Environmentalist should butt out of this debate...
Environmentalist should butt out of this debate
So, the Earth Resource Foundation wants cities to outlaw smoking
on the beach. Pardon me, but isn’t this just the latest example of
the tyranny of the majority?
Making the use of a legal product, manufactured and sold legally,
illegal -- hello, outdoors -- is just the latest effort by fringe
wackos to steal individual freedoms from some of our citizens because
a percentage of them are slobs and carelessly discard their butts.
I’ve got an idea. Let’s stop this gradual denial of those freedoms
right now. Let’s let it all hang out. Let’s outlaw the use of tobacco
unless it’s in the “smoking zone.” And I propose we make Montana the
smoking zone.
And I, for one, am not concerned that residents of Montana may not
agree with this choice. After all, more people live in Costa Mesa,
Huntington Beach, Newport Beach and Irvine than live in Montana. And
so, this can be just one more instance of the majority imposing their
will on the minority, and if they don’t like it, tough.
Of course, it could take a while to get to Montana, resulting in
huge nicotine fits among the more addicted. It could also result in
quite a few smokers giving up the habit, which would be good. Maybe a
few others would go “postal,” which would be very, very bad. But the
Earth Resource people would be happy. And to them, that’s all that
counts.
CHUCK CASSITY
Costa Mesa
City’s handling of Scheer lawsuit unprofessional
It is unfortunate to read of the fiasco of the city of Costa Mesa
versus former City Atty. Jerry Scheer. The failure of a simple act --
signing off the paperwork -- shows an amazing lack of procedure and
consensus among city management and council members. If the city has
to pay $1 to Scheer, you know that the city was just wrong.
It is simple: City management and council acted without the
professionalism expected of even the worst of municipal governments.
A sign that City Manager Alan Roeder and cronies must move on to
another city with lower expectations.
MICHAEL JOHNSON
Costa Mesa
Public opinion is shifting gears in regard to airport
The Navy’s “plan” to sell a toxic property -- the former El Toro
Marine Corps Air Station -- to the housing industry has ground to a
halt. Now it is apparently looking into asbestos and toxins in the
runways. Huge traffic loads have to be studied, annexation of the
airfield to Irvine is being challenged, and airport proponents are
going around Irvine and its captive cities.
Public opinion is shifting away from being anti-airport to being
pro-jobs and anti-housing development. No one denies we need the
planned El Toro International Airport. It is estimated to provide $19
billion in income, 134,000 jobs and serve 30 million annual
passengers. The airport is ready to use, no one is in the noise zone,
and all we have to do is turn on the lights.
DONALD NYRE
Newport Beach
County mustn’t repeat mishandling of assets
Bill Turner’s commentary “Wasting an asset at El Toro” in the Dec.
16 issue of the Pilot spells out very clearly how Orange County got
itself into the El Toro airport imbroglio and who are the winners and
the losers.
The present state of Orange County’s finances enters heavily into
any decision of the fate of El Toro. Long after Bob Citron plunged
the county into bankruptcy we are still paying off the bond issue
that is supposed to clear our financial record to the tune of
millions per year. Now we seem to be continuing the Citron tradition
by the mishandling of one of our most significant assets -- the
former El Toro Marine base.
The county was given a gift of the closed El Toro Marine base by
the U.S. government with no strings attached. Then we spent $50
million in taxpayer money to convert the existing facility into
suitable form for commercial use and published the plan in the
environmental report, which was on display at all county libraries.
However, as Turner pointed out, the city of Irvine, developers and
realtors subverted the airport plan and replaced it with the “Great
Park” alternative. The result of Irvine’s et al duplicity will be
costly to Orange County and the state of California.
The $10-billion gift and the $50 million spent on planning will be
thrown away. Orange County will not receive the $19 billion in
operating revenue, nor will it benefit from the associated taxes. And
about 134,000 jobs will not be generated. Any other El Toro
activities that will generate taxes to help Orange County and the
state budget will disappear. Without an airport at El Toro, people in
Orange County will still be forced to drive to LAX, and the horrible
traffic will continue, causing another expansion of that freeway.
Will Orange County go the Citron route or will it take the prudent
fiscal course?
WILLIAM KERNS
Costa Mesa
Another example of photojournalism at its finest
I have to congratulate your photographer Don Leach. He’s done it
again. And also your editor who picked his photograph to accompany
the story “Pomona Elementary School students get Christmas gifts” on
the front page of the Daily Pilot on Saturday.
If that doesn’t bring a smile to every person’s face -- with that
little child in the middle and that little boy behind her with such a
nice grin. It sure as heck has to warm the hearts of all those people
at Harbor View Elementary, who presented those gifts to those
children.
What a wonderful combination of things by all of you folks.
GORDON PATE
Costa Mesa
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