Mailbag - May 9, 2002
Noise from the dog park breaks city ordinances
The reason the local neighbors are trying to get the Huntington Beach
Dog Park relocated is that every day the dog park is open it violates the
Huntington Beach city code in regard to noisy animals.
This states that no owner of an animal or owner of the property (The
city) shall permit by sound or cry the interference of “the comfortable
enjoyment of life or property” by a number of persons, a neighborhood or
a community.
It goes on to define this as a nuisance and that it shall not be
permitted.
I am one of a number of people in the neighborhood adjacent to the dog
park whose comfortable enjoyment of life and property is being interfered
with.
Contrary to the belief of the dog park supporters, the decibel level
does not matter, nor does the time of day. Any noise at any hour that
disturbs the neighbors is a violation and “shall not be permitted.”
The only solution we see to this ongoing dispute is to move the dog
park -- the sooner the better. The supporters can then have the space
they desire at any time of the day for their own use as they see fit.
ALAN REID
Huntington Beach
Let’s keep on this prevailing wage issue Please write more
stories on the ludicrous Huntington Beach prevailing wage.
I would like to see stories citing how Irvine saved money on not
having prevailing wage, on how $35-$40 an hour is more than contract
computer programmers, contract accountants or salaried teachers make.
What is the percentage of Huntington Beach workers who make less than
$40 an hour?
Do some editorials on how the Huntington Beach City Council cowered to
union interest.
Absolutely, absurd.
GARRET GRAJEK
Huntington Beach
John Baca Park is a great tribute
How refreshing to hear that a new park is being named after a Vietnam
war hero instead of another politician. Good move.
SHIRLEY SUTTON
Huntington Beach
Do us a favor, get rid of the waiver
As a founding member of Orange County’s Ocean Outfall Group (a
citizens advisory committee dedicated to ending Orange County’s 301(h)
waiver), I have studied the issue enough to know that it’s time to wake
up and smell the sewage.
In a recent Los Angeles Times article (‘Beach Closure Is Reminder Of
1999 Problems’, Times OC May 2nd), the shenanigans again muck to the
surface, as Monica Mazur a spokeswoman for the county’s environmental
health division, makes silly statements like “We still don’t understand
what’s going on,” and “It’s like an onion, we’re gradually peeling the
layers away.”
Indeed. It’s like an onion all right -- it stinks to high heaven.
These people won’t admit the problem until it floats up and dances
with them, like a mermaid.
Orange County operates under a 301(h) waiver that allows them to dump
dirtier sewage than 99.75% of sewage districts in America, four miles off
one of the most famous beaches in the world.
And now, the Orange County Grand Jury tells us that a publicly funded
1997 study (The 20 Meter Study) was not shown to the public, and that,
had it been, the sewage district probably wouldn’t even have been granted
its current waiver.
With ongoing public protests outside the sewage plant in Fountain
Valley, a great web site called www.stopthewaiver.com, and a well
choreographed city-by-city campaign by the environmental community
raising awareness of the snowballing issue, all we can say -- once again
-- is: “Do us a favor, get rid of the waiver.”
JOEY RACANO
Huntington Beach
When should the sanitation district stop studying the contaminating
the ocean water and start actively combating it? How does yesterday
sound?
All right already with the studies. Their own studies so far have
proven the plume comes back to shore. Their studies show the cost to the
average taxpayer will be $40 a year. They have $400 to $600 million in
reserve. They should drop the waiver, start immediately toward full
secondary treatment and stop polluting the ocean.
EILEEN MURPHY
Huntington Beach
I have lived along the Southern California coast for virtually my
entire life and now my children and I spend a lot of leisure time at the
beach.
My opinion is that Orange County Sanitation District needs to own up
to its inefficiency and poor internal politics and do what is necessary
to be 100% compliant with the Clean Water Act. How many more waivers are
they going to ask for? Do what is necessary to be 100% compliant, instead
of wasting precious time, valuable resources and our county funds to
continue to cover up the alleged major cause of our closure of the
beaches.
If Hyperion in Los Angeles (how much larger is their population?) can
be compliant, why can’t we in Orange County? We are currently ahead of
whom, with our efforts to treat waste water before being pumped out to
the ocean -- Tijuana?
Orange County Sanitation District, get your act together now.
JOHN STREIPS
Huntington Beach
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