Newport Dunes owners’ generosity will be...
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Newport Dunes owners’ generosity will be missed
Thanks for the memories (“Sale of Dunes resort glides forward,”
July 24).
I just wanted to say thanks for all the great events Newport Dunes
has provided for us here in the Newport Beach and surrounding areas.
I have attended many beach events with great food and music. I
have enjoyed many fun parties often sponsored by the Dunes’
generosity when it was good for our community. The resort’s events
have always been wholesome and creative coupled with our fabulous
weather we enjoy on a year-round basis.
I have attended events sponsored by Newport Beach Rotary Club,
Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce, business luncheons, plus numerous
charity fund-raisers. All were great fun and have lasting memories,
including the NFL Irrelevant Week parties.
We also greatly appreciate the former fabulous annual fireworks on
the Fourth of July, and thank you for providing this for us at your
expense.
With highest regard and great appreciation. We shall miss the
Dunes’ management style.
DIANE COLTRANE
Corona del Mar
Police helicopters make all the difference for victims
Here’s a comment to Rene Jacober and the Committee to Abolish
Helicopter Noise (“Residents seek quiet on Newport front,” Tuesday).
Maybe next time a crime has been committed in their neighborhood
where aerial assistance could have made the difference in the
suspect(s) being captured or not, they will think twice about the
occasional noise created by the helicopter.
I am sure there are other areas of the city that would welcome the
assistance provided by the helicopter acting as a “super eye” for the
ground units while investigating a call and apprehending suspects.
After all, the helicopter is probably in their neighborhood because
one of their own residents called the police for help in the first
place.
I doubt that the helicopter flies over the Eastbluff area just for
a scenic tour. I live on the peninsula, and the helicopter flies over
us a lot too. They only stay in the area long enough for the ground
units to get whatever situation they are responding to under control.
Everyone should think about it next time there is a prowler or
suspicious car driving around their neighborhood. If someone calls
the police to report it, let them use the most effective tools they
have to assist them in investigating the call.
HARLAN LASSITER
Balboa Peninsula
Committee doesn’t spread human relations too well
The Costa Mesa Human Relations Committee members are not
interested in building bridges between people. Their intent is to
have a gatekeeper that allows only those with their own myopic
opinion to enter. They prefer that people with opposing opinions be
labeled, refused admission into their ranks and disgracefully
dismissed as irrelevant. Are they afraid of allowing a dissenting
voice into the group?
Roslyn Manley suggests new committee members be picked by the
committee instead of the present method of being selected by the City
Council members (Mailbag, “Some are working against Costa Mesa
committee,” July 18). I can’t think of anything much worse.
Because current members appear far more interested in promoting,
if not actually forcing, their own specific agenda, I suggest future
members continue to be picked by council members on the basis of
their tolerance for all people and all viewpoints, even those who
some might brand as “politically incorrect.”
DON LIVINGSTON
Costa Mesa
Peninsula ficus supporters needs to drop their fight
The first thing I did when I moved into my current residence was
remove the ficus tree in my front patio (“Residents uniting against
City Hall,” July 25). Nearly every residence in my neighborhood has
had a drainage problem because the ficus roots have invaded our
drainage system.
Removing a healthy old tree is always a sad experience, but most
experts would agree that ficus is one tree that does not fit in an
urban setting. My advice to those ficus fans: Relocate these trees to
a vacant area and spare the taxpayers’ expenses in fighting your
well-meaning but nonetheless nonsensical lawsuit.
JOHN T. CHIU
Newport Beach
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