Model UN a valuable resource for students...
Model UN a valuable resource for students
As a former Model UN student at Edison High, I would like to
inform Wayne Parker (“Model UN a waste of school district’s money”
Mailbag, June 12) that he and his comments couldn’t be more wrong.
Has he even stepped into an Model United Nations class? Or observed
the students in their countless hours of research, writing and speech
preparation that is required of them for conferences? If he had, he
would see that it is definitely not filled with socialists and
America-haters. The program is filled with the smartest kids in
school -- liberal, conservative and independent. Some of Model UN’s
objectives are to teach a person how to look at situations from
different perspectives and to resolve issues peacefully. This
valuable program prepares high school students for college and the
future, unlike many other classes that are offered (or even
required). Students need to understand the world they are living in
and Model United Nations is a valuable resource for educating the
youth of America.
STEPHANIE LANDIS
Huntington Beach
As a former Model United Nations student at Huntington Beach High
School, I went ahead and forwarded Wayne Parker’s letter “Model UN is
a waste of school district’s money” to other former Huntington Beach
High School Model UN students to gauge their response. As I expected,
we all had a good laugh -- especially about Parker’s quip that the
program “indoctrinates students in a globalist, socialist
philosophy.” Let me see, how have my fellow former Model UN students
becomes such threats to the American way of life?
Some are teachers, even within Huntington Beach. How deplorable!
Some are attorneys. (Although if they’ve truly been indoctrinated by
a globalist, socialist philosophy I suppose they’ll be giving back
all that money the make.) I hear one works for the Scottish
Parliament. (Those Scots have always been nothing but trouble.) A few
are artists -- musicians, poets, and writers. (Although I hear the
“writer” now lives in New York and that city is truly a bastion of
anti-American sentiment.) Some have gone on to the military. (Uh oh,
socialists within the ranks.) One has been a paramedic, in our own
city mind you. And yours truly works for the Federal government.
Yikes!
Parker, the bottom line is Model United Nations does indoctrinate.
It indoctrinates students into becoming better citizens -- citizens
of the United States of America and citizens of the world.
JODY FISHER
Huntington Beach
Poseidon has no place in Huntington Beach
As if they had learned nothing from the Enron debacle, or from the
nefarious California “energy shortage,” some of our city planning
staff seem determined to put the Poseidon desalination plant on the
fast track. Private business has had a terrible record in public
utilities in recent years. We need only to look at how the hideously
ugly AES plant geared up its production recently.
Why should the good people of Huntington Beach suffer the blight
of yet another large industrial eyesore (on prime coastal land no
less), when it is appears likely that most of the desalinized water
is destined to be sold far away from our city borders? Poseidon
admitted that it already has an agreement with the Rancho Santa
Margarita Water District to sell them up to half of its water. No
doubt, this is with an eye to the proposed 14,000-unit housing
project planned for South County. That project cannot be built
without a water supply. If that project were to be built, it would
destroy the last large stand of endangered coastal sage scrub habitat
in Orange County and it would expand all the ills of urban sprawl
further without doing anything to fix our current problems.
When the Planning Commission met May 27, Commissioner Steve Ray
courageously asked planning staffers about this growth-inducing
issue. Staffer Scott Hess said that was “going beyond the limits of
your jurisdiction.” That’s pretty shocking. All sides of an issue
must be presented freely in open forum in order to develop the best
plans. City staffers must remember that they are public servants who
are supposed to be working for the people of Huntington Beach (not
private developers). And they should keep in mind that the testimony
of Poseidon’s team of experts is paid for by Poseidon.
Public utilities should be run first for the public good, not for
private profit. Let’s hope that the Poseidon scheme sinks like its
film namesake.
MARINKA HORACK
Huntington Beach
When considering desalinization, the components of the brine
should be elucidated for the public. The ocean is not just a
container full of dissociated sodium chloride ions and fish, it has
all of the good and bad ions that are on land as well as all of the
bad stuff we don’t want in our driveways or in our lungs.
Where shall Poseidon get its water to desalinate? How far off
shore?
The Heal the Bay Web site shows passing and failure score cards
for the beaches of various parts of Los Angeles and vicinities.
Failure and the consequent dead fish icon are because of the urban
runoff. Urban runoff, affectionately called “urban slobber,” has
lead, mercury, arsenic, cobalt, copper, pesticides, herbicides, fecal
matter and anything else that finds its way down the gutters. This
stuff does not get treated (there is one exception in Santa Monica);
it goes directly into the ocean. It does not just sit at the outfalls
at the beaches for our swimmers and surfers, but is carried by ocean
currents. We don’t know what really happens to it or how it has
affected our oceanic ecology over time, because we never took account
of what we had in our ocean before we poured millions of gallons of
nasty waste into it in the first place.
We can just speculate that our ocean was in better shape before
people got here.
