Close Main Street as soon as possible...
- Share via
Close Main Street
as soon as possible
I would like to see Main Street closed to traffic as soon as
possible. I don’t go to town unless I can go on my bicycle it’s so
horrible.
LAURA DIXON
Huntington Beach
Main Street should close for the summer
I think Main Street should be closed to traffic, probably May,
June, July, August and September, pretty much all of summer because
that’s when the kids have summertime and probably less kids will get
hurt and run over and all of that.
STEVEN KERPER
Huntington Beach
I believe that Main Street should be closed to traffic for just a
few months in the summertime when it’s really unbearable with all
those cars and pollution from smog and it messes up while we’re
trying to dine on Main Street and you can’t even cross the street. So
I would say, close it from June, July, August, probably September,
but just a few months during the summer when it’s really congested
and people are really down there. But during the winter months it
would be foolish to close Main Street because there’s not much
business there or traffic there during the winter.
FRANK RUGELL
Huntington Beach
Main Street should close up to Orange
I own a condo in Downtown Huntington, I’ve lived there two years.
I highly recommend them closing off Main Street. The traffic down
there is terrible and they speed through there. I don’t know how many
times walking through that area, I saw people almost get hit by cars
because people just walk, they don’t even look to see if a car is
coming. And the cars at the stop signs can’t get through because of
the people and I definitely think it would be a great idea to close
off Main Street all the way up to Orange Avenue, indefinitely.
MARLENE GOODRICH
Huntington Beach
I think the promenade possibilities for Main Street are great.
Close the streets for the first three streets. I think it’s going to
be great for Huntington Beach. Let’s close them.
ALAN WEBB
Huntington Beach
We need to consider disabled people
My problem with closing this street is disabled people. How do
they make it three, four blocks, maybe even more, during the
summertime away from all the businesses and stuff? Unless you put
some parking near those streets I can’t see closing the street. It’s
a good idea so that we don’t have to suck fumes up as we sit there
but it’s not a good idea for the disabled.
VALERIE BUSTILLOS
Huntington Beach
Lots to be done before closing street
As you know they’re thinking about closing Main Street. I don’t
think the City Council wants to see merchants go out of business. Nor
do I think the City Council wants to displease residents. Nor do I
think the City Council wants to lose any revenue from Downtown. I
don’t think that at all. I think you have a couple of zealous
reporters, but I think we need to do research. Without research it
should not be done. No. 1, how much money are we going to be losing
in citations and tickets that are issued down there? No. 2, how much
money are we going to be losing from parking revenue? No. 3, when
Downtown is full, and everybody’s going through, isn’t it a fact that
during this time the parking structure is already full? So that means
we just lose that revenue from parking, they’re not going to go over
to the structure now to park. No. 4, isn’t it a fact that there are
people who have not parked inside the parking structure, they will
only park outside? No. 5, don’t we have promenades already? We have a
huge beach path, we have a huge pier, we have plenty of outside
shopping like Five Points where you can walk. No. 6, wasn’t the
Promenade that you are comparing this to in Santa Monica a place that
needed redeveloping completely? Wasn’t it a place that was the lowest
rent area in L.A. and they had to do this to make it the highest rent
area? Aren’t we the highest rent area now? And No. 7, this has to be
done through planning. Planning needs to give the city a report. Not
how to close it down, but the effects of closing it down. I’m going
to say this again, planning cannot be bought, planning doesn’t do
people favors. Planning will give you the facts whether you like them
or not. They’re not going to take sides and they will not be put
under political pressure from anybody. Give this to planning, give it
to the staff, the staff will give them a report back. That research
will be quoted, because if they do lose revenue, that means more city
fees are going to go up and they have to recoup these losses
somewhere. We can’t afford to lose them. And on Danette Goulet’s
column, about comparing our street to Las Vegas, I hope that she
realizes, the part of north Las Vegas that she’s talking about is a
promenade. That’s the failing part.
JINX VARONA
Huntington Beach
New administrator should fix the streets
I think the new city administrator should look into the street
situation in Huntington Beach. They’re terrible, full of potholes,
cracks, just generally in disrepair. They’ve been this way for years
and it’s deplorable. Anyway, I think that the city administrator
should look into it. I had read the report done by an outside firm
done on the streets of Huntington Beach. They averaged about 6 1/2on
a scale of one to 10. The problem was that interior streets get a
rating of approximately nine, whereas the arterial streets such as
Yorktown Avenue and Newland Street only got a rating of 1 1/2 to 2
1/2. And I have met with the mayor in the past about this and they
were supposed to look into this and not much was done. Yorktown and
Newland Street are two examples of terrible street conditions in
Huntington Beach.
