Effects of plant will linger for years...
Effects of plant will linger for years
After more than five hours of public testimony on the Poseidon
environmental report, it was disappointing and shocking to witness
the majority of the Huntington Beach City Council disregard the
concerns in opposition to the report.
Huntington Beach’s largest tourist attraction and thus revenue
generator is our beach.
This ocean desalination plant is to be built in the exact location
where the beach closures in Huntington Beach have taken place over
the years. This project will be constructed by the same company that
failed to build a viable seawater desalination plant in Tampa Bay,
Fla.
I am at a loss to understand how the City Council could approve
the environmental report. The inadequacies of the report aside, the
effects on the city of Huntington Beach and the residents will be
felt for years.
I want to thank Mayor Jill Hardy, Councilman Dave Sullivan and
Councilmember Debbie Cook for their reasoned and informed statements
in opposition.
FLOSSIE HORGAN
Huntington Beach
Like it or not, report deserved approval
I am personally in favor of the Poseidon project, so I naturally
like the council’s decision. However, even if I did not approve of
the project, I would have to believe that all the facts and science
contained in the environmental report called for a yes vote by the
council. I believe those who voted against it had sufficient
opportunity to have any questions they had answered by the city staff
and/or the applicant, so that their no vote was either a display of
predisposition against the project or an attempt not to alienate
those anti-Poseidon members of the community who have been their
supporters.
GEORGE CROSS
Huntington Beach
The report just wasn’t good enough
Council members Debbie Cook and Dave Sullivan and Mayor Jill Hardy
made the right decision in voting to deny the inadequate Poseidon
environmental report.
Council members Cathy Green, Gil Coerper, Don Hansen and Keith
Bohr voted to approve the environmental report. Hansen should be
especially ashamed because he lives in the 92646 area. Sixty-four of
his constituents have a lawsuit against the city and the Orange
County Sanitation District because of the pipeline being installed in
their area. Their houses are sinking.
Now this Poseidon project wants to put a pipeline in the same
streets, and these four council members voted that the environmental
report was adequate.
The report is inadequate in not telling how the pipeline could be
allowed.
Huntington Beach was the lead agency and should have stepped up to
the plate and done what they were supposed to do. The report was
inadequate, and they should have voted to deny it.
EILEEN MURPHY
Huntington Beach
Plant will wreck ecology of coast
I am very disappointed at the outcome of the vote. This project,
if approved, will do so much more damage than good.
The Poseidon company has a very untrustworthy past, and I have no
trust in them at all. I think that this will ruin the ecology of our
coast and will ruin the area I live in at Newland and Pacific Coast
Highway. I will have to move, and it will be a great hardship on me.
I have no assurance that the construction needed will not destroy my
home.
BARBARA WILLIAMS
Huntington Beach
Nothing for the city, harm for animals
I disagree with the City Council’s action in approving the
Poseidon environmental report. I don’t see a value for Huntington
Beach in creating more heavy industrial sites near the beach, and it
appears that Huntington Beach won’t even significantly benefit from
the water that may be produced by the plant.
But the most important reasons for preventing the placement of the
desalination plant as proposed are the potential for damage to ocean
waters and marine life, and the potential for fouling the aquifers
under our area. It appears that the scientific reasons for preventing
this development were ignored by the City Council.
DIANE BLAKE BENTLEY
Huntington Beach
Short and to the point
The council did not make the right decision.
JOHN HOWELL
Huntington Beach
On the other side of the issue
I have been a Huntington Beach resident for 35 years. The City
Council made the right decision in approving the Poseidon
environmental report.
ROBERT HARRISON
Huntington Beach
This neighborhood has had enough
Amazing. Here we go again: Southeast Huntington Beach continues to
be the guinea-pig development experiment. This city continues to
misuse this section of the city, and the drive for the almighty
dollar is always at the forefront of the ongoing city budget debate.
It is not enough that we in southeast Huntington Beach have our
friendly neighbor called Edison, which sometimes likes to discharge
large quantities of highly pressurized steam into the atmosphere in
the middle of the night when purging the pipes for plant maintenance
reasons, thereby waking up its neighbors without letting them know
ahead of time.
It is not enough that our friendly Orange County Sanitation
District, which lovingly ripped up miles of our streets not once but
twice and still are not finished with the project. And now it also is
dealing with neighborhood lawsuits and the displeasure of those
people who were inconvenienced by the noise, digging and horrible
pipe material selection that required it be removed and replaced.
It is not enough already that we have the ASCON landfill, which
spewed hazardous thick oil over houses and streets in our
neighborhoods last year and now is getting “cleaned up.” We must now
endure six long months of large equipment hauling and rolling over
our streets on their way out of town with the waste that was allowed
to be dumped there.
It is not enough that now we get another potential “neighborhood
friend” called Poseidon that has a long history in a failed Tampa Bay
experiment. Poseidon has not lived up to the proposed level of
product (fresh water) to be produced for the customers who might have
to buy it at inflated prices to recoup Poseidon’s current business
loss and lack of project management.
It’s still not enough for the four council members who voted for
this to go forward. Those of us who disagree with their vote on this
subject now live to see their future political careers end as soon as
possible for their lack of human insight, oversight, consideration
and attention to detail that is required for the council jobs you
hold.
I am not a NIMBY, antidevelopment person or environmentalist or
any thing along those lines. I am a human being who is getting tired
of the experiments.
Let me be specific. I am a human being who is getting really tired
of all these development experiments that are not adding to the
quality of life for those of us who live with these daily situations
and who put the council members into their positions to represent our
best interests versus the overall financial needs of the city at the
expense of taxpayers like us who make up this city and its budget.
I am also getting tired of council members who over the years have
lacked this basic human understanding of people who must endure these
experiments while never considering any other possible
quality-of-life development efforts that can add to the tax roles.
Do you want me to go on? Thought not.
MICHAEL KARAL
Huntington Beach
Treat Poseidon like any business
The City Council was right to certify the environmental report.
The original report was rejected and the company was asked to do more
work in certain areas. They did so. They have spent a lot of money to
jump through a lot of hoops. They are following the process and we
should treat them as we treat any other business in town. If a
7-Eleven wants to open in Huntington Beach, we make them follow a
process and follow rules and regulations, and we should treat
Poseidon the same way.
KATIE AGESON
Huntington Beach
If city gets water, the plan is good
If Huntington Beach is a part owner of the new desalinization
plant, so that Huntington Beach residents are guaranteed an
inexpensive supply of drinking water, then I’m for the plant. If
we’ve given a private firm permission to ship our water, our
birthright, elsewhere, then I’m against it.
PHILLIP GOOD
Huntington Beach
Report not adequate, nothing sorted out
The City Council majority made a huge error in certifying the
Poseidon environmental report. The document was obviously flawed,
incomplete and wholly inadequate in identifying all of the
significant effects of the project.
While the project can still be denied in the conditional use
permit phase, Poseidon should have been forced to come back with a
clean report with their plans better sorted out.
TIM GEDDES
Huntington Beach
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