Mailbag - Oct. 28, 1999
Although we appreciate the Huntington Beach Planning Commission’s attempt
to eliminate PLC’s “reign of dust,” we are less than pleased with the
watered-down approval allowing the fox to monitor the chicken coop.
As it stands, Public Works is left to monitor PLC’s adherence to
specifications designed to eliminate blowing dust. This is the same city
department in which inspectors somehow were unable to see a 45-foot-high
mountain of dirt where our rain of dust originated.
When asked at the Oct. 12 Planning Commission meeting why the inspectors
did not notice Mount PLC, Jack Miller, chief inspector, had no
explanation.
The only way we residents will be relieved of blowing dust is to have PLC
pay for a full-time, on-site inspector with the ability to shut down the
soil detoxification work whenever the work is out of compliance with
stipulations in the permit.
JAY KREITZ
Huntington Beach
Still think development is good?
I wonder if anyone has considered the part that excessive development and
growth in our city has contributed to the urban runoff that some believe
is the source of our beach pollution? I wonder if our Planning
Commissions and City Councils of the ‘80s and ‘90s still believe there is
no cost for growth and development? I wonder if they still believe that
growth and development are good for all of us?
Look around our city. Thousands of added new homes, many in very
high-density developments, like the developments surrounding the area of
Main and Garfield streets. Remember, these projects were approved by our
Planning Commissions and City Councils with the admonition that “growth
is good for all of us,” especially the developers, and will increase the
city’s tax base.
And now that the city’s infrastructure and ecosystem have been pushed
beyond their limits by this growth and development, the City Council will
ask the taxpayers for money to “fix our problems.”
The madness continues.
GIL NIXON
Huntington Beach
Let the residents vote on Wal-Mart
I believe there should be a vote on Wal-Mart as quickly as possible, and
it should be a straight up or down vote on the rezoning, with no other
sham “advisory” issues to stack the deck against the petition gatherers.
Council members Dave Garofalo, Ralph Bauer, Shirley Dettloff and Pam
Julien should rethink their desire to deter the will of the more than 10%
of the city that desires to have a special election on whether a
130,000-square-foot big box belongs in a residential neighborhood across
the street from a church and the city’s only cemetery.
I do not live in the Crest View area, but I am concerned about the level
of city services, and their costs, and the interests of all of our
children. My belief is that the elected officials should uphold, not
thwart, the integrity of the initiative process.
I applaud councilmen Dave Sullivan, Tom Harman and Mayor Peter Green for
upholding the legislative process and the people’s right to govern.
GINO J. BRUNO
Huntington Beach
The vote should have been just an up or down vote in January: Do you want
a Wal-Mart in a residential neighborhood?
The majority of the City Council, Shirley Dettloff, Pam Julien, Dave
Garofalo and Ralph Bauer, have voted to cloud the issue by pushing the
vote back to March and adding other issues to the ballot.
And what about their idea of asking voters whether they want 50% of the
sales tax from the store to be spent on a sports field and senior center?
I think they made a mistake not including apple pie and motherhood in
there someplace. That’s always a vote-getter.
EILEEN MURPHY
Huntington Beach
Other issues should not be on the ballot. We specifically obtained the
number of signatures needed to have a special election. The March ballot
is not a special election.
SUE SPECTOR
Fountain Valley
At least once is better than never
New math. Good morning, students. Let us begin our daily math quiz.
Ever since the honorable Mayor Peter Green announced the twice-monthly
street cleaning policy in Huntington Beach, our street has been swept
zero times.
When we had the once-a-month policy, our street was cleaned about once
every three months.
Now, what is the probability that our street will be cleaned this month?
Zero, you say? Very good. How did you arrive at the answer? One third per
month times zero per month equals zero? Very good, students.
Now another question. How many of you would favor going back to the
once-a-month policy?
CHARLES (REX) MYLES
Huntington Beach
Doesn’t anyone care about the nude juice club?
The nude juice place they’re going to put in makes me furious.
We have property near there, and my kids go near that area. I know
everyone’s protesting the Wal-Mart, which personally I would like to
have. But no one is saying anything about a strip club, which is going to
lower property values and bring in drugs and prostitution.
Is there anything we can do stop it? It really makes me angry that
they’re going to do that by the end of the year.
MARCIA HENDRICKS
Huntington Beach
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