Mailbag - Sept. 2, 1999
As an alumnus of Newport Harbor and a resident of Orange County for
my entire life until I left for college, I am appalled at the reaction
of putting up this wall -- the argument [about] encroaching on the public
sidewalk and hindering a view into the street from the alley (“It will
stay ...,” Aug. 27)
I think a great deal of the people here have missed the point. It’s no
longer about keeping the sidewalks beautiful and wide, it’s about
protecting the children who do not possess the capability to cry out
otherwise.
A child was [killed], citizens. Let us not forget the true issue at
hand. Two families lost children -- a little girl and a little boy who
were bright and shining stars in this sometimes bleak and dismal world.
Yet months later, because it wasn’t your child and it didn’t directly
affect your lives, you are arguing about the wall that will protect
children and their families from the hurt and pain that the Sotos and
Wieners have faced.
I do not personally know the Sotos or the Wieners, and I even admit
that I didn’t know their children, Sierra and Brandon. But having sisters
that age, I can only imagine how it must have felt to experience that
loss.
It’s not about the bureaucratic issue that many make it out to be and
can be boiled down to a few simple words: Keep the children, the future
of our world, safe at all and any cost -- even at the expense of
neighborhood aesthetics and convenience.
I urge citizens of Newport Beach and Costa Mesa to look at the real
issue at hand.
AMIE LAMANTIA
Student, University of Arizona
Newport Beach
I think its great that Costa Mesa and Estancia high schools are one
step closer to getting new athletic facilities (“School board gives OK to
spend for sketches of new sports facilities,” Aug. 26). The stadium and
pool will be a great asset to both the high schools and the city of Costa
Mesa.
However, I would like to see some interest in new performing arts
facilities for the high schools, particularly Estancia High School.
Estancia is home to the best drama department in Orange County; they
continually win major awards and produce top-notch productions year after
year. Yet these hard-working and talented students are forced to work in
an unsatisfactory and, in some cases, unsafe theater.
I know the quality of the program shouldn’t matter, but doesn’t it
seem wrong that our district’s best drama program is forced to work in
the district’s worst theater? The school has been doing what it can to
improve the facility with its SIP funds, but the district needs to take
action and fix Estancia’s crumbling theater.
After the $6 million is raised to build new athletic facilities, let’s
focus on our arts programs for a change. Why don’t we think about
building a second district performing arts complex at Estancia that would
serve all Costa Mesa schools, while the Newport Beach schools can
continue to use the one at Newport Harbor?
Whatever the idea, the bottom line is that Estancia drama needs a new
theater to match the talent it showcases. Perhaps if drama was a sport,
the district would pay more attention to it. But if it were, Estancia
would be winning CIF every year, and they deserve a nice, new theater.
BRET TABOADA
Student, Philadelphia University
Costa Mesa
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