The buck doesn’t stop here
While at Corona del Mar State Beach with the family, as a good father
and family man, I let my 3-year-old daughter crawl over the cement
ring of the fire pit, where she severely injures herself. Not only
does she burn herself terribly, but the emotional devastation and
ensuing stress irreparably harms me and my wife. We love our daughter
and now we are saddled for the rest of lives with this terrible
tragedy.
As an adult with a young child, I feel no need to have to watch a
3-year-old or protect her from harm. It is not my responsibility to
attend to a youngster when there are so many distractions on the
beach. How can my wife and I be expected to watch our daughter every
minute, even if she is playing next to a hot fire pit? The demands of
everyday life are overwhelming, and we go to the beach to relax and
enjoy ourselves, not to play guard over a 3-year-old.
It is the responsibility of the city of Newport Beach, which
operates Corona del Mar State Beach, to protect our daughter from
harm. At the very least, the city could have an attendant or
lifeguard to watch our daughter and warn us if she was in danger. At
the most, the city should pay for our lawyer in order for us to sue
the city so we can collect damages for the city’s negligence.
As a responsible adult and a loving father, with the advice of my
attorney, this is what I deserve: a large settlement from the city of
Newport Beach so I can attend to my daughter’s needs after the city’s
total disregard for a child’s safety in a public place.
And speaking of public places, the trees on San Miguel are owned
by the city of Newport Beach, but my community association, with my
monthly dues, pays the trimming contractor for additional trimming.
So what if I want them trimmed literally next to death? Heck, I’m a
big shot, and if I want to go yell at these poor workers trimming
trees for minimum wage, I will. After all, my association fees and my
powerful position on the association board give me the right to do
this. Who the heck are these lowly workers anyway to have given me
resistance to my demands that they disregard city guidelines for
trimming? I’m a big shot, and these little people probably don’t even
live in Newport Beach.
I hope those trees die anyway, so they no longer block my view
that I pay so much for.
* PAUL JAMES BALDWIN is a resident of Newport Beach.
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