All’s fair at Fairview Park except sports...
All’s fair at Fairview Park except sports fields
This is in response to the Readers Respond on Fairview Park that
was in Thursday’s Forum section.
So, let me try to understand this. Fairview Park is now a Native
American cemetery, and this information goes back to 1935. That’s 68
years ago. So why was this not brought up when they built all those
homes on that part of town? I guess its OK to build homes, schools,
roads, and golf courses on sacred spots, just not sports fields.
The writer compares Fairview Park with the local cemeteries, but
the last time I looked, there was not a small train driving children
over the graves at Pacific View or a dog show going on at Harbor
Lawn.
I don’t understand why anything is welcomed at Fairview Park
except sports fields. If the Segerstroms wanted to build yet another
performing arts center on the spot, this issue of Native Americans,
small owls and native plants would quickly disappear.
I don’t live in the city of Costa Mesa, but this must be what the
residents want, because they have the power to change it.
CHARLES MASSINGILL
Newport Beach
Fairview is representative of California landscape
Re: “The owl outsmarts everyone,” by Lolita Harper, which ran Oct.
22: Costa Mesa is a microcosm of northern Orange County and a perfect
example of urban sprawl that results from -- poor or no -- planning.
Fairview Park is the last bastion of “natural” landscape in Costa
Mesa, and even it has been consistently assaulted: model trains and
tracks, encroaching neighbors, those who illegally cover vernal pools
with fill dirt, and those who just can’t leave it alone.
What is it about Fairview Park? Do you find it ugly? Well, if you
do, then you find the Coastal Sage Scrub habitat of California ugly.
Don’t worry, though, because 95% of this type of habitat has been
paved over. The landscape you find more pleasing is the result of the
human need to control nature -- the result of people like William
Mulholland, who usurped natural water supplies to populate a desert
for profit and power.
I enjoy Fairview Park because I still have the chance to see a
gopher snake, a coyote, a red-tailed hawk and, yes, even a winter
burrowing owl. The park sits adjacent to Talbert Nature Preserve, and
both provide needed open space in this otherwise dismal landscape.
Those who keep attacking Fairview Park in action and attitude walk
through the landscape and see dust and weeds. I walk through Fairview
Park and see a story -- the tracks, the scat, the sounds, the
battles. The biggest battle is being waged by humankind in an effort
to dominate that which we ought to protect.
At the Costa Mesa City Council meeting on Oct. 20, an older
gentleman showed a picture of a U-Haul and said we would see “more of
these” if we did not develop Fairview Park. The day after we develop
Fairview Park, my house will be on the market, and I will leave the
state I have called home for over 40 years. Until then, I will fight
for that “patch of weeds” and that “tiny little hooter,” because, as
usual, the opponent -- humankind -- is formidable.
J.B. “I DON’T NEED
TREES TO BE A
TREE-HUGGER” LITVAK
Costa Mesa
Alternative to 19th Street bridge causes problems
According to the Santa Ana River Crossing Study, the alternative
to extending 19th Street via a bridge to Brookhurst Street in
Huntington Beach is to build Bluff Road through Costa Mesa and
Newport Beach.
Bluff Road will connect Victoria Street, just east of the Santa
Ana River, to the west end of 19th Street. It will follow the base of
the bluff directly below the Marina Highlands homes in Costa Mesa, go
past the Seabluff Canyon town homes and continue, adjacent to the
Newport Terrace condominiums, to 19th Street.
Bluff Road is projected to carry 21,000 cars per day past these
homes if the 19th Street Bridge is not built. With the Bluff Road
alternative, 19th Street from Bluff Road to Placentia Avenue is also
projected to carry 19,000 cars per day. Bluff Road will continue
south, on the view side of the Marina View homes and California
Seabreeze homes in Costa Mesa, to 17th Street and will carry 7,000
cars per day on this section of road. It will then connect with 15th
Street and ultimately end at Pacific Coast Highway. Bluff Road for
its entire length will be through actual or potential parkland.
Questions need to be asked if this option is selected. How is West
19th Street going to accommodate 19,000 cars per day? Could extending
19th Street to Brookhurst Street in Huntington Beach allow for the
elimination of Bluff Road and its adverse effects on a major park and
many residential areas? Would extending 19th Street be paid for with
federal, state and county money because it connects a freeway with a
state beach? Would building Bluff Road, a local road, require local
funding? Why didn’t the study include projecting daily traffic
increases that would occur on Victoria Street and Adams Avenue if
both the 19th Street extension and Bluff Road were not built? Why
haven’t east side Costa Mesa residents been informed that, based on
the Santa Ana River Crossings Study, extending 19th Street or
building Bluff Road will result in the same traffic volume on east
19th Street regardless of which one is chosen. Why don’t mitigation
cost estimates for removing the extension of 19th Street from the
County Master Plan of Highways include the cost of building Bluff
Road?
The key question however, is what is best for the majority of
Costa Mesa’s Westside residences and businesses and what would be
least intrusive to the environment? The extension of 19th Street over a bridge to Brookhurst Street in Huntington Beach or Bluff Road? Both
are presently on the County Master Plan of Highways.
ROBERT GRAHAM
Costa Mesa
Costa Mesa, Newport
Beach: let’s make a deal
I think Costa Mesa should make a deal with Newport. We will
consider 19th Street bridge if Newport will allow the Costa Mesa
Freeway to go from 19th Street to Pacific Coast Highway. That’s what
should have been done all along, but they blocked it.
ARDY HURST
Costa Mesa
In short, bring on
the 19th Street bridge
I am a Costa Mesa business owner and resident for 18 years, and
yes, I want the bridge built across 19th Street.
LESLIE A. MCCARTHY
Costa Mesa
Bridge will destroy
last bits of nature
In reference to the 19th Street bridge. I live in Newport Beach. I
drive 19th Street everyday, sometimes from one end to the other. I do
not think Newport Beach needs another bridge. If we must, let’s
utilize what we have already in existence and widen it to accommodate
more traffic.
To place a bridge across 19th Street to Banning in Huntington
Beach is as much as saying, “Let’s develop what little open space
there is left!” We all know that if the bridge is built it will bring
with it more housing and business developments.
I prefer a quiet rural type area where I can still observe nature.
No bridge at 19th Street!
KAREN HANNERS
Newport Beach
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