Everything that’s up in the air
EDITOR’S NOTEBOOK
Some of the biggest debates this summer were airborne.
Residents have been vocal in speaking out against banner-towing
planes and in favor of a new city ordinance that bans them from the
skies over Huntington Beach.
The law passed Monday night, but on Tuesday there was still
confusion in City Hall as to just what was prohibited. Some city
officials, including Councilman Peter Green, who voted against the
ordinance, said it banned planes from flying under 1,000 feet. Others
said, no, they thought it prohibited any planes towing advertisements
from flying over the city at any altitude, be it 30 feet or 30 miles
above. Still others said when you find out let me know.
It took four calls and at least six city officials and lawyers to
answer the question. No ads, no how, nowhere over Huntington Beach,
said Bob Wheeler, the attorney who drafted the ordinance for the
city.
Persistent rumblings from the Federal Aviation Administration and
pilots who say they will ignore the ban should make this an
interesting case to continue to follow.
The other flying fiasco it seems I may have kicked up myself.
Ever since I wrote a feature on our flyboys in blue they have been
the topic of a heated debate. It was my intention, after I wrote the
feature, to also write a column and share with readers the experience
of riding in the Huntington Beach Police helicopter and just what you
can see from up there. Although I became sidetracked from that
purpose months ago, perhaps it is now time to tell you. The answer is
a lot.
Frankly, any issues or irritation over noise does not compare to
what they can accomplish from up there.
My preconceived notions turned out to be completely wrong. I
remember a copter was tracking me as I sped, uh I mean drove the
speed limit, along Pacific Coast Highway one day. I slowed down, but
thought, weird, they aren’t really pacing me are they? The answer, of
course, was yes. I further assumed as I craned my head to look at
them that they couldn’t see me doing that. Dead wrong. They were
probably laughing at my reaction, for as I learned first hand, they
certainly could have seen me. The visibility from that helicopter on
a clear day is amazing. I could see everything going on for a good
distance.
We saw a lifeguard swimming way beyond the surf zone, which, had
it been a swimmer pulled out by a riptide, proper authorities could
have been contacted immediately. Further down, we saw a riptide from
the air. Luckily no one was in it.
So great, you might think, they can see for miles on a clear day.
But let me tell you, criminals might want to work by daylight,
because the technology they carry at night was equally impressive.
Not only do they have high-powered binoculars but they have this
infrared device that can see a person’s heat, can detect warm tire
tracks -- hiding from this helicopter would be no minor feat.
I also feel compelled to point out that Huntington Beach police
are not the only helicopters flying over the city. If you hear a
helicopter while sitting in your living room it just might not be
them. One very angry resident living in the Seapoint area, for
example, wrote in about the noise of the helicopters each and every
morning. Most likely, that racket was made not by the police, but by
the helicopter that takes workers out the oil rigs each morning.
* DANETTE GOULET is the city editor. She can be reached at (714)
965-7170 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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