-2 vote, boys against
girls, the Costa Mesa City Council has taken us backward 17 years to
a time when people looking for an honest day’s work had to walk the
streets like prostitutes.
Not only did the job center provide an economic interest to the
city, matching workers with employers, but it also improved safety
for our residents. When we send the day laborers back to street
walking, will you really know who that is getting into your car to
help you clear brush from your hillside?
At the job center you did. Now that the Costa Mesa Police will be
spending a larger part of their time enforcing traffic and street
solicitation laws as a result of the closure, they will not be able
to respond as quickly to traffic accidents and crime. Expect an
increase in petty crimes from those no longer able to find day jobs,
but who are determined not to see their children go hungry.
In the long run, the costs to the city will be higher without the
job center than the cost of running it. So who wins by the closure?
Developers who know that “Westside Redevelopment” is the city’s code
word for driving out manufacturing businesses and moderate income
housing. They want to replace our city’s balance of jobs and
middle-class housing with a vision of a sterile “Spyglass Hill-Lite.”
For now, greed and bigotry have found common cause in closing the
job center and increasing the misery of honest people just trying to
get by.
RICHARD GILLOCK
Costa Mesa
Parking proposal has questionable motives
Passing St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church on the way to work
recently, I observed the common “No student parking today sign” and
reflected on the evening of March 8, 2005 when the Newport Mesa
Unified School District board met regarding St. Andrew’s proposed
long-term lease of the Newport Harbor High School parking lot.
I was a bit mixed up at this meeting because St. Andrew’s leaders
wanted a lease but kept on saying the $3.5 million consideration they
were proposing to pay was not just the cost to lease, but mostly for
the rehab and enlargement of the parking lot.
The contractors they talked to said the rehab of the parking lot
could cost anywhere from $2.1 million to $3 million, figures with a
large spread that had no verification from a written estimate or any
contractor present at the meeting.
St. Andrews then went on to say that if the school board managed
the project correctly, the board would have a surplus of
approximately $500,000 to $1.5 million for the betterment of the
school. When was the last time you saw a construction project in
today’s day and age come in under budget? I would venture to say the
board would be lucky to come out with any excess money and what’s
amazing is St. Andrews is not really offering to lease the property.
What they are offering is money to improve and enlarge a parking
lot (by 80 parking spaces) that they will use and have control of for
50 years.
That means that Harbor High will not be able to expand, build or
modify that land for 50 years and every school board for the next
five decades will have their hands tied regarding that land. I know
that St. Andrew’s called it a 30-year lease with four five-year
options, but who in their right mind would not exercise an option on
land for free?
Yes for free.
There is no additional consideration for any of those options. As
a matter of fact, there is no expense associated with the options or
the initial lease term. No taxes, maintenance or insurance. The
taxpayers will take care of the expenses while the congregation uses
the taxpayer’s asset for 50 years.
Even if there is some kind of betterment money for the school, the
economics of the lease boil down to this: St. Andrew’s gets to use
and control a piece of prime real estate in one of the most affluent
neighborhoods in the country for a minimum of five to six cents per
square foot with no increases and no expenses for 50 years. Here is
the best part.
This lease is the only contingency that the Newport Beach planning
commission required for a general plan amendment permitting St.
Andrew’s a massive expansion of their church.
I have lived in the immediate neighborhood for the past 19 years
and the Newport Harbor High School parking problem was always there.
Why hasn’t St. Andrew’s been so generous before this?
Because there was nothing in it for them. The church says it will
give the school the money even if the Planning Commission turns the
expansion down. The Planning Commission has already said if St.
Andrew’s gets the parking, they would allow the expansion.
How about St. Andrew’s offering the money in the name of school
and neighborhood betterment without the caveat of their proposed
leasehold? The expansion is not to help neighbors or the school but a
business decision driven strictly for survival. At a prior Planning
Commission meeting, St. Andrew’s leaders admitted to losing
membership. Why expand when membership is down?
The reason is to compete. They need to compete with the churches
that have expanded to locations that were meant to handle the
traffic, noise and crowds. St. Andrew’s current location was never
meant to have a massive church, parking or no parking.
I implore the school board to deny the lease, which would create
more traffic, noise, safety and security problems in the
neighborhood. It is all about the church expansion, not about the
parking.
A Benevolent gift?
No it’s a smoking deal for St. Andrews and for St. Andrew’s only,
for now and for decades to come.
FRANK ADLER
Newport Beach
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