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Letters

The People’s Park?

Re “What’s wrong with Balboa Park?” (Cover Story, July 31). Your author attended the introductory lecture that addressed this subject, read the accompanying report, interviewed a few officials, and prepared a report that was a précis of all that had gone before. For those who hadn’t attended the discussions, he performed a service. He was objective and allowed his speakers to outline the ostensible successes of Balboa Park. As I attended this lecture and read the reports, I don’t recall that so much emphasis was placed on the institutional needs that the author discovered.

First, I disagree that Balboa Park is all right the way it is. The people who made this statement were purposely blind on speaking on behalf of a Chamber of Commerce that wants San Diegans to believe they are living in the best of all possible worlds. Can’t these people see? Or is it possible that visual blight has become so common everywhere in America that people cannot conceive alternatives?

Second, as with so many studies of Balboa Park, the emphasis is on the Central Mesa, where the Zoo and buildings are located. The cliché that Balboa Park is the Smithsonian of the West is again intoned. How many people have been to the mall in Washington, D.C., and studied the mistakes that have been made there? How many are aware that the Smithsonian museums are not all on the mall? How many know that the majority of them are free?

Washington, D.C., Boston, Philadelphia, St. Louis, Minneapolis, and San Francisco have greater museums than those in Balboa Park. Their collections cover all facets of art and science, ancient and modern. The architecture of buildings is compatible with their surroundings and of a high architectural order. Buildings are pleasing to look at and to move into. They are so widely spaced they do not exist cheek-by-jowl. Views from the tops are the talk of the towns. So much for the uneven collection of crowded, cramped, and unsightly museums in Balboa Park that outdo each other with banners, flags, and lights that destroy whatever architectural and aesthetic merit some of the original Spanish-Colonial buildings may have had. The 1935 additions are awkward boxes on the outside and clumsy aisles on the inside. Yet 1935 is the year historical preservationists want to re-create in Balboa Park — re-create that is with incongruous sculptures by Niki de Saint Phalle making a mockery of the architecture and history of buildings that pay tribute to the breathtaking examples of Spanish-Colonial buildings in Mexico, Central, and South America.

The focus on the Central Mesa as a tourist and money-making attraction has been the ruin of Balboa Park. Its constricted and obsolete layout is the cause of Balboa Park’s insoluble circulation problems, and it is the maw that devours whatever private or public money can be extracted to the detriment of the natural green outdoor portions of the park that line the east and west sides.

The speakers made a big fuss about obtaining public approval for whatever may happen to the park. This is not going to happen. San Diego voters have historically turned down park bonds because they saw their money going to mushrooming cultural institutions and not to picnic and festival areas, dog parks, playfields, and the many imaginative recreational projects that could be put into the park for the benefit of residents if the money were not always diverted away. What the City will do, as it did with the Naval Hospital, Veterans’ Center, and other establishments that belong anywhere in the city but in a public park, is to find a way to circumvent public approval. Leasing buildings is the easiest way to do this, and each lease means a dilution of public control. Tourists and Chamber of Commerce officials will be delighted. Park-going citizens will have to seek other outlets for the improvement of their physical and mental health and for the fostering of democratic values that parks like Central Park and Prospect Park in New York City and the Commons and the Emerald Necklace in Boston have made their chief aims.

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There is an irony that the chief complaint of a visitor to the park was the presence of the homeless. As leases grow, as the park becomes more and more a private domain, the homeless will go elsewhere or put up a fight. Try as the Chamber of Commerce and City Officials may, they will not disappear.

How to make the park pay for itself? Cut off subsidies to the museums and zoo. Charge for parking everywhere in the park, with special low fees for residents, build as many underground parking garages as are necessary, and stop the building of vanity fountains, so constructed that people cannot dangle their feet in the water. If the voters do not approve park improvement projects, then the park must go where it is heading. If a true benefactor occurs, his concern will be for the welfare of the people as a whole and not with the promotion of his set or his personal hobbies. Somewhere in Balboa Park there will always be grass, trees, and the earth itself to offer its warm touch and embrace to those who crave the solace it alone can give.

Richard W. Amero
San Diego

Don’t Trust The Stewards

Thank you for the thoughtful article on the continued decline of our wild backcountry (“Way Too Many People Live Out Here,” Cover Story, July 24). Unfortunately the very agencies that are the supposed stewards of public lands (e.g., the U.S. Forest Service and BLM) have a long tradition of catering to the abusers and exploiters. Unenlightened policies have seriously degraded our natural heritage. To trust them with carte blanche to do the right thing is ludicrous. Thank you to the watchdogs for looking out for our embattled natural world.

