Main Street ficus decision makes no sense
Looks like City Manager Homer Bludau is proud of the courtâs
decision to cut down the Ficus trees on Main Street, like a kid
waiting for his test results from the DMV (âJudge approves Main
Street ficus removal,â Sept. 17).
âIâve done everything right.â But, thatâs typical of an outsiderâs
view on these historical trees. I for one watched those trees grow
up. In fact, I watched the artist paint the trees on the wall of the
salon on Main Street. So Iâm a little bitter about someone who just
moves into town and starts making decisions for us.
Was there a citywide vote? No.
Those trees provide more enjoyment and beauty than the damage they
cause those businesses. His statement that the cut-downs have âno
time table and work could happen any timeâ makes me believe thereâs
more tree-cutting in his eyes.
You donât hear any complaints from the business district on Balboa
Island about their trees. Marine Street has plenty of crack bumps
visible on the surface. Iâm sure the roots are just as destructive
there as on Main Street.
Could they be next?
I agree that the area has begun to look for the better, but I
canât see why we couldnât be more flexible in this area. I laugh at
the thought of having to keep pace with the different construction
phases as a reason to rip the trees out so fast; after all, the city
always uses the âlowest bidder.â
Sorry I havenât taken advantage of the new pierâs restoration;
they look great. I see many visitors with smiling faces coming off
the piers as they head to their cars.
TOM SMITH
Balboa Peninsula
I do not think the ficus trees should have been removed (âCity
tears down Main Street ficus,â Sept. 19) and I think coral gum trees
are even more damaging to sidewalks -- look anywhere where there is a
coral gum tree.
MARGO STUART
Newport Beach
I finally got over my shock that they would do that and Iâm just
kind of wondering how much money theyâre going to lose in tourist
dollars now that theyâve taken away the ambience that we had down
there. People go there like itâs going to a different time. You walk
in there and it was like, âOh, wow.â So, anyway, I donât think
theyâre going to have that ambience for a while so Iâm sorry that
theyâre probably going to get sued for their little prank that they
pulled, but thatâs life, right?
WENDY MARTIN
Costa Mesa
I had no interest in it at all, but now that theyâre out, I think
it looks a lot better than it did with them in there. It opens things
up and itâs like a breathe of fresh air.
DON McCOWAN
Newport Beach
I agree, wholeheartedly, with the removal of the trees on the
Peninsula. I live in Dover Shores and have the same problem and have
been asking the city to remove our trees. Over the past five years
that Iâve been here, Iâve watched them replace sidewalks three times
and put in sewer clean-out at $1,500 each all along our block. I
think the city would save money in the long run if they would just
remove the trees and replace them.
MELINDA PENTZ
Newport Beach
Iâm commenting on the ficus tree supporters. I say those people --
Vandersloot and everybody else -- should move to the mountains or
Oregon and hug all the darn trees they want.
Iâve had to fight for my ocean view because of trees and tree
huggers for 17 years. In Newport Beach, we value our views and we
value our property, which is quite expensive, and ficus trees are
beautiful, but they never should have been planted in this area.
So tell Vandersloot and all the Arbor Society to move and hug all
the darn trees they want -- move to the mountains, anyplace, but
leave Newport residents and our property to us.
I would have removed the trees in the middle of the night and I
would have strung the Arbor Society members on a boat and sent them
to Catalina.
In the city of Newport Beach, our property and everything else
belongs to us, let the tree huggers move.
MARTIE STANTON
Newport Beach
I think the city should appreciate people like Vandersloot and
other more who do good work for the city of Newport Beach, and I
think that it shows the true colors of the city that they went there
at 7 a.m. to cut down the trees before the other side had a chance to
file their papers.
CANDICE HUBERT
Newport Beach
I think this whole thing is absolutely ridiculous. These trees are
not 300-year-old oak trees; these are not majestic trees. The ficus
is the pigeon of trees basically. They grow anywhere, anytime, makes
no difference. Nothing encroaches plumbing worse than a ficus tree,
there is no other tree.
The trees needed to come out without question. Theyâre destroying
the sidewalks. Itâs not fair, and if all these people that love trees
so much; where were they when the Christmas lights were in the trees
for the last four years, the same lights just deteriorating and ugly.
Nobody took care of the trees then, and now all of the sudden
there is a big uproar about how we should be protecting these things
and, as much as I love trees, the ficus tree does not produce oxygen.
It doesnât do anything except for encroach in plumbing, hurt the
local residents, the local businesses, and that is how I feel about
it. I just think itâs absolutely ridiculous. Letâs put some nice
palms in. I think also letâs not put in the gum trees; it is a
stupid, ugly tree. Put in some nice beautiful majestic palms or
something thatâs more indigenous to the area and letâs move on with
it.
JEFF ARSMAN
Balboa Peninsula
What was the real reason for this emergency act requiring a police
task force and the breaking of the noise ordinance law? Truly trees
are more trouble than cement. They shed leaves, make cracks in the
sidewalk but they are beautiful and they should be respected. I
suspect that the council is not interested in beauty but sees things
only in terms of dollar signs. The beauty that was Newport Beach is
almost all gone today and has been turned into one large parking lot.
I am really incensed by this act of the council.
BARBARA LINDQUIST
Newport Beach
Iâm pretty upset with the chopping down of the ficus trees. They
were absolutely beautiful and they did offer some shade and I hope
that they donât make that place look like Disneyland No. 2; thatâs
what Iâm most concerned about.
Thatâs such a nice old Newport area and flavor and I hate to see
all the revitalization going in there and ruining it and making it
look like South Coast Plaza or Fashion Island with all the fake
Disneyland perfection. I loved to see it the way it is. And also,
would you please tell the city that I have a eucalyptus tree on
Fourth Avenue in front of my house that needs cutting down if they
really want to cut down a tree.
SANDRA BASMACIYAN
Corona del Mar
I object to the city taking down the ficus trees and hope that
everybody agrees with us.
JAMES P. ANDERSON
Newport Beach
I have the Balboa Island Web site and I have been getting a lot of
disturbing mail from elsewhere in Southern California regarding our
trees. I replied to the people who wrote that ficus trees are very
destructive; we are paying a price for a mistake made by city
managers years ago and ficus trees are no longer allowed to be
planted in public areas.
Twenty years from now, when the new trees are big, everyoneâs
going to wonder what the big fuss was. Iâm from the Midwest
originally. Iâve always been amazed that Californians didnât
understand that trees were the cheapest form of air conditioning
available.
I love trees, but I donât love destructive trees. This was a
matter of money, it wasnât a matter of anything else. If the people
who wanted those trees to stay were willing to pay yearly for the
damage that was done by them, then they could stay. Otherwise, I
think that we have to bow to the city leaders that we elected and not
try and run the city. They have studied this ad infinitum. Letâs stop
looking at the present and look to the future and create a beautiful
place for our children and grandchildren. By the time the new trees
have grown to maturity it will be beautiful for the future. Stop
being so selfish in the present and look ahead.
CAROLYN CARR
Balboa Island
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