FEEDBACK: Readers discuss the Newport Coast annexation issue
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Evidently success has gone to Allan Beek’s head (“Beek launches
anti-annexation campaign,” Aug. 23). He apparently thinks that if people
don’t agree with his agenda, they shouldn’t be allowed to live in Newport
Beach. The way people vote cannot be a litmus test for whether or not
people can live in our city. Beek seems to think this is Newport Beek.
It doesn’t matter that the annexation may be advantageous to the city.
If it isn’t the world according to Beek, then it is not acceptable. I
moved to Newport Beach in 1972. At that time, when I came home from work
and tried to turn left from MacArthur Boulevard to Ford Road, I had to
wait for the light to change three times because of the heavy traffic. In
an emergency, if you had to get from the east side of Newport to Hoag
Hospital in the summertime, you had to go around using Bristol Street
because Coast Highway was a parking lot. Is this what Beek wants to go
back to? Newport Beach is a wonderful place to live and is known as such
throughout the country. We did not achieve this by building a fence
around the city and burying our heads in the sand.
The thing I really find really ironic is that Mr. No-growth wants to
build an international airport in El Toro. Evidently, the fact this kind
of facility would dramatically impact the area and add an incredible
amount of traffic to an already overburdened system does not bother Beek.
If extreme growth in another area would benefit his little corner of
the world, so be it. Your car may be from the ‘50s, but the year is 2001.
LEONARD BALIS
Newport Beach
My wife and I have lived in Newport Beach since 1968, and every time
we travel we come home and say, “Thank God we live here.” What we are
thankful for is the proximity to the water, the educational system and
the loads of friends with similar outlooks.
However, when one looks at the annexation of Newport Coast, I see
nothing there that fits with my definition of Newport Beach. Sitting up
on the hills and away from the water, the Newport Coast and I have little
or nothing in common. We would like the opportunity to express our
feelings in a vote, which just might change the outcome of the annexation
decision. If the majority of current residents of Newport want to proceed
as demonstrated by a vote, so be it. But please let us have an
opportunity to vote on the matter.
CLIFFORD A. SCHMIESING
Newport Beach
Not only should the citizens of Newport Beach be allowed to
participate in the debate over the annexation of Newport Coast, we should
be able to vote. I am against the annexation because:
* the cost of services may very well outweigh the revenue generated.
Show us the figures.
* as is, the city of Newport Beach is so spread out that there is no
sense of community, rather we are a string of communities. I suspect the
Newport Coast residents will be very demanding in the context of wanted
services and attention.
* geographically, they have no connection to the rest of the city.
* the fact that many of these residents will be deluded by the anti-El
Toro debate (which in my opinion has resulted in a distortion of the
facts about noise, pollution, etc.) is no little matter. They really
belong in Irvine, whose tax monies are going to fight El Toro and
increase planes over Newport.
The real question is: What do we gain by having the down coast as part
of the city? (Always wondered how it became known as the Newport Coast?)
Is it revenue? Then show us. Is it prestige? Do we need it? Is it more
territory for the City Council? What is it?
JUDY ROSENER
Newport Beach
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