Regard for greenery in Portland, Ore. puts...
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Regard for greenery in Portland, Ore. puts Costa Mesa to shame
I have spent time up the Portland, Ore. area, where trees are
revered and trees cannot be cut down, and they are planting trees
even where they are building houses, and here, Costa Mesa is cutting
down mature trees just so hardball can be played.
To me, the tree and the environment is more important. Is it going
to appease people in Costa Mesa or other cities that will come around
to play on our fields?
I was in the plane on the way to Portland, and when we landed, we
saw luscious, beautiful treetops. You come down into John Wayne
Airport and what do you see? Tops of houses and ugly palm trees.
I just can’t believe we are thinking of getting rid of all those
trees.
NADINE ANDREEN
Costa Mesa
Trees are not the bees knees when it comes to views
Newport Beach is not the only city with idiotic tree policies.
Costa Mesa also does not have a clue when it comes to trees blocking
neighborhood views. Residents of the Marina-Highlands on the far
Westside are also the victims of a misdirected policy on the choice
of trees planted in city boulevards.
Our area is one of three or four areas in the city that have (or
used to have) ocean views. Unfortunately, the city has chosen to
plant pine trees and other varieties that grow to a height of 40 to
80 feet, which block our ocean views. The view is one of the main
reasons that residents purchased homes in our area many years ago. As
the trees grow taller each year, our homes decrease in value.
The same is true for the Freedom homes located along the southern
portion of Canyon Park. The trees there have grown from the floor of
the park to the point where they now block the ocean view for many of
those homeowners. An additional problem is the stand of eucalyptus
trees just outside of Canyon Park, which is actually in Newport
Beach. Those trees also block the view for many residents of the
Freedom homes.
Another problem is the city policy that absolutely no trees can be
topped. There are many varieties of trees that have a mature height
of 12 to 18 feet that can be heavily pruned and/or topped without
damage to the tree.
It’s time that cities wake up to the fact that trees do not
necessarily improve property values. In fact, the choice of trees can
be detrimental to a neighborhood. In addition to the loss of view,
there are the high costs associated with the repair of sidewalks,
curbs and streets from root problems and the need for periodic tree
trimming that could be better used to repair the terrible condition
of our city streets.
Trees can be a wonderful improvement to our streets, but the city
needs to realize that the choice of trees should enhance the
neighborhood rather than be a detriment.
T. DOUGLASS
Costa Mesa
Fairview Park land along Swan Drive is not for individual resale
Encroachment by Swan Drive property owners into Fairview Park --
what is that all about? It’s no longer about encroachment, it is
about money. It’s about coercing the Costa Mesa City Council into
declaring that Fairview Park property between the Fairview Channel
and the properties on Swan Drive as “surplus” to the needs of the
park. This will allow the property to be sold at a very low price to
the individual property owners on the south side of Swan Drive
because it is worthless to anyone else, they will argue. This surplus
of park property, when divided up and added to individual properties
on Swan Drive, will then raise their values by tens of thousands of
dollars.
Fairview Park was intended to be kept in its natural state, with
minimal improvements and with the open space of the park being its
major value to the people. If this is still true, how can giving away
any of that property be advantages to the purposes of the park? A
lower parking lot, walking trails and bike trails were recently
deleted from the park area below the bluffs because the Swan Drive
people didn’t want improvements in the park because they weren’t
natural. Now these same people are saying that the park property
behind their homes doesn’t need to remain natural but should instead
become part of their own backyards.
If the City Council does decide this is surplus property, it
should be for all of the park property between the Fairview Channel
and the back of Swan Drive properties. This property would then have
access off Placentia Avenue and be worth millions of dollars to
developers as a place to build condominiums. The millions received
from the sale of the property could then be used to improve other
parks throughout the city.
If the City Council no longer sees the value of keeping Fairview
Park a natural park, then let’s make the condition of the sale that
the surplus property become a lower parking lot, softball and soccer
fields and a bikeway connecting Placentia Avenue to the river trail.
ROBERT GRAHAM
Costa Mesa
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