EDITORIAL
The message was loud and clear. And nobody accepted it.
Pepe Serna’s litany before 200 Latino youths -- that only a handful of
them would go to college, most of the girls would become teen mothers and
only one of them was really worth anything -- met with defiance, just as
it should have.
And the third Latino Youth Conference this week will help them prove
Serna wrong. Between the career advice and the motivational speakers, the
conference offered the students a chance to stretch their horizons and
imagine what they can become.
The speakers -- including Frank Gutierrez, owner of Muebleria Vallarts,
and Superior Court Judge Frances Munoz -- were living proof that those
horizons are endless.
The youths also had among them three fine examples: Roy Alvarado
Leadership Award winners Hilario Arriaga of Estancia High; Zhaira Franco
of Costa Mesa High, and Claudia Flores of Newport Harbor High.
With continued efforts, the number of students deserving of that honor
can only grow. And our community will be a better place as a result.
Bay studies crucial to estuary’s long-term survival
The words “baseline study,” “watershed analysis” and “environmental
impact report on permanent dump site designation,” probably don’t mean
much to the average person. When people read those words in a newspaper,
they are easy to gloss over.
But news this week that nearly $1.5 million was awarded to Orange County
to complete these studies is something that every Newport Beach resident
should pay very close attention.
The baseline study will determine for government agencies what the bay
looks like at its optimum health. Without this study, it is difficult to
know which steps should be taken to make the bay better. What’s more, its
completion means the federal government will kick in 65% of the cost of
projects to help the bay achieve that optimum health.
When asked where their water comes from, most people would say “from the
tap,” which proves that the concept of a watershed is relatively foreign
to the average resident. But to Upper Newport Bay, the watershed -- all
of the upstream areas that contribute to the storm water runoff, sediment
and pollutants that flow into the bay -- couldn’t be more important. The
other study that the federal money will help to complete is an
examination of the bay’s watershed in an attempt to figure out the best
ways to prevent or limit all that “bad stuff” from entering the estuary
at all.
The last study -- and perhaps the most important in the short term --
will allow a temporary dredging dump site in the Pacific Ocean off the
Newport Beach coast to become permanent. When scooping up the muck that
has built up on the bay’s floor becomes necessary again, a nearby dump
site will greatly reduce dredging costs.
Orange County Supervisor Tom Wilson, Congressman Christopher Cox
(R-Newport Beach) and others who fought for this crucial funding, deserve
a pat on the back for having the knowledge and foresight to realize the
importance of good, long-term management of this precious resource.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.