Mailbag - Aug. 14, 2001
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Animal ordinance would be sane choice
Leave it to Chris Steel to make defamatory remarks concerning the wild
animal ordinance that he so clearly opposed and obviously doesn’t
understand (“Animal exhibits face new scrutiny,” Aug. 5). One shouldn’t
expect otherwise from a man who is under criminal investigation and has
publicly made less than tactful statements about certain “classes” of
people living in his city.
Can Steel explain how this ordinance would add to the Police
Department’s burden? Can he think at all? If anything, this ordinance
would alleviate the burden of the Police Department if or when the
seemingly docile elephant giving rides or parading in the circus decides
to run amok. Yes, this happens.
Forget about the moral and ethical concerns regarding wild animal
exhibits. Steel could not possibly comprehend anything of the sort. For
the rest of us, capturing wild animals from their native lands, beating
them into submission and toting them around in boxcars 50 weeks a year to
perform stupid tricks for our amusement is abominable. But to Steel, this
does not compute.
J.E. KELLER
Costa Mesa
Costa Mesa councilmen on right track
It might be simple to accuse the Costa Mesa City Council of being
dysfunctional (What’s Up?, “True problems beginning to show at City
Hall,” Saturday). Just look at the record, but is that what columnist
Steve Smith was suggesting when he called upon his friend Norm Fricker to
help him analyze current council actions?
Perhaps contacting the source and simply asking Councilmen Chris Steel
and Gary Monahan what they were thinking when they “floated” their effort
to add two additional council members and offer a plebiscite for an
“elected mayor” may have yielded better results.
Proportional representation, being a city of more than 100,000 and
having a chief executive that has been duly elected to lead the community
with an open agenda may have been on some council members’ minds. If
Steel and Monahan didn’t elucidate these concerns to their constituents
or fully explain the issues to other council members, surely they can be
faulted. However, responsive government during times of growth can be
quite contentious to the prevailing order of things and sometimes
difficult to explain diplomatically, even if the changes are needed.
So in the words of Robert Redford to Paul Newman in “Butch Cassidy and
the Sundance Kid,” let’s say to council members Steel and Monahan, as
well as Steve Smith and Norm Fricker, “Just keep thinking, Butch; that’s
what you do good!”
RON WINSHIP
Newport Beach
Landlord rule would go after wrong people
At a time when I seriously question all politicians’ abilities to
govern themselves and obey the laws they created, let alone govern their
own constituency, I read where the Costa Mesa City Council wanted to
order landlords to evict tenants who commit drug- or gang-related
offenses (“Council begins study of crime eviction program,” July 10).
I wonder if by “gang” they are also referring to members of labor
unions, Legionaries or a bicycle club. And by “drugs,” I wonder if they
include alcohol-related offenses such as DUIs or the abuse of
prescription medication, such as mommy’s Xanax or diet pills?
Councilman Chris Steel supports the eviction law (you know, the guy
who’s facing felony charges of perjury and election violations). I wonder
what Steel thinks about a law that deports crooked politicians?
J. SCOTT DAVID
Newport Beach
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