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With reference to the recent editorial (“Unfairly tainted library
foundation deserves support,” July 15) in the Daily Pilot relative to the
Newport Beach Public Library, we want to make sure that the Pilot and the
community receive a clear, accurate and current message. Both the Board
of Library Trustees and the Newport Beach Public Library continue on a
course of action designed to build the library to new heights based on
cooperative activities of fund-raising, the province of the Library
Foundation, and operations--the responsibility of the Board of Library
Trustees.
Old misunderstandings recirculated by the Pilot misinform the
community and really are old news. The past is, and should be, behind us.
Further publicity and articles are inappropriate and destructive. The two
bodies are working on areas of activity that require mutual planning; we
are both moving in a positive and fruitful manner. Please help us pursue
that growth that our community has every right to expect.
PATRICK BARTOLIC
Board of Library Trustees
LAWRENCE SPITZ
Newport Beach Public Library Foundation
Resident disagrees with Badham’s views on the Dunes
I notice an interesting trend in the letters from readers that concern
the Dunes hotel project. Those of us who live within two miles of the
proposed resort are dead set against it, while the Newport Harbor Area
Chamber of Commerce and those politicians who are willing to issue an
opinion are very much in favor of it.
The letter from former Rep. Robert E. Badham is typical of the
thinking that drives politicians and developers (“Readers sound off about
Dunes project,” June 29).
He says “the benefits [of growth, development and expansion] have been
obvious in commerce, creating wealth and a magnificent way of life.”
He also says “We have been without meeting facilities adequate to
service the numerous charitable and business functions attended by our
own citizens.”
Has Badham forgotten the Marriott, the Newporter, the Four Seasons,
the Sutton Place, the Radisson, the Balboa Bay Club, the Pelican Hill
Golf Club, and all the yacht clubs and private clubs that serve the
community and the tourist industry so admirably?
Newport Beach is not a big city by anyone’s standards, and another 470
hotel rooms is something that will benefit no one but Tim Quinn and the
Evans Hotels people.
Badham says “Let’s not let a selfish minority ‘pull up the gangplank’
and shut our community down.”
He obviously doesn’t live near the Dunes project, and he hasn’t taken
a good look around Newport in a while if he thinks our community is
shutting down.
BARRY COLE
Newport Beach
Reader says Smith is wrong to complain about scores
As I read Steve Smith’s article (“Maybe test scores have improved, but
not enough,” July 8), I was struck by his almost condescending attitude
toward the Stanford 9 test scores at Newport-Mesa Unified School
District.
I am not a teacher in Newport-Mesa. I am someone, however, who values
the job these teachers take on with little or no support from the
community. These teachers are often attacked with irrational jabs by
Smith. Smith is entitled to his opinion, but he has not been accurate
with his generalizations.
First, he goes off about the board member who stated that the
district’s students need to score in the 50th percentile. There is a huge
difference between 50%--half right and half wrong--and the 50 percentile,
a statistical average. In Stanford 9 figures, 50 percentile is considered
scoring at grade level. So in fact, the board wants all students to score
at grade level or above, not at 50%.
Second, Smith just touched very briefly on the fact that many of the
students who are scoring below grade level “are limited in their command
of the language.” He goes on to complain that on the West Side the
language programs are not working. Does Smith honestly believe that in
two years these students are gong to acquire enough of a command of our
most difficult language? Oh, by the way, most of these students only hear
English when they’re in a classroom, so they don’t even have two years of
English language development.
The third error in facts that Smith made was the comparison of the
same grade level at a school two years in a row. In order to compare
statistics properly you must follow the students, not the grade. You
cannot compare 1998 second-graders at Wilson Elementary School with the
second grade in 1999. You must compare 1998 second-graders with 1999
third-graders to get an accurate result of how the same kids did during
the school year. Otherwise, you are comparing two unlike items.
My advice to Smith is if he is unhappy with the product the district
is putting out, then move. I for one am satisfied with the end result of
what Newport-Mesa does with our children.
KEN COOPER
Costa Mesa
The future really will have more traffic
There was an excellent article on this issue of growth in Newport
Beach (“The best-laid plan,” July 17) but I would like to correct one
typo in the article.
I am quoted as saying that because the general plan of Newport Beach
allows another 20% of growth in our city, we can expect another one
person for every one who is already here. The correct number is one more
person for every four people who live here.
Even this modified number is staggering. Imagine every traffic jam and
every bank teller line with another one person in it for every four who
are already there. Now add the growth and traffic which would be
generated by the currently proposed chances to the general plan such as
the Dunes hotel, a huge new building for Conexant and a new Koll Center.
The article is certainly correct in saying that the Newport Beach of the
future will be bigger, denser and trickier to get around.
SUSAN SKINNER CAUSTIN
Newport Beach
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