New development doesn’t just affect the immediate vicinity but spills over with no-longer-dark skies, increased and often illegal vehicular recreation, and roaming dogs, to name a few.

One factual correction. Cuyamaca Peak is not the high point of San Diego County. That distinction goes to Hot Springs Mountain, near Warner Springs, which is 21 feet higher than Cuyamaca.

Ted Caragozian
via email

Most Likely To Burn

We can all sit idly by and allow Mother Nature to wreak its havoc in the future, or we can actually do something demonstrable now to prevent the recurrence of such future firestorm devastation!

I wholeheartedly concur with Geoff Bouvier (“Way Too Many People Live Out Here,” Cover Story, July 24) that far too many people in the aggregate “live out here,” when compared to the total population of San Diego. Proportionally, however, it’s actually a rather small percentage.

After this past October, fires ravaged San Diego County. I understand two thirds of the area burned by the 2003 Paradise Fire and one quarter of the 2003 Cedar Fire were consumed again.

The history of San Diego chronicles firestorms being a common occurrence in the late 1800s. The 70-mile-wide County of San Diego is reported to be the most fire-prone environment on earth!

What can we do? What should we do? We can make a “null decision” — a positive decision to do nothing — or if we’re more responsible, we have the capability to deter and greatly reduce the impact of these firestorms in the future.

How and where do we begin? Before the start of the 2008 regrowth period, we should establish a fixed three- to five-mile-wide firebreak inland, north to south, border to border. We’ve already unnecessarily dillydallied for far too long in seriously addressing our omnipresent firestorm problem.

All of the unpopulated areas in this strip would be made sterile — similar to what the Romans did (salted) to the city of Carthage after Carthage was destroyed — and maintained permanently without vegetation. In addition to ground-control operations, crop duster-type airplanes and other aerial firefighting types of equipment would/should blanket the remainder of the terrain.

In addition to the 2.9 million citizens who deserve this protection, San Diego also has the largest population of endangered animal species and plant life in the U.S. Preventing these firestorm disasters would be for their survival too!

We all know the cycle of nature’s fire rampage will roar back again in San Diego County. We can do nothing and have history keep repeating itself, or with stellar leadership by implementing the foregoing plan it will significantly reduce future San Diegan firestorm threats. Time is of the essence.

Fred Harden III
via email

It Sounds Bad

After reading “Off-Road on Private Land” (“City Lights,” July 24), I felt I had to respond. My sons and I have been off-roading at Ocotillo Wells for years, and I taught them to be responsible desert users. Two years ago I was speaking with an old friend who has a trailer in Ocotillo Wells and is out there almost every weekend. She told me that some “Iranian guy” had bought some property and was fencing off popular off-road sites. She related how her and her partner were tearing down the fences and vandalizing his property, and others were organizing to do the same. I was incredulous! This was a side of her I had never seen before. I asked, “So this guy legally bought land and is trying to protect it, and you’re vandalizing his property to drive him out?!” She got quiet with the sudden realization of how bad that sounded.

Now I see that the gentleman received no help from our legal system (what a big surprise) and is now guilty of protecting his own land! This is a travesty of justice. Mr. Inn should be exonerated and have his legal fees paid by the system that was supposed to protect him.

John Cox
via email

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The People’s Park?

Re “What’s wrong with Balboa Park?” (Cover Story, July 31). Your author attended the introductory lecture that addressed this subject, read the accompanying report, interviewed a few officials, and prepared a report that was a précis of all that had gone before. For those who hadn’t attended the discussions, he performed a service. He was objective and allowed his speakers to outline the ostensible successes of Balboa Park. As I attended this lecture and read the reports, I don’t recall that so much emphasis was placed on the institutional needs that the author discovered.

First, I disagree that Balboa Park is all right the way it is. The people who made this statement were purposely blind on speaking on behalf of a Chamber of Commerce that wants San Diegans to believe they are living in the best of all possible worlds. Can’t these people see? Or is it possible that visual blight has become so common everywhere in America that people cannot conceive alternatives?

Second, as with so many studies of Balboa Park, the emphasis is on the Central Mesa, where the Zoo and buildings are located. The cliché that Balboa Park is the Smithsonian of the West is again intoned. How many people have been to the mall in Washington, D.C., and studied the mistakes that have been made there? How many are aware that the Smithsonian museums are not all on the mall? How many know that the majority of them are free?