How far out does that nasty stuff go? How far out will Poseidon
pump its source water? I doubt that it will get untouched waters and
it will certainly get all the wonderful dissolved metals that Mother
Nature puts into it. Add that all up and that is what will be
concentrated into the brine. Mixing it with sewage effluent may or
may not fix the problem. My guess is that it won’t, and at the
outfall and beyond the AES plant will be an ocean desert.
I won’t be swimming there nor my children or friends.
TERRY YOUNG
Huntington Beach
Laws don’t allow trashing of property
California law recognizes that the public can gain prescriptive
rights of access to private property when the land has been used: for
five years as if it were public land; without asking or receiving
permission from the owner; with the actual or presumed knowledge of
the owner; without significant objection or attempts by the owner to
prevent such use.
The Shea Parkside property meets all of the above criteria as far
as I can determine.
Ron Metzler of Shea Homes is well aware of my activities on his
property; I have phoned, e-mailed or spoken with him in person
approximately 10 times regarding various issues. I have never asked
for or received his permission to be on the property, but neither has
he forbidden me to enter.
While I hope that my independent role as the eyes and ears of the
Coastal Commission keeps Metzler awake at night, I also hope that
Metzler appreciates me informing him about unauthorized vehicles
driving around on his property and a water erosion problem that was
beginning to carve a gully into one of his slopes. If prescriptive
rights of access apply to me, they also apply to the paintball
players. But nobody has the right to trash someone else’s property.
The paintball players leave foxholes, tires, lumber, sandbags and
even kitchen appliances, whereas I take only pictures and leave only
footprints.
I think it’s safe to assume that Shea Homes probably prefers the
latter type of prescriptive rights access.
MARK BIXBY
Huntington Beach
Let’s have seniors patrol the wetlands
We are both just horrified at the thought of the paintball issue
and the littering in the wetlands. The wetlands are a very
significant element of our ecosystem, far more significant than most
people realize and I just think it is an absolute crime. I hope that
they will cite any individual that is found there and have them be
fined.
Not only that, we were wondering whether the seniors patrols, you
know they have senior citizens that help the police, we were
wondering if there couldn’t be some of those people who could do some
significant time there. It is such a shame that anything should
happen to our wetlands. And in Huntington Beach we are very blessed
to have some very special wetlands. And it is up to us to preserve
them.
MICHAEL AND CAROLE DADURKA
Huntington Beach
Paintball isn’t hurting anything out there
The children during the paintball playing do not occupy this
40-acre area. I have video tape of the children playing paintball and
they haven’t used trees or cut them down. The tires were already
there. The paintball markings on the tree do wash away after each
rain.
The second thing that I have to say is if in fact there are toxins
down there, there are many other people who take their dogs down
there. The stench of the dog feces is unbearable on hot days. So what
about that as toxin? If anything, the wetlands look their best in the
40 years that I have lived here. It is more organized, and years ago
four-wheelers used to go through there and tear it up and there were
a lot more drug addicts down there.
I think it’s atrocious that Danette Goulet wrote her column about
this and these kids are going to be fined or even arrested. Is there
no place for children to play anymore?
TRACY TOMB
Huntington Beach
City should appeal award in Saldivar case
I do believe the city should appeal the court’s decision to award
Antonio Saldivar’s family $2.1 million. If he grabbed a gun, or what
appeared to be a gun, at the officer, the officer did what he should
have done under those circumstances.
DAVID COFFMAN
Huntington Beach
If I were a policeman in the middle of the night and a young man
pointed a gun at me, I too would shoot him and I believe anyone in a
similar circumstance would. I think it is just appalling that this
family should be allowed this amount of money from the taxpayer’s
fund simply because this boy, young man really, did not have sense
enough to do as he was told by a policeman who spoke his language and
who followed the routine
VELMA BROWN
Huntington Beach
I am appalled at the city paying $2.1 million for killing Salidvar
after he brandished a hand gun, toy or otherwise, to an officer in
pursuit of a suspect. My parents lived in Huntington Beach for 45
years and are appalled that we have to pay for that jury’s findings.
As a Huntington Beach resident, I will defend myself and my city
for everything possible to bring the rights of Americans, but I tell
you what, I will not pay for the $2.1 million. Being a veteran of
the military, I pulled my weapon several times on unsuspecting
criminals pointing handguns at me. Yes I have shot and killed several
civilians but protected my own life.
It is an outrage, an absurdity what they are going to do to this
officer that was protecting the city of Huntington Beach. This lets
anyone pull a toy gun at anybody and get millions and millions of
dollars. There is an absolute atrocity when an officer, in fear of
his life, is basically prosecuted for defending his rights. Think
about your women and children at home, who were shot and killed.
Think about it.
RICHARD JOHNSON
Huntington Beach
Award should stand, officer was wrong
I say no, the police officer should be fired. He has two more law
suits against him pending.
He is still a police officer, he completely emptied his revolver.
There is nobody like this who should be on the city of Huntington
Beach police force or any police force like it. He was wrong, he
tried to cover it up. The family deserves the money.
