Footbridge over troubled toes
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VIC LEIPZIG AND LOU MURRAY
Although it may not look like it at first, this is really a column
about a footbridge over Outer Bolsa Bay. But before we get to the
bridge and where to place the footings for it, we need to talk about
toes. Feet, toes, trust me, this will tie together.
The first part of this story is about coffee tables and the
disastrous effect that they can have on little toes that come into
contact with them at high velocity. Like most accidents, this one
started innocently enough.
Late one evening last week, Vic was preparing for class. He looked
so cute sitting there amid his pile of papers that I got up from my
comfy chair, intending to give him a peck on top of his head. But the
coffee table got in my way in a big way. Vic said that the sound of
my little toe cracking against the solid wooden leg of the table was
frightening, but not as bad as the scream that followed.
I sank back into my chair wailing for an ice pack. Vic ran to the
freezer. But by the time he had sorted through the packages of frozen
vegetables and meat and located the ice pack (a process that I
estimate took six hours) the pain and my crying had subsided
somewhat.
Vic thought I should go to the emergency room, but two things
stood in the way. First was my solid conviction that doctors can’t
really do anything for a broken little toe, and the other was that we
had just switched HMOs and had no primary care physician and no idea
what hospital we should go to or how to contact them.
The first step -- albeit a painful one -- was for me to hobble
over to the pile of incoming mail that had accumulated and look for
our health care paperwork, while Vic searched his office. My stack of
mail was quite high, filled with the inevitable mass of magazines and
stuff that I just can’t seem to get around to dealing with. I began
sorting through it desperately, perhaps too desperately. I lost my
grip and a foot-high pile of catalogs tumbled off the wet bar onto my
foot. This wasn’t going well.
Finally I found the right paperwork and called the HMO. I got an
introduction to their delightful health couldn’t-care-less system. I
was shunted to a nurse, who, after asking me a number of questions,
discouraged me from going to the emergency room. She pointed out that
I would be waiting in line behind all the heart attack and auto
accident victims. A broken toe doesn’t count for much.
The nurse said that if I decided to go anyway, there were two
hospitals I could choose from, conveniently located in Santa Barbara
and Calexico. Well, not quite, but when you’re in pain, they might as
well be that far away.
The solution that the nurse hit upon was to simply play a
recording for me that told me how to treat myself. I guess that’s
what our health care system has come to. She played a generic “what
to do with injured extremities” tape. The recording suggested that I
tape two fingers together. I tried that but my toe still hurt. I was
surprised that the recording didn’t give me instructions for mixing
plaster of Paris to make my own cast.
I’m happy to report that my toe probably isn’t really broken and
is mending on its own. I can hobble about using a cane, but my
mobility is limited. And that’s why I can’t get to the Bolsa Chica to
see for myself the purportedly endangered tarweed plant that may hold
up the footbridge project. See, we told you this would all tie
together.
Department of Fish and Game biologist Brian Shelton met recently
with a number of people representing different Bolsa Chica groups to
discuss the possibility of a footbridge across Outer Bolsa Bay near
Warner Avenue. The idea is to get pedestrians safely from the parking
lot at Warner Avenue and Pacific Coast Highway to the Bolsa Chica
mesa. Currently, people have to risk their lives in traffic by using
the Warner Avenue bridge, which doesn’t have a sidewalk on its south
side. We’re certainly in favor of a safer crossing alternative.
One potential hang-up is that there are tarweeds growing on the
mesa that may be rare or endangered. Since I can’t walk over there, I
can’t locate the plants and key them out, so I’ll just have to go on
hearsay that they may be one of the endangered tarweeds such as the
Mojave or Otay tarweed or the rare southern tarweed rather than a
more common tarweed species.
The other hang-up, of course, is money. If the Department of Fish
and Game doesn’t even have money for trash removal and portable
potties, it seems foolish to consider a major construction project
like a footbridge. But in the strange world of funding, it is often
easier to obtain grants for construction than for routine
maintenance.
So far there is no agreement on what type of bridge should be
constructed, or where exactly it should be located. If this story
develops further, we’ll keep you posted. Meanwhile, we wanted to give
you a leg up on the issue, so to speak.
* VIC LEIPZIG and LOU MURRAY are Huntington Beach residents and
environmentalists. They can be reached at [email protected].
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