MAILBAG - Oct. 15, 1999
What’s new about due process rights for employees being trampled on
by the Newport-Mesa School District (“Grading performance of teachers not
easy,” Sept. 16)? Ask a teacher in Newport-Mesa or elsewhere and they can
relate their own horror stories about how district and school
administration have routinely disregarded employee contractual rights and
manipulated personnel practices and evaluation procedures to meet their
own agenda. And they’ve spent plenty of our taxpayer dollars doing it,
too.
As far as the Brown Act and public meeting laws are concerned, there are
still some of us in the community waiting for the Daily Pilot to inform
readers of the outcome of the investigation into the last reported
violations made by the Newport-Mesa School District some time ago. These
district office and school board bullies really should be ashamed of the
way they have treated Ms. Wood, who has given 30 years of her life to
education. Is this what our kinder and gentler superintendent is all
about?
KENT S. MOORE Corona del Mar
Dunes hotel conference space needed
As a long time Dover Shores resident, I was very pleased to read the
story about the Newport Dunes plans for a hotel (“Dunes builders give
highlights of resort project,” Sept. 24). It is the perfect place for a
total family destination resort.
The additional conference and meeting space is something Newport Beach
needs very badly. As a founder of the Speak Up Newport Mayor’s Dinner, I
can tell you that we have had to limit our dinner capacity to about 600
for the last several years -- because that is the largest any of our
Newport hotels can handle. And we did not want to have the Newport Beach
mayor’s dinner in Anaheim or Irvine!
I think the Chamber of Commerce and Hoag Hospital must feel the same way
about the limitations on their events and programs.
Over the years, the Quinns (owners and operators of the Dunes) have been
wonderful neighbors. Just last week, in support of Clean Estuary Day,
which I chaired, the Dunes was not only a major financial contributor,
but gave us total access to the resort, including their boat launch
facilities, their parking area, and even prizes for the volunteers. We
could not have been successful without them.
They participate continuously in the community, working with the Girl
Scouts, the Junior Blind, the Upper Bay Naturalists and many other
organizations. The hotel will be one more resource they will use in
making Newport a wonderful place to live.
V.L. DEBBIE GRAY
Newport Beach
Cox is right on El Toro compromise
I congratulate Rep. Chris Cox (R-Newport Beach) who has taken a
common-sense approach to the El Toro Airport issue by stating he will do
everything possible to secure restrictions, thereby making it a more
friendly neighbor to the community. Orange County needs an additional
airport, even though some cities object! Cox offers the solution that
should be agreeable to everyone. Work toward a smaller El Toro, secure a
curfew so there will be no late-night flights and mitigate restrictions
on noise, number of flights and types of aircraft. Now why didn’t
Supervisor [Tom] Wilson think of that?
A. GALLAGHER
Costa Mesa
Lobster pain is not a gain
Please allow me to respond to Peter Buffa’s column about the police
officers in Irvine who temporarily pulled the plug on Sumo Sushi
restaurant’s Lobster Zone crane game (“A lobster tale the size of
Irvine,” Aug. 6). As Officer Dennis Ruvolo points out, this game subjects
lobsters “to unnecessary, inhumane treatment.”
Well guess what: so does cooking these crustaceans in your own kitchen.
There is little doubt anymore that lobsters, like all animals, can feel
pain. Most scientists agree that the nervous systems of lobsters are
quite sophisticated. For example, according to neurobiologist Tom Abrams,
lobsters have “a full array of senses.” Jelle Atema, a marine biologist
at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Mass. -- and,
according to The New York Times, “one of the nation’s leading experts on
lobsters” -- says, “I personally believe they do feel pain.”
Indeed, anyone who has ever boiled a lobster alive can attest that, when
dropped into scalding water, lobsters whip their bodies wildly and scrape
the sides of the pot in a desperate attempt to escape. In the journal
Science, researcher Gordon Gunter described this method of killing
lobsters as “unnecessary torture.”
As they begin to understand these fascinating animals, more and more
people are deciding lobsters should be left in open waters, not placed in
a cooking pot. At the very least, surely we can all agree that turning a
sentient being’s death into a game has no place in a compassionate
society.
PAULA MOORE
Staff Writer, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA)
Norfolk, Va.
What’s an influential list without Joe Bell?
I just saw your list of the 103 “most important people” on the coast. I
understand the meaning and limitations of such lists. I also understand
the limitations on apparent “self-praise” and the absence of any of your
columnists from that list. That being said, does the Pilot appreciate
what a treasure it has in Joe Bell?
My wife and I have followed his column since his days at the Times. We
were disappointed when he was replaced with a “pleasant mediocrity” and
elated when he surfaced with the Pilot. His column is in the classic
tradition of thoughtful and candid comment on topics which are too often
today banished by “political correctness.”
Keep his nose to the grindstone for as long as you can keep him working.
JOE A. DICKERSON Costa Mesa
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