Sounding Off
Don McGee
The misuse of an ever-depleting resource seems to be at the crux of
several ongoing sagas here in Surf City.
Money is evaporating almost as quickly as water here in California.
The state is expecting a $24-billion shortfall in the future and thus
Huntington Beach will feel the fallout from this catastrophic occurrence.
Programs that have been financed in the past are suddenly being
considered for cutbacks or complete elimination.
Yet we seem to find funds ($45,000) for questionable projects such as
Surf Circle (“surfhengeâ€) and $18 million for a sports complex that was
supposed to cost a twelfth of this.
As art goes I find the new sculpture to be interesting, not for its
beauty, but because it does look like the sign for pi, the 16th letter of
the Greek alphabet and the symbol designating the ratio of the
circumference of a circle to its diameter.
Sitting at the shore, next to the horizon, it should serve as a subtle
reminder that the earth is not flat. This is important because there are
more than a few contingencies around that have a mind-set conducive to
the belief that it is indeed flat and that business can be conducted in
ways that allow little or no thought as to the sustainability of outmoded
and archaic methods that have been employed thus far in our history.
Such agencies are the Orange County Sanitation District and
Environmental Protection Agency, who would have us operate our sewage
treatment facility in accordance with the antiquated method that has not
served us well for many years now. Their archaic agenda allows for
continued pollution of our most precious resource -- the ocean -- in
spite of the 1972 Clean Water Act. Despite continued pressure from a
variety of concerned parties the district rapaciously grips to its waiver
like it is the holy grail and something to be surrendered only under the
threat of death or dismemberment.
Sustainability of the ocean is not a priority in the thought processes
of anyone who would continue such degradation and befoulment. The other
party to this abomination is the EPA, which sits in the back room, rubber
stamp at the ready, granting waiver after waiver, ad nauseum. Litigation
is the only mechanism that ever gets agencies such as these off the dime
and moving toward a new paradigm. Litigation, that the burdening cost of
is borne by the taxpayer, who they keep forgetting, as if they ever
recognized, are those they are supposedly serving.
As for the business with this antiquated mentality, there is AES and
developers, who operate on the contention that profits are the only
consideration and sustainability is just a dirty five syllable word.
AES and the devil-may-care, build-it-out-as-soon-as-possible,
full-speed-ahead developers seem to view sustainability as their ability
to sustain their modus operandi, with consequences being only the
aftermath when the truth is finally realized, which will be long after
they have reaped and ran.
These are the ones that have concocted the “fair†initiative that
would reduce the council to five members that they would not only control
the election of, but their votes once seated. The “fair†initiative would
be hilarious if I believed they also saw the humor in choice of misnomers
for this bit of flimflam.
*DON McGEE is a Huntington Beach resident. To contribute to Sounding
Off send an e-mail to o7 [email protected] or fax us at (714)
965-7174.
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