The joy that is Music in the...
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The joy that is Music in the Park
There are so many wonderful reasons why we live in Laguna Beach.
One that tops my list is Music in the Park at Bluebird.
We look forward to those eight Sundays every summer where we can
picnic and enjoy music with other members of the community. It is an
experience that makes Laguna special. We get the opportunity to hear
some fabulous bands. We get to socialize with our neighbors and
friends. Our kids enjoy the camaraderie of being part of such a
wonderful community. My daughter asks every summer when the music is
going to start.
I am thankful to all the neighbors who have positively endured the
crowds for those eight Sundays. I think this is such a worthwhile
program and those of us who attend regularly thank you for your
patience.
I also want to thank the organizers and volunteers for Music in
the Park. They greet you at the park entrance with a smile and a warm
welcome. I hope this unique event continues for many years. It has
become a summer tradition in our family.
PEGGY WOLFF
Laguna Beach
Campaign ads went far too far
I’m writing in reference to the recent City Council campaigns of
Laguna Beach. First off, I feel that letters and ads run during the
campaign by supporters of Cheryl Kinsman were insulting at best and
defamatory and open to litigation at worst.
While I am a supporter of the First Amendment, I feel that certain
standards should be set by the news editors to insure that subsequent
campaign ads and articles should stick to the issues and not try to
slander their opponents with doctored up photos and innuendos. This
goes for the fliers, phone calls and other blatantly offensive
propaganda.
Wayne Baglin and Jane Egly spoke of their vision, their stands on
issues and how they would problem solve. No muckraking, just clarity,
which is the way the process should be.
NADINE NORDSTROM
Laguna Beach
All voices should be welcome
In some ways, local elections impact our personal quality of life
more than state and national votes. There must never be a taboo
against robust debate about the policy positions and character of
local candidates.
We disagree with those who call for a more sterile debate in which
meaningful criticism of candidates is whispered at cocktail parties
but never spoken openly. A great U.S. Supreme Court Justice once
wrote, “It is in the clash of opinion that freedom rings.” Laguna
Beach was long overdue for a real campaign in which people who do not
accept the status quo could challenge the political order in which
entrenched elites have grown far too comfortable.
The idea that the 2004 local elections were somehow below some
mythical historical standard of decorum has been expressed by several
prominent residents, arguing that local campaigns should be about
what candidates are for rather than what they are against. These
self-appointed arbiters of political correctness even suggest that it
is improper for ad hoc, spontaneous grass roots and business
coalitions to campaign against candidates.
We don’t submit to that kind of velvet gloved political
suppression in America. The idea that the candidates and entrenched
local organizations like Village Laguna and Laguna Beach Taxpayers
have a monopoly on the political debate is simply anti-democratic.
The idea that individual residents like us, business operators like
Arbitech or major players in the local community like Montage don’t
have the same right to try to influence local elections as any other
group is hypocrisy of the most arrogant kind.
We were aligned with no one, just a family taking a stand, but we
are glad to have stood with others who had the courage to rattle the
cages of the ruling regime. In a town with so many people frustrated
about how local government sometimes treats residents, don’t try to
tell us what we can or can not say in the exercise of our rights at
election time, and don’t talk about everyone working together and
being happy until you get that Design Review Board under control.
This election was just the beginning of a resurgence of a strong
commitment to individual rights that is more a part of Laguna’s true
heritage than the uptight, officious political culture of the City
Council in recent years.
HOWARD AND LURA HILLS
Laguna Beach
School district has issues to attend to
If a million dollars were spent on the artificial turf on the
Laguna Beach High School football field to save on water and
maintenance, why is there a new lawn on the hillside slope in front
of the school?
The architects and engineers’ designs, we think, have been faulty
in the past. The high school community pool was moved from the quad
to right next to a neighborhood. The design is incomplete; the sound
reverberates up into the surrounding neighborhood.
Have you seen the baseball field fence? It’s Ug- Ug- Ugggly. Also,
the new realignment of the field creates a potential for lawsuits.
The baseball diamond should have been left where it was.
When will the current $39-million bond that we are paying on be
paid off?
A sound barrier needs to be built around the pool. Examples can be
found in La Habra and at Fullerton’s Independence Park. Leave the
baseball field as it was or turn it into a campus and community park.
Please switch the high school fire alarm to “silent alarm” at the
Fire Department after hours.
The Laguna Beach Unified School District and the city of Laguna
Beach are responsible for creating, and allowing to be created, a
nuisance. This consists of traffic congestion, lack of parking,
disturbing the peace, view loss and trashing the neighborhood. They
have degraded our quality of life and lowered our property values.
The issues of pole noise, the baseball field fence and the false
alarms are negative impacts to the surrounding neighborhoods and
hundreds of homes overlooking the school. These must be corrected.
KIAYU SUN AND JOHN HINGUA
Laguna Beach
Tactics may result in worse deal
Correct me if I am wrong, but didn’t the City Council have a
modest proposal from HighPointe Communities for 15 to 20 lots on 16
acres with an offer to dedicate 228 acres for open space?
Didn’t the members put the developer through three-plus years of
Planning Commission and City Council hearings only to finally approve
a project that was not economically feasible (as the developer
continually stated throughout the process)?
I recall that the neighbors who opposed the project had concerns
about traffic, view corridors and privacy. I would suggest that they
now concern themselves with Plexiglas windows to save themselves from
the impending Titleists and Top Flites that threaten to be their new
neighbors.
Congratulations to the council members. Their stall tactics worked
on the small local businessman. Good luck with the Montage.
DAVID LANDES
San Diego
* The Coastline Pilot is eager to run your letters. If you would
like to submit a letter, write to us at P.O. Box 248, Laguna Beach,
CA 92652; fax us at (949) 494-8979; or send e-mail to
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