âWe have already given up so much:â More than 1,000 emails weigh in on Newportâs decision on beach access
The preference this week to keep the shoreline open in Newport Beach was not unanimous â not on the City Council and not among constituents, who wrote more than 1,000 emails in two days when the city announced it was considering restricting beach access after a weekend surge of sunbathers.
âWe need the beach. Itâs why I live here,â Garrett Hall wrote. âI got laid off and Iâm struggling but I at least know I can put my feet in the sand and watch the sunset. Please donât close them!â
Although other coastal counties issued blanket closures weeks ago to control mass gatherings to curb the spread of the coronavirus that causes COVID-19, Orange County is a patchwork. Newport closed its boardwalks, piers and large beach parking lots in late March, about a week after Gov. Gavin Newsomâs statewide stay-at-home order, but its sands were never closed.
When last weekendâs heat wave blasted in, more stir-crazy Californians than usual looked for relief where they could find it after more than a month of lockdown. Local lifeguards estimated 40,000 people on Newportâs beaches on Friday and again on Saturday.
Widespread media reports showed the scene at Newport and neighboring Huntington, and residents decried the images as distorted or endorsed them as accurate. Gov. Gavin Newsom called out Newport by name at his Monday news conference. The Newport Beach City Council spent four hours debating the issue Tuesday before deciding to leave the beaches open, with heavier police and lifeguard presence to manage crowds and tighter parking controls.
One way or the other people had something to say, 1,055 times over.
âPLEASE do the right thing and close the damn beach,â wrote Linda Poole.
Of the emails the council received before Tuesdayâs meeting, 391 were pro-closure and 664 were pro-access. Some were lengthy, others succinct. Frustration and anxiety were palpable. A few were profane.
Here are a few more:
To close
âCoronavirus is able to spread quickly and without regard in large groups, and your city allows 40,000 people to gather on the beach? Is this a political statement, thinking that you can thumb your nose at the Democratic governor of our state?â Marty Cerles
âDo you really think that COVID-19 wasnât at the beach this weekend? I find it very disappointing and reckless with residentsâ lives.â Vivian Ryer
âLos Angeles is capable of keeping beaches closed. Itâs shameful and infuriating that youâre unable to do the same.â Ryan Shadrin
âOn Friday, it felt like all 40,000 people were trying to find parking right outside my front doorâ Carl Mumm
âNo reason for any of our beaches to be opened. May I remind you there is a pandemic happening.â Christine Brown
âBy not closing the beaches you are saying essentially: âItâs OK for you to come and spread the virus and give it to us. Maybe weâll share ours with you!ââ Jim Cokas
To stay open
âFearful or vulnerable citizens should stay home. But healthy citizens need to live again, work again, and enjoy our surroundings that we pay SO much for. Please let individuals make their own decisions regarding their health.â Angie McCunniff
âCOVID-19 is real, but so are individual freedoms,â Kathryn and David Moore
âIn these troubling times, our mental health is collectively deteriorating every day and one of the few things that has helped me stay healthy and optimistic has been surfing. Please donât take away our ocean, we have already given up so much.â Hayden Rhone
âPlease keep your ocean open for water enthusiasts. To make everyone suffer because of a few bad people is not the American way.â Matt Wirta
âI am beginning to be more concerned with potential for civil unrest. People are not coping well with this forced shutdown and as with last weekend, will continue to ignore the signs and go around them. We are inviting a widespread chaotic reaction.â Brian Schuler
âI have NEVER seen my kids so excited [as] on Friday. Their eyes lit up again. They are dying inside and the beach helped lift their spirits.â Jenny Todesco
âLet us jog on the beach, walk on the boardwalk, and surf in the water. This is our community. This is what we are made up of. I struggle to understand why our representatives are trying to tear the very fundamental values of Newport Beach away from us.â Jessica Saucedo
âI am begging you to please keep the beaches open. People need to get fresh air and feel the sun and hear the waves. People are discouraged, frightened, angry, anxious, tense and unhappy. The beach is one of the most relaxing places to go to be healed and get renewed hope and energy.â Lisa Hocker
Ultimately, the council leaned toward maintaining the ability to get to the sand.
On Wednesday, the emails kept coming.
âCanât believe you guys voted to keep the beaches open unbelievable
Guess you guys donât do your homework
Level of stupidity you have stooped to,â
wrote Rita Patel, in a stanza of frustration.
âEven the governor is calling you out and you still donât get it
For those of you who voted to keep the beaches open shame on you hope you donât get voted back in
UNREAL
Have no wordsâ
Others, grateful.
âWe support your decision to keep the beach open,â Suzy Dizon wrote.
âThank you.â
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