MAILBAG - Jan. 11, 2007
- Share via
Poseidon supporters need all the facts
Regular Huntington Beach Independent readers cannot help but notice the suspicious deluge of letters supporting the proposed Poseidon Resources desalination plant project. Orchestrated and encouraged by Poseidon and their symbiotic AES cohorts or not, these letters all betray the same misunderstanding and ignorance of the facts in the matter.
Here are my favorite five facts that all letter writers and members of the public need to bear in mind:
Those writing these alleged letters of support should take these facts into consideration before jumping on or clinging to the Poseidon bandwagon. Otherwise, there is a good chance they will get run over by it in the long run.
TIM GEDDES
Huntington Beach
We shouldn’t be inconvenienced by new area code
From a Huntington Beach resident’s perspective, perhaps the best way to eliminate NIMBY ranting and special hearings at the various city hall forums on the proposed phone area code changes there is a more basic, cost-effective method.
I doubt that this would be well-received by the various city political entities because it dilutes their exposure and grandstanding on the matter.
First off, an overlay sounds great, but is just a panacea to placate the inconvenience to residents and businesses and will outgrow itself within a few years — do the math.
If you really want to be efficient and fair to the existing 714 denizens then do some quick math on the two options — the second and third ones — and see which cities are the greatest polluters in terms of user growth and phone service needs in their proposed zone.
Why should people in Huntington Beach (residents and businesses) be inconvenienced when cities like Santa Ana, Fullerton, Orange and Anaheim are embarking on large mixed-use projects with huge growth driving this need.
I think that a simple, fair and realistic approach would be to look at potential growth in all these zones based on existing and projected city projects and penalize the gross polluters.
I have nothing against development, but do not inconvenience me because your cities are on a fast track and need more resources. To me, this is no more than infrastructure upgrades — you build it and create a need, then you deal with it.
DREW KOVACS
Huntington Beach
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.