Facts need checking in ‘Watchdog’ writing
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Tim Riley
It’s like clockwork. Another Sunday, another innuendo-filled Watchdog
column.
You certainly are keeping us busy having to correct the record.
Your writer on June 12 misled the public by omitting several
facts:
* The city had a willing seller for the Santa Ana Heights Fire
Station and Training Center site. The final action did use eminent
domain so that the seller could take advantage of tax benefits.
* Redevelopment dollars can and should be used for buildings like
fire stations because the station specifically benefits the
redevelopment project area. The training building -- which will allow
us to train to serve the greater Newport Beach and Santa Ana Heights
area -- has been funded in large part via a grant from the Rancho
Santiago Community College District, not redevelopment agency
dollars. The remaining balance is earmarked in a separate general
fund capital improvement project.
* The proposed training tower will be 6 inches -- yes, 6 inches --
taller than the tallest building in the neighborhood. It won’t be 50
feet tall. Indeed, readers should drive by the site (Acacia and Mesa)
any time over the next two weeks to see exactly what this will look
like. We’ve “story poled” it at the request of the community.
Training centers like this one are not luxuries -- having one in town
means that we don’t have to pull engine companies out of service to
train, which provides better immediate and long-term service to our
residents. And training to respond to any emergency is essential for
effective public safety service.
* The proposed regional recreational facility -- a joint project
of the county, the city and the Orange Coast YMCA -- is hardly a city
“shopping” project. This project -- like the others on the Project
Advisory Committee’s list -- was put forth by the advisory committee,
supported by the advisory committee and designed mainly to
accommodate the committee’s wishes.
The Daily Pilot’s fact-checkers need to check and re-check your
columnists’ assertions.
Before too long, the public may start believing them.
* TIM RILEY is the Newport Beach Fire Chief.
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