ROBERT BRADLEY -- Community Commentary
Since you invited 1/8readers 3/8 to respond with all your little question
boxes, I thought I would just do that. Many a letter I have written to
newspapers. But generally after doing so, my frustration has abated, and
I hit the delete button. Who needs to listen to it anyway? Also, I get
verbose, and what newspaper really needs that? Perhaps I will hit the
send button this time.
I have three things to say about Huntington Beach after having visited
here in 1948 to party on the beach and having moved here 20 years later
to work and raise kids.
First, after several decades, one begins to recognize that, plain and
simply, we have some mean people who live in Huntington Beach. I suppose
every city does, but the diatribe over the Christmas party is slightly
over the top. If I were going to be a June graduate in public
administration, I think I would probably pass on this city.
Thirty years of nonsense over such issues as the Bolsa Chica,
redevelopment, affordable housing (They were kidding, weren’t they?), and
on and on, leave a working stiff a little insensitive to all the
hucky-puck that the City Council and the media debate, cry, and shout
about.
Of course, most everyone has to make a living, and most of the stuff you
hear and read are a matter of good intentions, if not always so
honorable.
One always wonders about the people who join in all the protesting. I
know that they must want a more sophisticated and civil society, but
where do they find the time and energy? One envisions that they are bored
and have little else to feed their ego. I know they work hard. They never
seem to rest.
Who really cares about the Christmas party? The city treasurer drops more
than that on the floor, working hard to lay off the city’s excess cash.
Which reminds me, who is he and why don’t we hear from him on Channel 3?
I guess he just works hard and doesn’t catch Eron Ben-Yehuda’s
attention. Maybe he even knows what he is doing.
I thought the comments on Mayor Dave Garofalo’s leveraged investment in
the local bank were the height of irony (“Some locals question Garofalo’s
decisions,” Dec. 16), coming from people whose business is risking
others’ money. Garofalo has every right to do that -- he will enjoy the
consequences one way or the other. Surely, since he is mayor and the bank
is a local start-up, it is everybody’s business. But why bother to
speculate on how wise it is or if he would do that with the taxpayers’
money? Last I saw, he still has only one vote.
Of course, I understand that he is pro-growth. However, I am tempted to
concern myself with the fact that Garofalo literally hangs on every word
Steve Bone utters. Sometimes I want to upchuck.
I ... think probably Steve Bone does like Huntington Beach. I would like
it, too, if my least expensive room was $149 for a cold and damp Monday.
If I were the mayor, I would be happy with the extra $14 in bed tax going
to the city. I wonder if anyone from within the Huntington Beach
boundaries will ever stay there?
Second, regarding our current and wished for growth: Huntington Beach
will never ever be Belmont Shore, nor will it ever be Newport Beach.
Plain and simply put: It is a beach town. You go to a beach town for fun
and frolic. All the new development will never change that. One does not
visit Main Street because one needs to buy something that is considered a
necessity. There are none there. Everything for sale is optional to basic
needs. And if they had real stores there, who would pop 25 cents for 15
minutes when they can go to a “big box,” park free and save money?
We should try to be the very best we are at what we are. We go Downtown
to party just like I did in 1948, and we should capitalize on just that
and a strong police force.
I vote that we close off the last two blocks of Main at Pacific Coast
Highway and cover it with a sound-and-sight show like Las Vegas did with
the Fremont Experience. Then you could draw more than teeny boppers. An
investment somewhere to replace the Golden Bear would be a pretty good
idea, too. Let’s let the good times roll again -- for adults, too.
Loved the idea of the eminent domain thing we went through (“Eminent
domain repealed Downtown,” Dec. 9). What a waste of energy. When
Ben-Yehuda refers to the seven rooms upstairs 1/8in the El Don building
3/8 as apartments, he really pushes the English language. The El Don
owner will get his price ... and it will be a good figure.
Third, Huntington Beach is really a good city, reasonably well run and
certainly a pleasant place to live. All those who perpetually criticize
every little thing should run for the City Council and really devote
themselves to their causes.
Occasionally, I am asked why I don’t run for the City Council and the
answer is: It’s too hard and demanding, and I am too lazy. Years ago,
when aerospace dived, I was asked why I didn’t try to go to work for the
city. My answer to that was that I couldn’t afford the luxury -- I had to
be able to pay the rent.
So I say we have a pretty good deal, and we need to bask in that feeling
and spare our community the meanness and the disruptions.
Thank you for reading this if you got this far. Once again, my
frustrations are satiated, but this time I will hit the send button and
see if it works.
* ROBERT BRADLEY is a Huntington Beach resident.
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