LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
I read the editorial in the Feb. 1 Independent, and it was a breath of
fresh air -- a good editorial (“Hearthside can end this 30-year battle
nowâ€). I am in support of Hearthside becoming a willing seller of the
land so it can be brought into public ownership and preserved.
Please count me in as a resident of California and of Huntington Beach
-- supporting this preservation of Bolsa Chica and of the Coastal
Commission’s decision in that direction.
CAROLE SHINN
Huntington Beach
In your editorial you support the Coastal Commission’s “taking†of
Hearthside Homes’ land based on the fact that many people wanted that
decision. You ignore the fact that many people also approved of the land
use that had previously been approved -- three times -- by the
commission.
The fact that the plan was not supporting the wishes of some people
caused them to be the vocal group. The rest of us were satisfied with the
direction the property use was going, so we remained silent.
Apparently, that was a mistake. If you had a representative at the
November hearing of the Coastal Commission, you would know that there
were as many, possibly more, people attending in support of the
County/Hearthside plan as there were who opposed it. Now that the
commission has come up with a plan that robs the residents of the
community of many benefits that were included in the Hearthside plan, we
must become the vocal group.
I must add that you improperly read the desires of the group who
opposed the Hearthside plan if you feel the commission plan met with
their approval. They openly state they will not be content with any
building on the Bolsa Chica mesa, not just with limited building.GEORGE
CROSS
Huntington Beach
Thank you so much for your editorial in support of saving the Bolsa
Chica wetlands. As a Realtor you would think I would like as many homes
as possible in the area. As a concerned homeowner, I am worried that no
one is thinking of the long-term effect of overbuilding. Who cares about
the birds? I do. We should care about all of our open space. We all need
to think of the lack of open space there is today.
Where are the animals and birds going to live? Even the rain water has
nowhere to go as more and more space is turned into buildings and roads.
Over and over again in our state, we have overbuilt. We must stop and
think of our environment so that future generations can still enjoy these
areas and the animals can still have a place to live.JENNIFER A. THOMAS
Huntington Beach
Your Feb. 2 editorial is so misleading and oversimplified, one can
only surmise that the writer was completely uninformed about the issues
surrounding the Bolsa Chica and relied heavily on the propaganda of
certain pseudo-environmental groups such as the Bolsa Chica Land Trust
and the Amigos de Bolsa Chica to craft this puff piece.
Journalism should be a notable profession and editors should be chosen
less for their stylized writing and more for their desire to be fair in
all things. At the very least, anyone attempting to sway public opinion
through editorial privilege should not insult the same public by
neglecting to fully comprehend the issue at hand.
The complexities of the Bolsa Chica decision notwithstanding, the
writer’s insipid plea to end this struggle simply because a vocal
minority has expressed unhappiness is utterly ridiculous. Battles for
justice are not easily won, but Hearthside Homes should not back down due
to the whining of a handful of spoiled brats who simply want what is not
theirs. To even suggest such a thing exposes the ignorance and arrogance
of the writer.
Why not “enough is enough†on the part of Coastal Commission and NIMBY
(not in my back yard) groups? Why not encourage them to respect private
property rights, quit jerking the owner around, quit entering into
agreements they have no intentions of keeping, quit suing, quit
manipulating the system and quit whining.
That would also end the “turmoilâ€, wouldn’t it?
RICHARD TIFFIN
Huntington Beach
Your editorial was very noble.
You told it the way it actually is.
Without a doubt everyone you talk to is very happy that part of the
mesa is saved. What could be more proof?
Truly a noble editorial.ALFRED L. VARI
Huntington Beach
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