No surprise when bad politics arise How...
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No surprise when bad politics arise
How dare people act upset at Newport Beach City Councilman Dick
Nichols’ statement (“Councilman’s comments anger City Hall,”
Saturday).
With bribes running ramped in cities all over Los Angeles and
Orange County recently (don’t they watch the news?), they should be
looking into it. Bribes are, and have always been, part of bad
politics.
As for questionable recent decisions by Newport’s Planning
Commission, we need look no farther back than the Mormon church
steeple height problem. Someone on our City Council, with the entire
community involved crying foul, should have looked into that.
BRAD SMITH
Newport Beach
A right to talk, but a responsibility, also
It’s interesting, although not very comforting, to see that Costa
Mesa is not the only repository of politicians who forget to engage
their brains before they open their mouths. I refer, of course, to
Newport Beach City Councilman Dick Nichols’ recent brain burp before
the Planning Commission during which he reportedly implied that
someone had been paid off (“Councilman’s comments anger City Hall,”
Saturday). Good grief!
I agree with other writers that Nichols, as a resident of Newport
Beach, is entitled to speak on issues before the Planning Commission.
However, his position on the City Council carries with it the
responsibility of thinking before he speaks.
It’s one thing to overhear those kinds of comments while sipping a
cool one at a local bar -- it goes with the turf -- but for a sitting
councilman to blurt out such innuendo in a public forum is an
entirely different matter. If he truly believes what he said, then he
should launch an investigation. If it was just unedited drivel
running out of his head when he opened his mouth, then he should
apologize and keep his fingers crossed that no one sues him and the
city. And the citizens of Newport Beach should remember.
GEOFF WEST
Costa Mesa
A sign of something completely different
In Tuesday’s paper, a letter ran that is full of errors and
misconceptions (“Improvers improving Costa Mesa?”).
I am familiar with the request to post a “no soccer playing” sign
at a community park. However, the request was for a sign that not
only prohibited soccer, but also all other sports that are
inappropriate in the park in question, including baseball and field
hockey -- generally, thundering herd-type sports or those where balls
are hit, thrown or kicked by teams.
This park is a very small neighborhood park that is close to homes
and streets. It is no way a sports field. The central feature of the
park is a tot lot. The park is also dotted with large mature trees.
What has been happening is that soccer players are taking over the
park and disrespecting the uses for which this park was intended and
chasing off citizens who do want to use the park as intended.
The park has no flat area of a size that is appropriate for soccer
playing. The soccer players play around and among the trees and are
in danger of running into the trees. The turf in the park, which is
not the proper turf for heavy use, is now turning brown and has bare
spots because of the heavy use. The trees are being damaged. Soccer
balls are frequently kicked on to the sidewalk and into the street.
These balls are often followed by soccer players, who dart into the
very busy street. Residents have complained about finding human waste
in the tot lot after the soccer players leave.
Now, as far as the letter writer’s other vague innuendoes about
residents who are trying to improve Costa Mesa, I would only say that
his agenda seems pretty clear from the terms and words he has used.
My guess is that if the writer is for any sort of improvement, he
will define the term to mean clean the alleys once a year, rather
than making the very necessary changes in our city that will make
this the best place to live in all of Orange County.
JANICE DAVIDSON
Costa Mesa
A picture-perfect idea for Irvine Avenue
The consensus seems to be that speed is the most common factor in
causing accidents in the “S” curves on Irvine Avenue. I don’t favor
installing speed bumps or additional signals to slow down traffic,
and I don’t favor additional policing because of the numbers of
people who exceed the speed limit make it impractical to chase down
every one, the danger to the policemen and the time it takes for the
officers to spend in court when a ticket is contested.
I would like to see investigated the practicality of combining
traffic cameras with radar on portable trailers to photograph and
send a huge bill to the owner of every vehicle caught speeding.
This might require a change in the laws to provide that the owner
of a vehicle is responsible for anyone caught speeding in his vehicle
and would certainly require that the requirement that every vehicle
have a clearly visible front license plate be enforced. It would also
be very unpopular.
KENNETH L. PERRY
Newport Beach
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