A great night for Huntington Beach I...
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A great night for Huntington Beach
I feel compelled to write about an incredible experience I had at
the Third Battalion First Regiment U.S. Marine Dine-In, where
Huntington Beach formally met the 1,200 Marines that we are adopting.
At the end of an incredible evening, a young Marine came limping
up to me and stuck out his severely injured hand saying, “I want to
thank you in Huntington Beach from the bottom of my heart for doing
this for us.” Then he teared up, apologized for getting emotional and
hugged me. As he hugged me he said, “Until tonight I didn’t realize
that anyone cared.”
I told him with some emotion myself that I knew the people of
Huntington Beach cared and that our city would be showing them how
much we cared in the next few months. The “3-1” Huntington Beach
Marine Adoption Committee will soon be advising residents about what
specifically they can do to show that we care.
DAVE SULLIVAN
Huntington Beach
* EDITOR’S NOTE: Dave Sullivan is a Huntington Beach city
councilman.
Good faith needed
in school sales
In response to Rosemary Saylor’s letter (“Sale of fields a tough
financial decision,”) I agree with her suggestion that residents of
Huntington Beach need to step up and buy the closed Fountain Valley
School District school sites that lie within our city’s boundaries. I
will be supporting a measure to do that if it gets on a ballot. But
she is off the mark in her statement “ ... [the school board] does
not make [a decision to sell property] without a review committee
(made up of parents and other concerned community members).”
The district did in fact put together such a committee, but nobody
from the affected neighborhoods was on the committee, nor were any
users of the property, as suggested by state law. The absolute
minimum of public hearings were held, and most affected neighbors
were not notified. Most speakers at the few hearings held spoke
against the sales, yet the school board voted unanimously on the
first vote, without debate, to sell the sites. We can all draw our
own conclusions from this as to who really made the decision to sell
the property. In my humble opinion, the board and community are being
led by the nose.
What will really happen if Supt. Marc Ecker has his way is that he
will be managing a big fat endowment of the tens of millions from the
sales, plus nearly $25 million from the recent sale of McDowell
school, plus whatever is left over from the sale of two other schools
in the last few years, less the nearly $6 million the district
recently spent on the purchase of the Star Real Estate building at
Brookhurst and Slater. Ecker might have the cushiest superintendent’s
job in the county, yet according to state law, none of these sale
proceeds can be spent on teachers’ salaries or instructional
materials. It can only be spent on capital improvements to the 11
remaining district campuses. Please don’t take my word for it, look
up the facts yourself.
Yes, Huntington Beach should buy the land and preserve it in its
present state. But the question is, when and for how much? I agree
that we should all do a better job at funding and supporting all our
schools. But liquidating community assets like our precious few
athletic fields in order to set up one tiny (4,000 students) school
district to be wealthier than all the other surrounding districts is
not smart, and not fair.
I call on the school district to deal in a truly good-faith manner
with Huntington Beach to facilitate the transfer of those properties.
The process of deciding to sell the property was not conducted in
good faith. Shoving a full-market price demand on a short fuse down
our throats is not good faith. It will be fought vigorously.
DERYL ROBINSON
Huntington Beach
We don’t want
MTV beach house
We have never allowed MTV in our home. I feel the influences
promoted by it are not in keeping with the standards and values we
choose for our family. I can’t imagine that having a “beach house”
for MTV in such a prominent place as the Pier Plaza could add
anything positive to our community.
CAROLYN S. ALLEN
Huntington Beach
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