Public needs watchdogs patrolling school districts...
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Public needs watchdogs patrolling school districts
Kudos to the Daily Pilot for allowing critics of our powerful
public school monopoly to voice publicly some of their concerns. I
have no way of knowing if the local teachers’ union used questionable
methods to remove one of their critics, Wendy Leece, from her
Newport-Mesa Unified school board position, but the facts certainly
indicate there is corruption in the system, starting at the top, and
few members of the media and/or government officials are willing to
inform the public of such abuses.
In her last month in office, outgoing state Superintendent of
Public Instruction Delaine Eastin and her Department of Education
were hit with a $4.5-million judgment in a whistle-blower case. The
jury found that Eastin had retaliated against longtime education
department employee James Lindberg. During the 1990s, Eastin’s
Department of Education was accused of giving away million of dollars
in federal education money.
Whistleblowers and outspoken critics within the public school
system are rare, and so we do not learn of the internal problems.
That alone is one reason to lament the departure of Leece and begs
the question of whether her replacement, teachers’ union candidate
Tom Egan, will prove as unbiased as he claims.
ADAM MURRAY
Newport Beach
Bridge idea collapsed, don’t bring it back
Re: Costa Mesa City Council deciding against authorizing a study
of the 19th Street bridge.
Historically, we’ve been through all of this before. The reports
have been done. The public hearings have been held. It was determined
that a bridge, which would create a minor highway on 19th Street,
would be detrimental to businesses. It was not a good option, and the
city is taking, I think, the correct path on this. Robert Graham has
been stumping for the 19th Street bridge for a long time. I ran into
him several years ago in Canyon Park, talking to me about, “Wouldn’t
it be nice for residents down here to have a straight shot to the
beach.”
Well, you know what, we have a straight shot to the beach. We have
quick access. We don’t need to bear the brunt of that highway, minor
highway on 19th Street, in order to get to the bridge. It’s
interesting that Graham has always wanted the 19th Street bridge but
he doesn’t want the Gisler Bridge by his house to go through.
The logical thing that might happen then, if we have the 19th
Street bridge and then the 19th Street build up on the Westside, is
that there would be an extension through the Eastside neighborhood to
Dover. The city has already taken a stance that they won’t do that
and put in the sidewalks. I think there’s a need for a review of the
history of this in the paper, perhaps. I just really feel that the
Eastside and Westside Costa Mesa neighborhoods should not bear the
brunt of traffic so that the merchants on Mariner’s Mile don’t have
to confront their need to develop parking alternatives. Costa Mesa
should not be a bypass from Coast Highway to serve Huntington Beach
and Newport Beach.
I really feel that the city should not reconsider the bridge on
19th Street.
SUSAN EMERSON
Costa Mesa
Why not just extend the freeway to Huntington?
There is no need for the Costa Mesa City Council to reconsider a
bridge at 19th Street. We deemed it out many, many years ago.
Besides, all we have to do is have Caltrans extend the Costa Mesa
Freeway along 19th Street, over the river and through the woods to
grandmother’s house in Huntington Beach, because that’s what
everybody wants, isn’t it: access to the Costa Mesa Freeway. Then we
won’t have to worry about a bridge at 19th Street because Caltrans
will have taken care of it with the freeway carousing down 19th
Street.
I am being very facetious, but that’s all I can see. The whole
idea of this nonsense of bridges from Costa Mesa to Huntington Beach
-- and I might add, the Gisler Bridge to Fountain Valley -- is
absolutely out of the question.
JO BLACK
Costa Mesa
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