senoritafish: (Grrrrr!)
[personal profile] senoritafish
Since I have a prior committment and can't attend the planning commission meeting tonight (well, if I get home early enough, I may walk up there and at least sign in, so the opposers at least get credit for another body being there...

Dear Ms. Wine,

I have lived in Downtown Huntington Beach, only two blocks away from the Civic Center, off and on since my parents moved here in 1968. I attended Smith Elementary, Dwyer Middle School and HBHS (graduated 1980), and now my kids are following the same path.

I am increasingly concerned that the City of Huntington Beach seems to be in a mad rush to cover any remaining open space with buildings and seems, to me, to consider developers wishes over any other parties'. First the undeveloped part of Central Park for a huge senior center, now this unneeded "Cultural Center." We don't need any more restaurants downtown - they seem to go out of business quite regularly down there.

Apparently, the planned library space is only half as big as the current building. Yes, the Central Library is not that far away, but this one is within walking distance of my kids, and current state budget battles mean their school libraries are not available nearly as much, making this library that much more important to area school children. The building itself is representative of a part of Huntington Beach's history; I cannot understand why this city feels it has to make every part of itself new and eradicate anything from earlier eras. Building trends in all parts of downtown show this; the house across the street from me, which was a historical Standard oil building and older than other buildings nearby which are on the National Historic Register was recently torn down to put an an enormous ugly So Cal Pseudo-Spanish Generic house that takes up the entire lot. The town I grew up in is becoming unrecognizable.

Green spaces are few and far between in this city. Let's not cover up one that already exists. The statement I heard by a city council member saying "It's just something for neighborhood dogs to pee on," really rankles me. If you don't want grass, which I agree, consumes a lot of water, has to be mowed regularly and is a bit boring, put in a xeric garden, or native plants. Make something interesting. Or even open it up to public gardens open to nearby apartment dwellers (even more needed, since those at GoldenWest College closed). But don't build on what little open space remains.

Thank you,

Leeanne Laughlin
Huntington Beach resident

Nice

Date: 2009-10-06 11:12 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] li-kao.livejournal.com
I'm eager to see what response, if any, you get.

Re: Nice

Date: 2009-10-07 11:44 pm (UTC)
ext_341900: (bugged)
From: [identity profile] senoritafish.livejournal.com
Thanks - I don't really expect a reply, but it was incorporated into the public comment at the Planning Commission meeting, which apparently voted against it. However, I found out that this is just a small part of a much larger 20-year plan for downtown, which would triple the number of bars and restaurants and put large parking garages ON THE BEACH. Ugh.

I guess the city council still has to vote on it, and it was actually the mayor who made the above comment.

Re: Nice

Date: 2009-10-12 05:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] i-bookwyrme.livejournal.com
Yeah, I was surprised the mayor was quite that tactless. Way to sell a program.

Wait--they want to triple the number of bars?! Police & residents already fuss about the amount of noise & out of control behavior, and they've been trying to go family-friendly....

Date: 2009-10-12 05:37 pm (UTC)
ext_341900: (Jet - red)
From: [identity profile] senoritafish.livejournal.com
There's another planning commission meeting tonight to apparently finalize this 20-year plan. And I guess the City Council still has to vote on it - and I know they're pretty pro-development.

Here's another group I found out about last week fighting this:

HB Residents for a Balanced Downtown (http://www.hbr4bdt.com/DesktopDefault.aspx)

...although one of their objects is a grocery store down there, which I'm not so thrilled about either.

Re: noise etc....yes, that was what a LOT of the public comment was about, that all of the businesses want to cater to the 21-30 crowd and not enough is being done for outside of that age group.

March 2016

S M T W T F S
  12345
6789101112
131415 16171819
20212223242526
2728293031  

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Mar. 15th, 2026 09:44 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios