MAILBAG - March 20, 2001
I just read the article “Ice rink’s still up in the air,” (March 13)
by Jennifer Kho.
I am appalled. Just when I think our city has some really nice
community-spirited business relationships -- like Mesa Verde Partners,
which is a Segerstrom-held company and always has been a good business
partner -- I see someone like Gene Moriarty quoted as saying, “It would
be nice if people would leave us alone and let us decide,” when he’s
referring to the potential uses for the ice rink at the Mesa Verde
Center.
I hope Moriarty is embarrassed and ashamed at seeing that
narrow-minded, non-community-spirited quote in the paper. I realize that
he could do what he wants with the facility, but to pretty much dismiss,
in public, the opinions and thoughts and suggestions of the community
doesn’t bode well for what’s going to happen at the center.
CONNIE DUDDRIDGE
Costa Mesa
School board erred by allowing book
Steve Smith’s review (“School board trustee Leece is not always alone
in her views,” March 3) of a previous board action dealing with school
textbooks is most illuminating since it shows that the board decision to
disapprove is a proper and acceptable course of action.
After reading Smith’s critique of the book “Love and Shadows,” I’m
convinced, more than ever, that the board erred in its 5-2 decision to
allow a text with so obviously lurid a plot to pass board muster.
The fact that a number of parents appeared in opposition to the books
in question seemed to have no effect on those members who came to the
meeting with their minds already made up. Their testimony did not sway
these members nor, for that matter, did their testimony make any
headlines.
The books acceptability issue had been making the rounds for a number
of weeks before the board reached a decision. During this time, most
criticism had been leveled at a single member who had voiced her
objections to the books. As for the other members of the board, they
chose to go into a kind of hibernation or, as one scholar had opined in
previous study of boards, “They chose to retire to the wings until the
hubbub had subsided.” While one board member made an argument, the others
remained silent.
During the board meeting, the board president asked the question, “Why
these two books?” A good question that should have been answered by the
teachers who chose the books in the first place.
LEFTERIS LAVRAKAS
Costa Mesa
Electric bills can only get better
The consternation Joe Bell expressed in his March 8 column over his
electric bills is something we can all relate to. But help is on the way,
Bell. Despair not!
Every dark cloud has its silver lining. Take comfort in the sure and
certain knowledge that the invisible hand of the private sector will make
it all come right.
DICK LEWIS
Balboa Peninsula
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