Commission didn’t do its job, so...
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Commission didn’t do its job, so it should go
If the California Coastal Commission concerned itself with issues
legitimate to Huntington Beach such as:
1)Protecting the beach in a full and fair capacity.
2) Supporting and guaranteeing great-looking developments that
fronted and/or faced the beach.
3) Securing public beach access.
4) Promising clean sea water and sea scape for our coasts and sea
life.
5) Reviewing real coastal issues instead of personal and/or
political interests; i.e., not allowing hearing after hearing or
appeal after appeal regarding developments passed by citizen voter
approval, city and planning councils and commissions voted approvals
and approval by all legal venues.
I believe in the immediate and total elimination of the California
Coastal Commission.
If the commission had honorably completed any part of its job in
Huntington Beach, demolition of the condominium complex that sits on
the sand of our Huntington Beach Coast at 7th Street and Pacific
Coast Highway would have happened 10 years ago. We already would have
the incredible and fabulous developments of the Strand and Pacific
City, instead of the derelict and dirt-infested land that continually
sits in these coastal locations with hideous gates around them. Bolsa
Chica would be a resolved issue. Real coastal issues would be in
place and protected, instead of in front of a review board for the
fourth time or a fifth appeal with the California Coastal Commission.
Save Huntington Beach and our tax dollars, dismantle the California
Coastal Commission.
ANTHONY OURENZO
Huntington Beach
There is no question that the California Coastal Commission has
been operating in violation of the separation of powers clause of our
state Constitution, so the answer is yes -- no political body should
be allowed to function in contempt of the law.
The bigger question, and the one the Independent seems to be
asking, is whether or not the coastal commission should be allowed to
fly in the face of the laws that govern the rest of us or bear the
consequences of operating illegally all this time. No government
agency should be above the law, period.
The fact that the coastal commission already enjoys the
distinction of wielding unparalleled power while never having to
answer to the voters is disturbing enough. Allowing them to
flagrantly thumb their noses at the law and get away with it because
they, and their narrow-minded supporters, believe the end justifies
their means, is unacceptable.
It is not acceptable to burn SUVs or terrorize neighborhoods to
send a message, and it should not be acceptable to function outside
the law and trample the rights of others to achieve some distorted
view of nirvana. Once the commission is stripped of its powers, it
will have no reason to exist and control will return, as it should,
to elected officials entrusted by the voters. That’s a “nirvana” we
can all live with.
RONALD CHESSER
Huntington Beach
Attack on Boardman was unfounded
The letter in the Independent on Jan. 2 criticized Mayor Connie
Boardman for asking the council to send a letter to Bob Hite at the
Department of Fish and Game. The letter urges him to pursue
negotiations with the developer Hearthside/Koll to sell the Bolsa
Chica. The recently passed Proposition 50 has money to go for the
purchase of the Bolsa Chica in the language of the bill.
The last time I heard, the entire community and all of Southern
California is in agreement that the Bolsa Chica should be saved for
generations to come from development. Where’s the writer’s “misuse of
money:” in this letter? The money was approved by the voters with the
passage of Proposition 50. All the mayor did was get a vote from the
entire council to urge the department to go after the money already
approved. to be spent on the Bolsa Chica. I think the writer should
do a little research before he writes his letters filled with
misinformation.
EILEEN MURPHY
Huntington Beach
Bob Polkow, your attacks on Mayor Boardman (Sounding Off, Jan. 2)
are unsubstantiated, lack reason and do not represent the majority of
Huntington Beach.
First of all, the districting initiative was funded by a very few
wealthy interests who hope to take control of Huntington Beach
government by reducing the number of seats on the City Council. Most
of the signatures for the initiative were obtained by paid gatherers.
This is big money trying to defeat democracy. Will it pass? This
depends on how much more special interest money is dumped into it.
Second, with regard to the Wal-Mart rezoning initiative Measure I
to which you refer, it failed by just 4% nearly three years ago only
because it was denied (by the then City Council) the special election
status for which it qualified. Ninety percent of the signatures that
were gathered for the initiative to put it on the ballot were via
Huntington Beach volunteers. It fell victim to the $430,000 that
Wal-Mart dumped in to defeat it. This still is the most expensive
election in Huntington Beach history. Once again, is this democracy
or special interests? Before she was on the council, Connie Boardman
fought for the citizens of Huntington Beach and their quality of life
rather than yield to this huge outside special interest.
Third, you are again out of touch regarding the Bolsa Chica mesa.
Proposition 50 money is being sought to purchase it. This proposition
was passed by a majority, and was even supported by Hearthside Homes.
The majority of citizens here do not want homes built on the mesa.
Nearly all of California wetlands have been developed. It is a public
issue. You state, in contrast, that you desire for the mesa the
“building of homes for the people”. For whom? The 1% who could afford
homes there? Perhaps you should move to Phoenix or Las Vegas, where
developers are running rampant.
Huntington Beach is finally getting some balance, common sense and
honesty on the City Council. It was only a year ago that Dave
Garofalo was forced to resign -- someone indeed who did have a
“personal agenda.”
Boardman on the other hand, is an intelligent, hard-working member
of our City Council who considers the overall picture and quality of
life for the current and future citizens of Huntington Beach. It is
refreshing to have someone of integrity, who believes in the
democratic process and does not succumb to special interests and the
almighty dollar.
MARVIN JOSEPHSON
Huntington Beach
Leaders take note -- Huntington is a city
The NIMBY mentality is endlessly frustrating, the latest example
being the protest over a proposed Gisler/Garfield avenues bridge
across the Santa Ana River (“Gisler bridge study causes a rift,” Jan.
2).
Councilwoman Debbie Cook sarcastically remarks “That’s just what
we need is another Adams Avenue.” I live near Adams. Yes, it’s a busy
street, but it’s convenient; it gets me to Costa Mesa and provides
(via Harbor Boulevard) a shortcut to the southbound San Diego
Freeway. Would Cook like to tear down the Adams Avenue bridge if she
had the chance? How about digging a new river along the border with
Fountain Valley? Build a moat around the entire city, and we can
really cut down on traffic.
Huntington Beach is not a rural village. Get over it. Huntington
Beach is a city, and cities need an effective network of streets. And
for traffic between adjoining cities to be constricted to only two
streets is ridiculous. I don’t know if a Gisler bridge is necessarily
the best solution, but it should not be dismissed out of hand just
because nearby residents don’t want to see more traffic.
FREDERICK SINGER
Huntington Beach
Council is painful, thanks to the veterans
I would like to respond to Danette Goulet’s column “A painful
civic lesson at City Hall.” It was a painful lesson, indeed.
However, I got a very different read on it. As to the Planning
Commission, it did appear that staff was trying to go behind the
backs of our newly appointed commissioners. Could it be that they do
not approve of the new appointees? The right thing to do would have
been to first introduce the idea to them for discussion as Mayor
Connie Boardman had stated. It also appeared that our newly elected
officials Cathy Green, Gil Coerper and Jill Hardy were trying to do
their best to get the answers that would keep the voters informed,
while our “veterans” were trying to prove who was in charge.
After all this time in office, they still don’t get it. It looks
like the only real “veteran” for the time is returning Councilman
Dave Sullivan. Let’s hope that he can be the bridge that will bring
these women back to reality.
DAWN STANTON
Huntington Beach
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