Troubled bridge doesn’t even reach the water...
- Share via
Troubled bridge doesn’t even reach the water
Why does the Daily Pilot repeatedly publish letters and
commentaries from Robert Graham on the same old topic of why he wants
a 19th Street bridge?
As a reader of you paper for many years, it seems that at least
once a month for the last few years, you publish letters/commentaries
from Graham pushing his own personal desire a 19th Street bridge.
Please give your readers a break and stop publishing the letters from
Graham about the bridge issue. They are old, tiresome and a waste of
space.
Thank goodness the City Council has the wisdom to see through
Graham’s own personal desires and listen to a majority of the people
who live near 19th Street and do not want a bridge.
In his letters, Graham talks about extending 19th Street to the
beach. The 19th Street bridge will end at Brookhurst Avenue, and the
last time I checked, a beach does not exist there. Graham doesn’t
seem to have any regard or concern for those that live on the
Westside. He seems to think that the increased traffic and the
displacement of people from their homes and businesses along 19th
Street is perfectly all right, just so he can get to the beach more
quickly.
The shortcut to the beach he is talking about already exists and
it is called Victoria Avenue. Victoria Avenue is situated pretty darn
close to 19th Street, crosses Brookhurst Avenue and even has an exit
off the Costa Mesa Freeway. A sign should be put up on that offramp
directing Huntington Beach traffic to use Victoria Avenue. This would
surely reduce the traffic on Newport Boulevard and Coast Highway.
Also, people cutting through the residential neighborhoods of east
19th Street are not going to Huntington Beach, they are going to
Newport Beach.
A bridge will result in all of 19th Street (the Eastside and the
Westside) suffering from an unnecessary increase in traffic as people
from the surrounding areas use it as a shortcut. His talk about all
of the economic benefits that will result because of the bridge is
nothing but a bunch of baloney. The major market and drugstore that
he talks about would already be here if there were the customer base
to support them. It’s not like the 19th Street area is sparsely
populated. Quite a few people living around 19th Street already.
Commuters driving on 19th Street would not generate the business
needed to support a market or drug store. People living in a
neighborhood do that.
An extension of 19th Street will not solve the problems on the
Westside, it will only make them worse. Please, no more letters from
Graham on this matter.
JEANNE ERICKSON
Costa Mesa
Bark Park users refuse to roll over for skate park
It is amazing to me that the editors at the Daily Pilot were able
to weed through the complicated issues involved in the decision to
build a skateboard park at the corner of Arlington and Junipero
drives so quickly and definitively.
Nevermind the traffic increases, the parking chaos, the overuse,
the loss of dozens of beautiful trees, the fact that there exists a
better suited location in TeWinkle for the park or the dangers of
placing skateboards and dogs in close proximity. What it all really
boils down to, according to the Pilot, is whether we want to “side
with our children” or with Costa Mesa’s dogs.
No matter how many times we hear this rhetoric -- and anyone
involved with opening or administering a dog park hears it all the
time -- it never gets any less annoying or any less ignorant.
As much as I would love my dog to tiptoe out of the house each
morning at 7:30 a.m. and drive the family Ford over to the dog park
to exercise himself and socialize with his friends, it is never going
to happen. Saying the Bark Park is just a park for dogs is as
ridiculous as saying the skateboard park is a park for skateboards.
Bark Park is a facility where humans gather to exercise their dogs
and socialize with other dog owners. It is the recreational choice of
these people, and it is every bit as legitimate a choice as baseball,
soccer, tennis and even skateboarding.
The Bark Park Foundation estimates that about 1,000 people use the
dog park every week. On the weekend and after school hours, children
also accompany their parents. This little piece of land gets more
foot traffic on a daily basis than any other recreational facility or
park in Costa Mesa. The dog park is completely handicap accessible,
and we have disabled, elderly and mobility-impaired patrons who,
without Bark Park, might not be able to share their lives with pets
or service dogs. Having a dog park in the city cuts down the number
of leash-less dogs in residential neighborhoods and other parks. The
tons of dog waste we pick up is disposed of properly instead on
landing on your front lawn. Dog parks socialize dogs and educate dog
owners, which results in fewer biting and aggression incidents
everywhere.
The Bark Park has been in existence for almost nine years and has
always supported itself with donations and fund-raisers. The park has
become more popular than anyone ever imagined and has been successful
in every way. It deserves to be recognized by the city, the citizens
and the Daily Pilot as the important asset and worthy facility that
it is.
Bark Park is overused and desperately needs to expand. We had an
expansion park on the Fairview Park Master Plan for six years, which
was recently unceremoniously taken away. At that time, we were
promised that another site would be found, and now that site is in
jeopardy of -- once again -- being given to someone else. We can
relate to the frustration of the skateboarders over broken promises.
The TeWinkle Master Plan includes an expansion for the tennis court
facility, and the Bark Park is equally deserving and much more
desperate.
PATRICIA BELL
Costa Mesa
* EDITOR’S NOTE: Patricia Bell was actively involved with the Bark
Park Foundation from its inception in l994 to 2001. She continues to
write its quarterly newsletter, “The Free Pooch Press.”
Proposition 13 controls loose purse strings
Joe Bell, in his blind devotional to the Democratic Party and Sen.
Barbara Boxer, suggests a need to revisit Proposition 13. He must
have forgotten the reasons that California taxpayers supported the
initiative in the first place: Our elected leaders continue to fail
to live within the limitations of revenue and will spend whatever
they can get.
Besides, homeowners selling their dramatically inflated properties
in parts of California increase revenue through reassessments anyway.
It is not the quantity of tax dollars creating the problem; it is the
quality of the spending programs approved by our lawmakers.
Just look at our neighbors in Huntington Beach, who are in deep
financial distress because of an approved retirement plan for safety
employees. It provides lifetime retirement at 90% of current salary
at age 55. The German Socialist Republic has such a plan, and they
are going broke as well.
THOMAS E. KOLANSKI
Costa Mesa
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.