Jumping on the bandwagon
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I think the city should ban “fireworks”; they are dangerous. The City
Council should not try to duck the question as they have in the past
and should take action to save lives and property. There are many
community events in the area that allows families to celebrate the
Fourth. Service clubs will have to look for safer ways to raise
money.
BETSY WHITE
Costa Mesa
I’d like to see the city of Costa Mesa ban all fireworks.
Safe-and-sane fireworks are not really safe. They also seem to
encourage illegal fireworks, which now abound and make for a
dangerous evening. Some of the explosives used on our street soared
high enough to scatter hot debris over a wide area. We now stay home
on the Fourth of July, hoses out, ready to put out any tree or roof
fires.
JEAN ULANDER
Costa Mesa
I appreciate Costa Mesa Councilman Mike Scheafer’s concern and
compassion and the epiphany he has had in response to Adelaide
Thiel’s unfortunate firework injury. I wish her a quick recovery and
am sorry she is in pain. All due respect to Thiel, one makes a
decision to light a sparkler. A similar decision is made by the
adventure seekers at the Orange County Fair who take a chance on the
Adrenaline Drop attraction and are injured. The fair, so far this
year, has double the injury rate of the fireworks on the Fourth of
July. In response to those injuries, will Schaefer also work to phase
out the fair?
MEG TWEEDY
Costa Mesa
What should the city do about its fireworks? What it should have
done in 1990 when the advisory vote favored ridding the city of any
fireworks. How many lives will be lost and bodies maimed in this city
before we ban those torches? Councilman Mike Scheafer is right: A
neighbor was badly burned.
Solution: Conduct a workshop by smart marketers to teach the
nonprofits how to raise money for their charities. Have the sports
kids sell items, bake cakes, wash cars, etc. Use their computer heads
to solve problem. The 58 stands should be annihilated. They are ugly
and an eyesore to City of the Arts.
ANNE HOGAN-SHERESHEVSKY
Costa Mesa
As a longtime opponent to Costa Mesa’s “safe and sane” fireworks
policy, I was delighted to see that Councilman Mike Scheafer has
reversed his thinking and is now in favor of phasing out firework
usage in the city. My neighbor and I spent time on July 5 performing
our annual ritual of showing each other the charred remains of bottle
rockets that we cleaned up from our yards.
I regret that it took Adelaide Thiel’s injury to make the
councilman rethink his position. While I prefer an immediate banning
of all fireworks in Costa Mesa, if a phased-out procedure makes the
ban more likely to pass, then that would be welcome.
ELLIOTT S. MITCHELL
Costa Mesa
I am not worried that the Costa Mesa City Council may ban the sale
and use of fireworks for Independence Day. Aren’t there other issues
that should be addressed first?
Almost 50 innocent people die each day in this country from
alcohol-related driving assaults and yet our city, in some places,
rivals many well-known slum areas in the number of liquor stores and
substance abuse group homes per capita.
Costa Mesa has the embarrassing status of having the ZIP code with
the highest number of teen mothers giving birth in the county, and
yet, we still cling to the hope that our local Planned Parenthood
could possibly provide solutions and not actually be one of the key
causes to the problem.
Increasing numbers of transient men allegedly cause repeated
problems including crime, lewd acts and the take-over of some public
parks, yet our soup kitchen requires no community service or other
form of accountability in exchange for handouts.
We accommodate hordes of commuters from Huntington and Newport
beaches each weekday morning, and yet, in the evenings, those same
cities offer us no relief. And in the specific case of Adams Avenue,
Huntington Beach actually exasperates the problem with uncooperative
traffic signals at Brookhurst Avenue, causing gridlock in our city.
And Eastside residents have to endure more and more overhead
flights due to lost opportunities by our City Council to reduce
future growth in air traffic.
Whatever happened to common sense in setting priorities?
No, I am not too worried about losing fireworks when it is obvious
these issues mentioned and others need addressing first. Whether or
not we continue to allow residents to set off fireworks in this city
should be based heavily on community input and not reactionary
impulses.
Accidents happen, and if I witnessed firsthand what happened to
Adelaide Thiel, I too might have made the personal choice to swear
off fireworks. (I still may, anyway) I pray for a quick recovery for
her and her husband. However, sound law should be based on sound
judgment, careful thought and open and fair debate.
JOEL FARIS
Costa Mesa
* EDITOR’S NOTE: Joel Faris is a Costa Mesa planning commissioner.
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