Keeping fingers crossed to keep the fairgrounds...
Keeping fingers crossed to keep the fairgrounds here
As the Costa Mesa City Council’s liaison to the Orange County
Fairgrounds, I’m keeping my fingers crossed that it will, as it
should, remain in Costa Mesa. I’m holding Assemblyman John Campbell
to his word.
What he recently told me is that he has seen the light and now
will work to keep the fairgrounds in Costa Mesa. Two individuals
deserve special recognition if the fairgrounds stay here. Fairgrounds
manager Becky Bailey-Findley and especially the man who, as usual,
without fanfare, provided the early, critical leadership to keep the
fairgrounds here. He is the main reason why Costa Mesa is the great
city it is. That man is our city manager Allan Roeder.
CHRIS STEEL
Costa Mesa
Newport Beach parishioner sticks with St. James Church
With regard to the question of whether the Episcopal Diocese of
Los Angeles should sue St. James, I do not agree with the suit. I
have been a member of the Episcopal Church since I was baptized as an
infant. I have been a member of several congregations.
Over the past 20 years, I have seen both the Los Angeles Diocese
and the National Episcopal Church move farther and farther away from
the core values of the Christian faith, the divinity of Jesus Christ
and the authority of Holy Scripture. During these 20 years, I have
remained in the Episcopal Church, actively praying for its return to
the core values it was founded on and participating in reconciliation
attempts with those with opposing views. The theological core values
of the Los Angeles Diocese that St. James was originally a part of
are not the theological core values of the Los Angeles Diocese today.
The Diocese has moved away from St. James.
St. James members, including myself, have contributed 100% to the
operation and ministry of the parish, as well as Phase I and Phase II
of the building campaign for the current facility. No diocesan money
has been given to St. James. In fact, St. James has given money to
the Los Angeles Diocese. But being obedient to God’s command to be
good stewards of our time and talent, we can no longer share them
with a diocese whose beliefs are opposed to ours.
This decision brings both grief and relief. The grief is because
the church I knew and loved is no more, and relief that I can finally
rejoice in worshiping God and studying his word without the
distraction of the divergent views of the diocese.
CHRIS MORGAN
Newport Beach
Motorcycle ‘vroom’ not music to everyone’s ears
Alicia Robinson’s Daily Pilot article on the burgeoning use of
motorcycles in our community (“Vroom to grow,” Sunday) seems to
disregard an obvious truth.
Like the elephant in the middle of the living room, nobody seems
to want to talk about the fact that some motorcycles have a very
nasty side effect -- they make a lot of noise!
My family hears a near constant stream of ear-splitting belches
from these machines, which have become de rigueur for the macho 40-
or 50-something male suffering from identity crisis. So loud are they
that car sirens are often set off. And it gets worse as more and more
riders take short cuts to the coast through residential
neighborhoods.
The other nasty side effect is that the rider of the machine often
has a “So what?” or worse mentality about the noise.
Mike Silvernail, cited in the article, may believe the machines
are “therapy” for him, but they shatter the peace of mind for many
others. And they often ride in groups, so they must be “cool,” right?
WARREN BEACOM
Costa Mesa
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