ROBERT DINGMAN
Huntington Beach
Sports parking fees latest incompetence
This city has never been able to adjust to the fact that we are
not getting a “free ride” anymore because we do not get revenue from
our oil wells that have been shut down. We cannot live in a fairy
tale world forever. We have to get some smart money coming in to our
town or we are doomed.
You’d think that the Planning Commission -- which, I might add, is
such a joke it is unbelievable -- would have figured out how the
parking was going to work before this project started. That beautiful
sports center, which cost us a fortune, looks horrible with that
chain link fence; which will be all rusty in the near future. How do
we expect this joke Planning Commission to come up with an answer for
that parking when they cannot even fix the parking problem Downtown.
The problem I am talking about is the fact that there is not a
spot Downtown to park to go to the post office. We had some spots
until Starbucks started selling coffee across the street. Like there
is going to be the parking patrol there anytime soon. They city fixed
the problem by giving24 before they could get a ticket. Now the white
zone is taken up by the one or two cars that are going inside the
post office to stand in line, while those of us that just want to
mail a letter in the outside mail drops have no place to park.
This is all happening or not while the city raises our city bill.
Yes, I know why you, Danette Goulet, do not go to the meetings.
The thing is I could see myself ranting during my one minute, if only
I could get some immediate response from the council. But they just
sit there holier than thou.
Before we go any further on the parking, we need to get competent
people on the Planning Commission. I know one person that got on that
committee because someone felt sorry for him because he lost the
election for the City Council. Now what does that tell you.
Please, City Council, get your act together.
BONNIE SCOTT
Huntington Beach
Police helicopter noise is way out of control
It seems like the police helicopter is over my neighborhood 10
times a day. It is noisy enough when just flying by, but the
incessant circling is particularly annoying. Is it really necessary?
I recognize that it can be extremely effective in backing up ground
units and in pursuit situations. I am inclined to believe, however,
that most of the chopper time is spent on minor cases. When I look at
the police blotter in the Independent there is little that justifies
the air time the helicopter is getting. Air traffic noise diminishes
the quality of life here in Huntington Beach. Let me please listen to
the breeze and the ocean. Birdsongs, yes. Whirlybirds, no.
CHRIS AYERS
Huntington Beach
Sister City brings benefits, costs little
The persons who listed Sister Cities at the bottom of the priority
list in the city budget are no doubt unaware of the following:
*The original Sister City agreement was signed by then Mayor Bob
Mandic, along with Don MacAllister, and has been supported by every
mayor and City Council since 1982.
*Citizens of Anjo, Japan donated nearly $100,000 toward the
rebuilding of our pier when it was destroyed.
*Yes, street repair ranks above sister cities, but consider the
relative costs of each: money allocated for Sister City programs
represent only .0001 % of the $134,172 million of the city budget as
of Sept. 1, 2002.
*More than 650 guests from Japan and New Zealand sister cities
that we know of have made Huntington Beach a destination, and have
spent their dollars here.
*The Sister City Assn., comprised of volunteers, is responsible
for bringing Broadway shows, an award-winning pianist and flutist,
Flamenco dancers and other cultural events to Huntington Beach.
*The 75 cherry trees by the library and at the Police Department
are a gift from Japan, as is the stone lantern at the head of the
City Hall fountains.
*No city money is spent for anyone’s travel to New Zealand or
Japan.
CARMEN ERBER
Huntington Beach
Editor’s Note: Carmen Erber is the president of the Sister City
Assn. of Huntington Beach.
Bolton’s political cartoons a joy
I enjoy the local political cartoons by Steve Bolton in the
Huntington Beach Independent, which are well drawn and pertinent to
Huntington Beach. Please continue with them.
CARLA AND MICHAEL HUGHES
Huntington Beach
Obscene abortion signs not free speech
I am a furious 31-year-old middle school teacher in Huntington
Beach. My husband, our 20-month-old son and I just tried to have a
relaxing morning walk on the Huntington Beach Pier. As we got to the
intersection of Main Street and Pacific Coast Highway we were
assaulted with obscene photos of dead infants in anti-abortion
posters.
Ironically, I agree that abortion is wrong, but I also think those
graphic images are obscene and inappropriate for children and the
public. I am 10 weeks pregnant and it was very upsetting for me to
see such horrible pictures.
I took Issues in Freedom of Speech at Cal State Long Beach and I
understand obscene images and anything to incite a “reasonable man”
to violence is not protected by the Constitution. I saw a lot of
angry and potentially violent confrontations occur with the
demonstrators and I don’t understand how this “speech” is protected.
The police said their hands were tied. Is this obscene
demonstration protected by Freedom of Speech? And if so, can
pornography or pro-terrorists graphic photos of the N.Y. dead be
displayed at the pier? Shouldn’t our children be protected?
MELISSA ZAIDEN
Huntington Beach
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