Mailbag - Jan. 20, 2001
Why not use lobbyists to help us open the former El Toro Marine Corps
Air Station to aviation use (“Supervisors to hire El Toro lobbyists for
$1.16 million,” Jan 5)?
Just transferring ownership from the federal government to Orange
County is no guarantee that we will ever have an airport at El Toro. In
fact, transferring ownership before we have regular flights may be an
impediment to realizing a commercial airport there.
If ownership is transferred to Orange County without current aviation
use, this will only intensify the efforts of developers to gain control
of that valuable property.
For example, they and their paid consultants could whip up the
anti-airport frenzy, leading to the impeachment of pro-airport
supervisors and replacing them with puppets who would favor anti-El Toro
airport developers.
We must prevent such a scenario from happening. We need El Toro as an
Orange County airport.
DONALD NYRE
Newport Beach
Homeowner defends encroachment issue
After reading Steve Smith’s column (“It’s my turn to encroach on
Fairview Park encroachers,” Jan. 6), I feel that I must write in order to
defend myself and my neighbors with regard to the accusation that we are
stealing public land.
Here are some quick facts on this situation:
* These homes on Swan Drive were built in 1965 and originally sold
without a rear fence or wall. It was up to the homeowner to build one. In
most cases, the property line was located somewhere on a steep grade down
to a flood control channel.
* This land is a forgotten sliver of what is now called Fairview Park.
The state owned the land back when the first homeowners moved in. They
sold it to the county in 1973, and Costa Mesa purchased it in 1986.
* The property in question is a narrow -- about 30 feet wide --
dead-end strip of property bordered on one side by the flood control
channel with a very unattractive rusted, bent up, old chain-link fence.
Bordering the other side is a slope up to our rear property walls. The
majority of the land that is flat and usable is encumbered by an
ingress/egress easement to the benefit of the county and water districts.
Nothing will ever grow or can be built there because of the occasional
trucks that drive through there.
* The owners of this property have neglected it for more than 35
years, but several homeowners have been keeping it weed-free, saving the
owners thousands of dollars in maintenance costs. When we were served
notice in April, our maintenance was put on hold, which is why it didn’t
look so nice to Smith.
* The city has stated in print -- see the city’s Fairview Park master
plan -- and in public hearings that it has no intention of ever improving
the property.
Unfortunately, thanks to the recent publicity, I’ve seen several
families and young kids doing what Smith and his family did -- illegally
riding on the dangerous “no trespassing” county access road above the
channel to see what all the fuss is about.
Your “slow news day” story is now encouraging readers to trespass into
the channel, and it’s only a matter of time before a child falls into the
rocks and gets hurt.
Please remind your readers if they want to see this famous strip of
land, they should come in from Placentia Avenue instead of the channel
access road.
TIM CROMWELL
Costa Mesa
Editorial sends the wrong message
I religiously read the Daily Pilot and was appalled at the editorial
espousing the thought that noncitizens should have the right to
participate in our government (“Don’t dishonor those who fought to end
bigotry,” Jan. 13).
This thinking is endemic with the liberalism that is pervasive
throughout our country.
Today, there is no responsibility to do the right thing -- “If it
feels good, it is OK.” There seems to be no need for accountability and
the “rule of law” no longer is important, as evidenced by your suggestion
that it should no longer be required for a person to be a citizen to hold
an appointed office.
I understand and appreciate the tremendous influx of Latinos into the
United States and specifically Southern California.
This flight from poverty and the necessity to provide for one’s family
is basic. But we are a nation of laws and the thought that citizenship no
longer is important to participate in our government troubles me deeply.
I don’t understand your thought process, as suggested in the
editorial, that we, as a nation and as a community, should not screen
people to see if they are citizens.
Your editorial is evidence that we are slowly drifting away from our
Constitution and “nation of laws.” Have we become a feel-good people, no
longer accountable, no longer responsible for our actions?
I think the editorial does a disservice to those of us who are
citizens and sends the wrong message to those who are not citizens.
God bless those people who want to come to America for a better life
for their family. But they have a responsibility to obey the laws that
govern our country.
One of the requirements to enjoy this wonderful and prosperous way of
life is to become a citizen, be accountable and to make a contribution to
the well-being of our country.
To suggest that city appointees do not have to meet certain
requirements erodes our rule of law.
ROBERT SCHARNELL
Newport Beach
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