Community Commentary -- Paul James Baldwin
Quality of life issues affect us all, and affect some of us in
different ways. Take the two issues of traffic and water quality. Traffic
affects all of us every day as soon as we leave the house. However, water
quality affects mostly those of us who live near or on the water, and
those of us who swim in it.
I remember the debate many years ago about whether to rebuild the Back
Bay bridge on Coast Highway. There were opponents in the community to
building the new bridge, and I believe Allan Beek was a very active
opponent at the time.
His argument at the time was that if the new bridge was built, then
more people would use it and just increase traffic. His slow-growth
rationale was let the traffic congestion and the bottleneck on Coast
Highway get terrible and it might be a deterrent to more people using it.
I hope Beek now can appreciate how the rebuilt bridge has benefited the
traffic flow through Newport Beach, resulting in a better quality of life
here than if the bridge wasn’t redone. I believe that the past can give
us valuable lessons for the future.
As far as Newport Beach retaining that small-town beach city
atmosphere, well I must say, in general, give it up. It’s gone, and it’s
not coming back.
When I was attending Newport Elementary School back in the ‘60s, the
population of Newport Beach was 5,400 and Irvine Ranch was a ranch and
Fashion Island was cottontail rabbit land. Well, things have changed and
will continue to change, so get used to it.
Having said that, we do have some small-town and quaint areas we
should treasure, preserve and restore. Balboa Island and Corona del Mar
have been faring well, but Balboa Peninsula sure needs more attention and
resources put to it. And how about West Newport? Let’s pay some more
attention to this end of town and focus on its strengths, like surfing
and the surfers.
Now living on Newport Harbor and being a boater and a bodysurfer (when
the water is warm enough), water quality is probably a little more
important to me than maybe someone else. This is another difficult issue
to get a realistic handle on. If we listened to and believed all the
disinformation from the Irvine Ranch Water District, we would all be
swimming in treated toilet waste and walking across an algae-clogged and
-caked harbor.
We residents of Newport Beach are lucky to have a gadfly such as
Robert Caustin and his Defend the Bay looking out for all of us, and
looking over the shoulders of the water district.
Whether it is Beek or Caustin getting involved because of their
convictions, getting involved is right, regardless if they are right or
wrong. Here are two people who instead of just complaining about things
are trying to do something about them. Kudos to both of them.
* PAUL JAMES BALDWIN is a longtime Newport Beach resident whose
commentaries will appear occasionally.
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