Mailbag - Feb. 1, 2001
The Jan. 18 edition had an article regarding the recall of Huntington
Beach Councilman Dave Garofalo (“Garofalo’s recall petition approvedâ€).
The article stated that the format of the petition had been approved
by the city clerk Jan. 12 and that the Committee for Honest and
Responsible Government had commenced gathering signatures with a target
date of June 21 to gather 16,000 signatures.
I am glad the Independent printed this brief article, but I am
disappointed that it was buried on Page 12. This issue is far more
important than a dog park. This man is a blight on Huntington Beach and
must be recalled.
Thank you for the good work you are doing in keeping the public
informed about Garofalo. But the charges for which he is being
investigated and the agencies that are doing the investigating should be
repeatedly printed in the Independent so that all your readers, who also
want honest and responsible government, will be cognizant of his
[alleged] indiscretions.
As a member of the Committee for Honest and Responsible Government, I
am heartened by the response from the citizens who want to sign the
recall petition.
STEVE GULLAGE
Huntington Beach
Certification of recall petition is heartening
I was heartened to see that the recall petition against Huntington
Beach Councilman Dave Garofalo was certified. He has voted repeatedly on
projects where he had conflicts of interest.
Garofalo has hidden his business interests to disguise the conflicts.
He sought special treatment on the purchase of a house and then voted
repeatedly for the developer’s projects.
I think he will continue to peddle his influence if he is allowed to
remain on the City Council. Garofalo’s malfeasance is an embarrassment to
our city. I’ll be glad to sign a recall petition.
RICHARD MCGRATH
Huntington Beach
Committee should focus on well-being of children
It made me very sad to read Karen Martin’s letter and your interview
with her that was published Jan. 18 (“Meeting did not let all voices be
heardâ€).
It was very sad to see her as a Community Advisory Commission member
calling the people who she represents a “mob.†These people -- the “mobâ€
-- who did not behave well, according to Martin, are good citizens of
Huntington Beach taking the time to come to a meeting and express their
opinion as they were asked by the committee members.
These people also happened to be among the 92% of the 260 households
(396 people) who responded to the door-to-door poll conducted by the
neighborhood community. Now, one should ask why people who are among the
vast majority group should be angry according to your paper? Could it be
that they are frustrated with the situation?
I will give you one well-documented example as one of the reasons.
Martin’s letter reads, “As a courtesy, we allowed you to present your
views despite that no-gym option was outside the scope of the meeting.â€
On the contrary, the questionnaire sent by the committee, along with the
invitation for the Jan. 10 meeting, starts with the first question: “1 --
Opposed to the gym auditorium in any form.â€
It looks like Martin did not manage the meeting to her satisfaction
and was not able to tell us about our “rude and disrespectful manner†in
the meeting directly.
Instead, she had to write a letter to your paper. As a constructive
suggestion, I would propose that maybe she should not represent us as a
committee member either.
Hopefully, this would help reduce the controversies on the side
issues, and we would be able to concentrate on the main issue, which is
that the school board is proposing to spend millions of dollars to build
a giant-size gymnasium with two adult-sized basketball courts on the
Spring View Middle School grounds.
They are [considering] to have it open for rent until 10 p.m. seven
days a week in the middle of the residential tract.
Interestingly, the very same giant gymnasium that supposedly would be
built for the good of the kids at their school would have to be emptied
of the very same kids after school hours because of the adults who would
be coming to rent and play.
This was the answer from the school officials when, at the same Jan.
10 meeting, I raised the question of how our kids are going to be
safeguarded at the gym in the presence of strangers.
After all these meetings, to this date, we do not have a solid and
sound counterproposal from the school board. I just have a simple
question for the school board: If it has money to spend, why can’t it do
it for the kids only with all things considered? Isn’t this the board’s
main job?
The giant gym would make our kids pay with their future, their other
important priorities and their safety, and it would make the neighborhood
pay with possibly serious consequences, such as an increase in crimes in
addition to the general inconvenience created by the rental.
I also think that we all should focus on the issues affecting the true
education and well-being of our children and our community, and do not
let this become an issue between community members.
KAMRAN RAMEZANI
Huntington Beach
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