WAYNE FORD
Huntington Beach
Use of sports complex shameful
I could not believe Chuck Beauregard’s praise for the new
Huntington Beach Sports Complex. As founder of Save Our Kids, he must
know that our kids will never play on those $18-million fields. True
they can now play on the Murdy, Edison, Greer and Worthy Park fields,
but those fields should have been given to the kids long ago. The
adults who want to play city league sports should pay for their own
club fields.
Last Sunday as I was out riding my bike, I stopped to watch men
playing baseball and drinking beer. What percentage of Huntington
Beach residents will actually use that park? It was a crime to
disguise this project as a benefit for children and then use
community funds for a handful of adults who were unwilling to fund
their own recreation. I say give the new complex to the kids, let the
adults fund their own fields.
SUZANNE STAHLBUHK
Huntington Beach
Priority check needed in the city
Originally I was not going to respond to the question regarding
the Sports Park, but the more I thought about it the more concerned I
am. This is another example of being led down the primrose path by
underestimating the eventual cost of a facility and suddenly waking
up to realize that it is now more than $15 million. The city
government can find resources for showcase projects that benefit a
few but cannot find the money to repair the streets and sidewalks
that would benefit all its citizens. It’s time the city learns to set
priorities.
PETER CLARK
Huntington Beach
Crosses don’t belong out on the beach
I am objecting to your article glorifying putting the crosses on
the beach. I think this is a political statement, and these people
are not genuine, exactly. They also do not have a permit. They had a
permit for one day on March 31. And they told me that their permit
was open-ended, but that’s not true. You need to check the facts a
little bit on how they got there and why.
Also, I do think it’s political and I don’t think politics belong
at the beach, or you’re going to have PETA there, you’re going to
have anti-abortionists there, you’re going to have all the people
that are going to chase people away from the beach that’s so glorious
in Huntington Beach. And, as the young man said who was quoted in the
article, if you don’t stand up and say how you feel about things you
accept the status quo. So I’m just doing what he said, I’m standing
up and objecting to his being there.
JUDITH MARSH
Huntington Beach
Low attendance at prayer event
It was disheartening to see the low number of participants that
turned out for the National Day of Prayer held on the steps at the
civic center the evening of May 6. Perhaps it was due to a lack of
communication by local churches and newspapers. We live in a country
where grass roots were founded on the freedom to exercise our faith
and trust in the almighty. This is not only a privilege but a duty to
exercise this right before it is taken away from us. Hats off to the
city of Brea, which did not stand idly by and allow the American
Civil Liberties Union to take away their right to hold the mayor’s
prayer breakfast. The Kiwanis Club and the ministerial association
sponsored this event at a private hotel where hundreds were in
attendance.
Wake up, Huntington Beach. This is just the “not care at all”
attitude that took prayer out of our schools and out of the
Huntington Beach City Council meetings. Thanks to Mayor Cathy Green,
it has been reinstated.
MARY BIAS
Huntington Beach
City needs to fix water problem
I am writing in regard to the state of our city in comparison with
other cities nearby. When you call to ask for something to be done
you get the same answer from our Public Works Dept. “So, sorry, we
only have two people in the whole city working on that type of job,”
or, “Our budget would not enable us to fix that problem because there
are so many others in the city with the same problem.”
I have received one of these answers every time I call regarding
the standing water in front of my house. When I stand out and try to
catch the street sweeper, he tells me he can not pick up the water.
In the meantime the stagnant water remains year after year. When I
found out there was a fairly inexpensive solution, concrete lifting,
I wondered why our city could not afford to fix this eyesore once and
for all. Standing water is a hazard to us all.
MEG WATSON
Huntington Beach
Administrator raises could benefit faculty
So, Kristina Bruning, president of the Coast Community College
faculty union, called the administrators’ raise appalling (“College
district gets new leader,” May 13.) Let’s watch and see where she and
her faculty union line up when it comes time to elect new board
members for her district. You see, it is simply one of, whose “ox is
being gored.”
Bruning and her union will undoubtedly use the increase in
administrators salaries to demand more money for themselves,
regardless of the “tight budgets that have forced the colleges to cut
the number of classes to students.”
It really hearkens back to “you scratch my back and I’ll scratch
yours” in defining the relationship between boards and faculty
unions. I mean come on, who controls the elections of school board
members? It is the faculty.
I agree, the administrators salary increases do seem a little out
of place in today’s economy, but I’m willing to bet that the faculty
won’t be incensed enough to seek a recall.
ED BUSH
Huntington Beach
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.