Making a July 4 stakeout stick
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Dave Brooks
For residents on Main Street, the Fourth of July weekend doesn’t
begin with a downtown parade or a fireworks show. On the route that
brings in 150,000 visitors a year, Fourth of July begins with a green
light from the police and harmonic pounding of wooden stakes into the
grass.
At 7 a.m. Sunday, nearly 24 hours before the city’s annual parade
got underway, residents were allowed to officially “stake out” a
place to watch what’s billed as the biggest Fourth of July parade
west of the Mississippi.
After a motorcycle police officer gave local residents the thumbs
up, hundreds of people began pounding wooden stakes into the grass
area separating the street from the sidewalks, threading the pilings
with ribbons, strings and tape. The small plot of normally public
grass was then declared temporarily private for the day, cordoned off
as the domain of nearby homeowners and their friends and family
invited to town to view the parade.
Residents said the staking out is necessary to get a good spot and
by 7:15 a.m. Sunday, every imaginable plot of grass from 6th Street
to Yorktown Avenue was claimed for the next day’s parade. Those who
don’t live on Main Street simply draw big boxes with chalk on street
corners and write their names in the square.
While the staking out may seem awkward, even unfair to
non-residents, it has become a tradition on Main Street and a chance
for neighbors to get out and see each other.
“For a lot of us, especially those who went to Huntington (Beach)
High, it’s a kind of a reunion,” said Downtown resident Pam Alagata,
who planned to erect a tent on the sidewalk space she reserved for
her grandchildren. “There’s definitely a togetherness about all this.
It’s become ingrained in the Fourth of July weekend.”
Up to the turn of the 21st century, there were no official rules
about staking out.
“One year a guy came out in a pickup truck and unloaded these old
redwood lawn chairs in front of my house, nine days before the Fourth
of July,” downtown resident Ray Walker said.
Increasing incivility prompted Walker and other local residents to
petition the City Council for an ordinance governing the stakeouts.
The council followed with a bill arguing that residents couldn’t
stakeout a spot to view the parade until the stroke of midnight on
July 2. Main Street residents responded by throwing parties until
midnight, then quickly dashing into their front yards to save a spot.
Chief Ken Small said police were concerned about the dangers and
troubles caused by the new late-night stakeouts.
“We had a situation where people, often intoxicated, were running
out into the street to get a spot,” he said. “We were afraid
something bad would happen.”
In February the council decided to change the stakeout, moving it
to its 7 a.m. time slot just a day before the parade. The council
also banned the use of duct tape to mark off spots, arguing that the
tape often stayed on the streets for weeks and months after the
parade.
Many local residents said they were happy with the change, arguing
that the once wild party atmosphere had been transformed into a more
sober tradition.
“It’s not martini time anymore,” Downtown resident Dewey Anderson
said. “People are going to start having the breakfast party instead
of the cocktail party.”
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