Things are abandoned all over
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You’re kidding, right? A problem with abandoned shopping carts? How
many snaps do you want from my personal “Shopping Cart Photo” album?
Would you like to post a reporter on my front lawn for about a week?
You’d have a book, a book my dears. I suggest black and white photos.
You’ll win an award of some sort, if not a Pulitzer for the
juxtapositions of traffic/pedestrians/ life-threatening situations
and the plain-old-trashy-mind-boggling amount and volume of shopping
carts that are deposited/used/ taken and yes, even abandoned on the
properties of Costa Mesa residents.
Oh my, who comes up with these questions?
You all aren’t from around these parts are ya?
KATHLEEN ERIC
Costa Mesa
I’m calling in regards to the shopping cart issue within the city
of Costa Mesa. I definitely think that we have a shopping cart
problem.
You see them in the alleys, you see them in front of homes all
over town and I think it’s something that we should have instituted a
long time ago, which requires the businesses to have one of those
quarter slots on them so that when you return the carts to the
parking lot you get your quarter back. You stick a quarter in to get
it when you return it you get your quarter back.
If anything the kids of the town will be out there picking up the
shopping carts and we wont have a problem with the code enforcement.
It’s ridicules that the city has to do this. If we are going to spend
the money we should institute that on the shopping carts and invest
in the shopping cart situation that would allow people to return the
carts and to get the quarter. I think they have a product out there
that will actually lock the wheels on the carts if they go to leave
the area.
But I have seen this quarter thing done down at the desert and
other parts of the country and it works very well. You stick a
quarter in you get the cart. You return the cart back to the shopping
cart dispenser in the parking lot you get your quarter back so it
didn’t cost you anything to borrow the cart. So I think it’s time
that the city gets with technology and quit being the follower of
everybody in the country and start being the leader here.
It’s time we get some new ideas out there in the public and allow
businesses in the city to run it properly and get these shopping
carts off the streets.
LARRY WEICHMAN
Costa Mesa
I am calling in regards to the shopping cart problem. I don’t
think that this is a law enforcement problem. I think that the police
have enough to do. I do believe that it is a store problem and the
stores should be doing this not the police department.
In New Jersey the shopping carts are outside, however you need a
quarter to get a shopping cart and then you get your quarter back
when you return your shopping cart to the rack just like a luggage
cart in an airport. Also stores in New Jersey I’m using New Jersey as
an example because they do have this problem. They also have poles on
the shopping cart that do not allow them to leave the store. People
have to take their things out of the shopping carts before they leave
the stores. The stores in this area have all remolded; they used to
have the shopping carts in side the stores. I believe now that they
have them outside the stores it’s very easy for people to take the
carts outside when the carts are outside before they were inside the
stores and I don’t think they were as easy being accessible. I think
the stores needed the extra space to make an extra dollar. Now they
are losing their extra dollar by having people take their carts.
SANDRA BASNACIYEN
Corona del Mar
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