Feedback -- Rockin’ the boat
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The cartoon (Daily Pilot, June 24) by Bolton wasn’t far off the mark.
On Tuesday, June 26, Lodwrick M. Cook held a demonstration by parking his
large yacht toward the beach at his dock on Balboa Island (“Yacht
controversy takes a new turn,” June 27). This boat dominated the entire
area. It was larger than any boat in sight. It was a plight to the
charming characteristics of Balboa Island that we enjoy.
He was fortunate to have docked during a higher tide. It was so long
that the first 25 feet of the boat, almost half of it, would be on sand
at low tide. The stern, possibly over the legal limit in the bay, stuck
out into the channel far enough to cause dozens of kids returning their
small sabots from races to change course. The boat was too long to tie
off on the dock, so they had a line from the bow to the pier, a fixed
point. Both the boat and dock float with the tide. When the tide went
out, the boat would have been pulled into the dock and pier with enough
force to seriously damage the pier, dock or boat.
Cook’s first application was to move the pier and dock to a new
location, effectively making the beach private. The residents were
totally against this proposal and the City Council denied the request.
This new demonstration, with the boat pointed toward the beach,
indicated he would need to dredge a hole in the beach so his boat would
float in water at low tide. Again, we would lose the beach, as sand from
the surrounding area would migrate to the hole. Not only would the boat
occupy areas for swimming and block access to the bay, the hole created
by dredging would be a giant safety hazard for anyone walking or wading
near it. Falling in the underwater hole next to Cook’s large boat could
lead to serious injury or drowning.
Cook’s only alternative is to stop this ridiculous request. If he
spent any time at his new home, he might begin to understand the
privilege of his pier and dock on a public beach, use it appropriately,
and not selfishly force the rest of us into confrontation. Welcome to
Balboa Island.
BRUCE REYNOLDS AND FAMILY
Balboa Island
I’d like to express my opinion regarding (Lodwrick) Cook’s yacht. I
feel that he should be granted his permit. Here we have a law-abiding
citizen who’s playing by the rules -- asking permission -- bought his two
lots, etc., and is merely trying to dock his boat near his homes. Would
he be endangering anyone if granted his permit?
Contrast this with Dennis Rodman’s behavior. Maybe Cook should adapt
Rodman’s attitude and just dock his boat and proclaim, “I’m going to do
whatever I want to do and the rest of the community can just deal with
it.”
I’d much rather see the city use its resources to pursue enforcement
of the laws that Rodman so blatantly breaks. If and when Cook decides to
sue the city, I’m sure that it’s going to cost us to defend the city’s
decision.
When someone endangers beachgoers by landing a helicopter, I think he
should be held accountable. I certainly would expect the FAA to suspend,
if not revoke, the pilot’s license for such blatant disregard for the law
of the land.
I’d like to see Rodman take his attitude into the city of Los Angeles
and see if the police are as polite as Newport Beach’s finest. I doubt
the press would be allowed to photograph and publicize his antics. I also
think some nightsticks would have been dispatched to quell the
disturbance.
Remember, as long as he gets away with his stunts, we are encouraging
him to do more.
MARK P. MEDINA
Newport Beach
I do not believe that Lodwrick Cook has the right to dominate the
space in front of the property he owns on Balboa Island by docking a
large boat. If Cook will check the deed to his properties, he will learn
that he does not own the boardwalk, not the sea wall, nor the beach, nor
the water in front of his property. This property belongs to the city of
Newport Beach and the people of California.
If the city of Newport Beach grants him permission to dock his boat,
this is only a privilege and certainly not a right. In my opinion,
allowing Cook to dock such a large boat will not benefit anyone but
himself, certainly not the family lifestyle of Balboa Island or the city
of Newport Beach.
ROBERT B. LAMBERT
Balboa Island
They just don’t get it. The Cook family and Tony Melum, Newport
Beach’s harbor resources manager, believe the boat “fits in there,” after
mooring it as a landlubber would -- tied forward to the immovable pier
and aft to the floating dock.
Oh yes, it fits if you disregard the tides. Disregard the tides and
the mooring line will rip the cleat off the pier in a similar fashion as
the boating accident at Disneyland where a life was taken.
What the Cooks need to do is take the lead from a neighbor just one
pier away: realize that a yacht larger than 50 feet doesn’t belong on
these piers, blocks access to the public beaches and public waterways and
instead relocate the boat to a more appropriate venue, a commercial or
private mooring. The neighbor was sensitive to the issues and showed
compassion for his fellow neighbors and for the special life that Balboa
Island offers us all.
The land is private but not the walkway, the sea wall, the beaches and
the water. We all have ownership and enjoy sharing it with visitors from
around the world. That is why we are protective about the island
ourselves.
BILL AND LINDA PIERPOINT
Balboa Island
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