Tough stance needed on Grad Night 2005...
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Tough stance needed on Grad Night 2005
As a parent of a graduating senior at Corona del Mar High School,
I strongly disagree with Jeff Gingold regarding the seriousness of
testing for alcohol and drugs at Grad Night 2005 (“Students should
exercise judgment on grad night,” Wednesday). I believe that keeping
students who are under the influence out of the party and reporting
violators to the police will keep my son and other seniors safer and
will make the party more enjoyable for everyone who chooses to
respect the rules. Many times in the past, grad nights have been
affected by the behavior of students who felt that they could not
have a good time without getting high in one way or another. Students
as well as parents have been notified of the restrictions. Let’s have
our seniors show us now rather than later that they have learned our
lessons and that there are consequences -- yes, I know I have said
the word that so many parents hate to say, much less enforce -- to
their actions. If they want to celebrate, as they so richly deserve,
then they must go to Grad Night sober.
Congratulations to all our graduating seniors. Have a great night!
KATHY DONOVAN
Balboa Island
Airport plan suffered under bad influence
Letter writer Ann Merritt mentions that pilots and air traffic
controllers consider El Toro unsafe (“Why are people still pushing
for El Toro?” Wednesday). However, they only feel that way toward the
flawed county plan, designed to appease the Irvine Co.
For starters, northern takeoffs would have interfered with
incoming approaches to Long Beach and John Wayne airports. In fact,
in 2001, the Federal Aviation Administration even issued an airspace
determination stating that with that layout, El Toro would have
numerous delays, and at best could handle 4 million annual
passengers.
Then eastern takeoffs had the problem of tailwind into rising
terrain. A high-performance fighter jet can handle that. But no sane
pilots would ever try that with a commercial passenger jet.
Unfortunately, far safer and more efficient layouts such as the “V
plan” and “pilot’s plan” were never given the time of day. The only
patterns the administration is allowed to study is what the local
reuse authority, our esteemed Board of Supervisors, would consider.
Instead of implementing a better airport layout, they felt it was
more important to appease the avaricious Irvine Co.
With a buffer zone no longer required for El Toro, the Irvine Co.
will get to add thousands more homes to what is already one of the
densest counties in the nation.
I believe the single biggest factor that led to the downfall of El
Toro was that the Irvine Co.-appeasing county plan could not even
pass the basic laws of physics.
Had equal consideration been given to all layouts -- and had the
advice of pilots and professionals been carefully followed -- then
there is no way El Toro opponents would have had such a field day
pointing out the physical and aeronautical flaws. Perhaps El Toro
would now be open for business today. Who knows? Instead, those with
scientific minds were dismissed -- if not outright ridiculed as
heretics, just like in the Dark Ages.
REX RICKS
Huntington Beach
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