Thank you for saving the DARE...
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Thank you for saving the DARE program
Thank you, Huntington Beach City Council, for not eliminating the
Drug Abuse Resistance Education program in our schools. Though the
reduction in the budget will mean less contact between officers and
kids, particularly in the middle schools, the cut was proportional to
the overall budget crisis.
It’s great that the fifth- and sixth-grade students in our schools
will continue to learn strategies for avoiding drug abuse and will
still have the opportunity to become friends with our police officers
through DARE.
As promised, our organization, Substance Abuse/Violence Education
Task Force, will keep pursuing additional funding sources for
anti-drug and anti-violence education in our schools. Thank you, City
Council, for retaining a portion of the program as a foundation. The
kids in our community are worth it.
CELIA JAFFE
Huntington Beach
Geddes made a case against districting
I agree with a lot of what Tim Geddes wrote in Sounding off in the
Sept. 19 edition of the Independent, but with rising health care
costs and pension costs to city employees, I do not see additional
staff being hired.
I do agree with his paragraph, “The new City Council will have
less time to devote to their positions than the previous City
Council. And yet, the demands on council members’ time and efforts
are likely to increase. The job keeps on getting tougher and more
complex.”
Geddes, in the above paragraph, states why there is opposition to
creating city council districts and reducing the number of council
members from seven to five.
The council is overburdened now, and to reduce it from seven
members to five will only make it worse, not better.
Those that are pushing districting have an agenda. But once the
election is over, they will not have to do the work that the five
elected council members would.
I also take issue with those that keep using the figure of 22,000
signatures collected. The correct number is 21,443, and of that
number only 16,768 were certified. I would hope in the future they
would not include those 4,675 that were not certified, which I am
sure included Mickey Mouse, Martha Stewart, etc. If those that want
districting want to be seen as credible, then give the correct amount
of certified signatures collected.
TOPPER HORACK
Huntington Beach
Noise from copters alienating residents
As they did in response to a tidal inlet article, Vic Leipzig and
Lou Murray should again take a normally clear-thinking editor behind
the woodshed. This time they can give that editor a crash course on
noise pollution. Lesson one would be titled, “Police helicopters are
really loud.”
The noise irritation issue caused by Huntington Beach Police
Department’s Aero Unit cannot be dismissed as casually as it was in
the Independent’s recent Editor’s Notebook. Residents in my
neighborhood are furious over the increasingly frequent and prolonged
disruptions caused by the helicopters. The police department is not
taking the actions necessary to address residents’ outrage over the
noise they are causing.
Sgt. Tom Arnold, Aero Unit supervisor, courteously responds to
complaints and always has some reason for the excessive circling. He
says they are after bad guys (and they will circle and circle until
they find one); he says they prevent drownings (even when they are
circling over residences); he says it’s probably some other agency,
such as the news media (presumably checking for sig alerts on 12th
and Acacia streets); he says they leave as fast as they can (the last
time I called, it was after 45 minutes of continual circling
beginning at 10 p.m.); he says the marine layer is increasing the
volume (then make some adjustments). Sgt. Arnold always ends the
complaint call with an upbeat message of how effective they are and
that they will try to be more sensitive to the noise issue.
Guess what, it keeps getting worse. Perhaps actions such as the
following would help:
1. Vary the flight patterns for take-offs and landings so the
helicopters are not flying over the same neighborhoods when they are
going to and from the police station.
2. Strictly regulate the amount of time helicopters can hover over
routine calls and leave as soon as patrol cars arrive.
3. In the Aero Unit’s monthly reports, include the number and
types of complaint calls received.
4. Include in their monthly reports a list of the number of times
when they had to circle over a response call for more than five
minutes, and detail the reason why any response had to last over 10
minutes.
5. Establish a well-publicized 24-hour complaint hot line,
preferably through the council office, where residents can call at
all hours of the day or night to report excessive circling.
6. Fly at a much higher altitude, or ground the helicopters
altogether, when there is a marine layer.
7. Stop telling us that the new helicopters are 30% quieter than
the older model.
Finally, I hope the Huntington Beach Police Department understands
that the helicopter issue is alienating residents who used to be
strong supporters of the department.
As for the starry-eyed editor who wrote the article, even though
she got a free helicopter ride and probably got to wear one of those
keen headsets, please revisit the noise issue.
JOHN FICK
Huntington Beach
Banning ads is a waste of time
I have lived in the Seacliff area of Huntington Beach for 25 years
and the noise has really increased from a lot of things.
No. 1 is the morning and evening traffic on Goldenwest Street,
especially on those warm Saturday and Sundays that attract our inland
neighbors (many on motorcycles) to our beaches.
No. 2 is the Huntington Beach police helicopter when it is
practicing landings on the City Hall or overseeing some emergency
activity nearby and is using its’ P.A. system.
No. 3 is jet aircraft inbound to land on runway 30 at the Long
Beach Airport on an overcast day, the noisiest is the Air Force C-17,
which is manufactured in Long Beach and, like most military aircraft,
is not equipped with noise suppressors.
No. 4 are the sirens on emergency vehicles traveling on Goldenwest
Street in route to where they are needed.
All of the noise sources listed above are signs of an area
increasing in population, services and business that we accept as
part of our life in a place with great weather and many other assets.
The low-level drone of banner-towing aircraft advertising local
businesses and showing the Stars and Stripes is insignificant. I
think the City Council has more important business to do, like sewer,
streets, water supplies, etc.
Extending its authority into our airspace is a waste of their time
and taxpayer money.
ROBERT L. BLURTON
Huntington Beach
Helicopters are noisy and a waste of money
I read the letter a couple of weeks ago from B.F. Schnel regarding
the police helicopters.
I read the letter today from V. Barrett.
Conclusions?
The helicopters are noisy, they do cost too much taxpayer money,
and 99% of residents will never need the “emergency services” Barrett
alleges they will.
We were at a beach party 10 days ago, and the feeling among the 25
adult guests there was unanimous -- the copters are a nuisance.
I’ve lived in New York, Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles and San
Diego. All are cities much larger than Huntington Beach, and their
police forces do not have to fly in Keystone Cop circles all night
long. In fact, they seem to be able to enforce the law through police
cars and foot patrols alone. Can you imagine anything so novel?
Furthermore, speeding is a problem on every residential street,
and the city or police refuses to do anything about it. When a child
is killed because of a reckless speeder, let her death be on yours
and the Huntington Beach Police Department’s hands.
G. RENTO
Huntington Beach
Offensive truck ads must be stopped
Thank you for publishing the letter from my friend Linda Sedivy
(Mailbag Sept. 19) concerning the truck ads. My children go to Marina
High School, and I was also confronted with the two big trucks.
They circled the school three times while I was waiting in line to
drop off my daughter. Who knows how many times they had already been
around?
I agree with Sedivy about drawing the line somewhere. These people
are sick and should not be allowed to push these issues on our
children. I hope this is not the last we hear from the public
concerning this, and we do need to stop them.
LIZ STANFORD
Huntington Beach
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