DeVore can look in mirror for lost...
DeVore can look in mirror for lost dollars
How ironic that Assemblyman Chuck DeVore would criticize the
California Parks Department because the cost to convert the El Morro
trailer park in Crystal Cove State Park into a public campground and
day-user beach facility has continued to escalate. Actually, I think
it is mainly his actions that have caused all this.
The tenants were encouraged to illegally stay on beyond the Dec.
31, 2004, expiration of their leases largely because of his
introduction of unsuccessful legislation in the Assembly. DeVore’s
delaying actions caused the cost for the proposed conversion to
continue to rise.
At the same time, fighting the multiple lawsuits brought by the
tenants (all of which the tenants lost) has cost the parks department
a great deal of time and money.
The trailer park tenants, by not leaving, have been breaking the
law for eight months, having a wonderful time in what they think is
their summer resort, at the expense of you and me and all the
taxpayers of California.
FERN PIRKLE
Corona del Mar
Too bad Pendleton is off the airport radar
Thursday’s Daily Pilot had some very interesting letters regarding
Chris Cox’s failure to support an airport at El Toro. And the column
by Assemblyman Tom Harman on the great concerns we should all have
about the future of John Wayne Airport was very much on target as to
the future pressures that will be applied to raise or eliminate the
passenger caps. Why we never read about any possible usage of a
portion of Camp Pendleton for a commercial airport strikes me as
strange, but it’s probably politically untouchable.
DON HILLIARD
Newport Beach
Kids would benefit from God in schools
With reference to the July 21 “The Bell Curve”: As a 25-year
resident of Costa Mesa, grandmother and concerned American citizen, I
am writing to object to the implication that it is wrong to make
references to the concept of God in our public schools. This leaves
us with nothing to give our children except the influences of
individual teachers, who are subject to error and self-interest.
How else will our children be taught the seeds of spiritual
evolvement if not in the schools? Are we to forget that we are “one
nation, under God, with liberty and justice for all” and that even
our coins bear the inscription, “In God We Trust”?
America is a land in need of healing, and we must remember that we
are to put our trust in God if we are to be free.
PATRICIA SCHWENNESEN
Costa Mesa
Secret meetings, shameful decision
It is telling that the Costa Mesa Job Center advocates need to
meet in private and conceal their identities. It’s a shame that our
Chamber of Commerce would encourage businesses of this ilk, while
maligning resident input and characterizing public participation with
high-handed remarks about “inviting Dr. Kevorkian.”
LINDA NEWMAN
Costa Mesa
Costa Mesa, not Newport, to blame
I agree with Steve Smith on the subject of the lack of athletic
fields in most cities, and Costa Mesa has done nothing to solve this
problem. In the last 10 years, the city of Newport Beach has built
five youth baseball fields, two softball fields and four soccer
fields, and it is planning to rebuild two baseball fields and batting
cages in Mariner’s Park. Smith should talk to the volunteers at
Pacific Coast Softball, the Newport Harbor Baseball Assn. and AYSO
Region 97. All of these groups are made up of Newport Beach and Costa
Mesa residents. Ask them which city does a better job of providing
athletic fields. The city of Costa Mesa will give you a permit to
play soccer at Kaiser Elementary School in Costa Mesa. But if you
want to use the restrooms, you have to pay $150 a day to open them.
At Bonita Canyon Sports Park in Newport Beach, Newport Beach and
Costa Mesa children are playing baseball on the finest youth baseball
field in Orange County. I don’t hear a bunch of whining from the
Newport Beach families about the Costa Mesa kids.
CHARLIE MASSINGILL
Newport Beach
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