Washington, D.C., Boston, Philadelphia, St. Louis, Minneapolis, and San Francisco have greater museums than those in Balboa Park. Their collections cover all facets of art and science, ancient and modern. The architecture of buildings is compatible with their surroundings and of a high architectural order. Buildings are pleasing to look at and to move into. They are so widely spaced they do not exist cheek-by-jowl. Views from the tops are the talk of the towns. So much for the uneven collection of crowded, cramped, and unsightly museums in Balboa Park that outdo each other with banners, flags, and lights that destroy whatever architectural and aesthetic merit some of the original Spanish-Colonial buildings may have had. The 1935 additions are awkward boxes on the outside and clumsy aisles on the inside. Yet 1935 is the year historical preservationists want to re-create in Balboa Park — re-create that is with incongruous sculptures by Niki de Saint Phalle making a mockery of the architecture and history of buildings that pay tribute to the breathtaking examples of Spanish-Colonial buildings in Mexico, Central, and South America.

The focus on the Central Mesa as a tourist and money-making attraction has been the ruin of Balboa Park. Its constricted and obsolete layout is the cause of Balboa Park’s insoluble circulation problems, and it is the maw that devours whatever private or public money can be extracted to the detriment of the natural green outdoor portions of the park that line the east and west sides.

The speakers made a big fuss about obtaining public approval for whatever may happen to the park. This is not going to happen. San Diego voters have historically turned down park bonds because they saw their money going to mushrooming cultural institutions and not to picnic and festival areas, dog parks, playfields, and the many imaginative recreational projects that could be put into the park for the benefit of residents if the money were not always diverted away. What the City will do, as it did with the Naval Hospital, Veterans’ Center, and other establishments that belong anywhere in the city but in a public park, is to find a way to circumvent public approval. Leasing buildings is the easiest way to do this, and each lease means a dilution of public control. Tourists and Chamber of Commerce officials will be delighted. Park-going citizens will have to seek other outlets for the improvement of their physical and mental health and for the fostering of democratic values that parks like Central Park and Prospect Park in New York City and the Commons and the Emerald Necklace in Boston have made their chief aims.

Sponsored
Sponsored

There is an irony that the chief complaint of a visitor to the park was the presence of the homeless. As leases grow, as the park becomes more and more a private domain, the homeless will go elsewhere or put up a fight. Try as the Chamber of Commerce and City Officials may, they will not disappear.

How to make the park pay for itself? Cut off subsidies to the museums and zoo. Charge for parking everywhere in the park, with special low fees for residents, build as many underground parking garages as are necessary, and stop the building of vanity fountains, so constructed that people cannot dangle their feet in the water. If the voters do not approve park improvement projects, then the park must go where it is heading. If a true benefactor occurs, his concern will be for the welfare of the people as a whole and not with the promotion of his set or his personal hobbies. Somewhere in Balboa Park there will always be grass, trees, and the earth itself to offer its warm touch and embrace to those who crave the solace it alone can give.

Richard W. Amero
San Diego

Don’t Trust The Stewards

Thank you for the thoughtful article on the continued decline of our wild backcountry (“Way Too Many People Live Out Here,” Cover Story, July 24). Unfortunately the very agencies that are the supposed stewards of public lands (e.g., the U.S. Forest Service and BLM) have a long tradition of catering to the abusers and exploiters. Unenlightened policies have seriously degraded our natural heritage. To trust them with carte blanche to do the right thing is ludicrous. Thank you to the watchdogs for looking out for our embattled natural world.

New development doesn’t just affect the immediate vicinity but spills over with no-longer-dark skies, increased and often illegal vehicular recreation, and roaming dogs, to name a few.

One factual correction. Cuyamaca Peak is not the high point of San Diego County. That distinction goes to Hot Springs Mountain, near Warner Springs, which is 21 feet higher than Cuyamaca.

Ted Caragozian
via email

Most Likely To Burn

We can all sit idly by and allow Mother Nature to wreak its havoc in the future, or we can actually do something demonstrable now to prevent the recurrence of such future firestorm devastation!

I wholeheartedly concur with Geoff Bouvier (“Way Too Many People Live Out Here,” Cover Story, July 24) that far too many people in the aggregate “live out here,” when compared to the total population of San Diego. Proportionally, however, it’s actually a rather small percentage.

After this past October, fires ravaged San Diego County. I understand two thirds of the area burned by the 2003 Paradise Fire and one quarter of the 2003 Cedar Fire were consumed again.

The history of San Diego chronicles firestorms being a common occurrence in the late 1800s. The 70-mile-wide County of San Diego is reported to be the most fire-prone environment on earth!

What can we do? What should we do? We can make a “null decision” — a positive decision to do nothing — or if we’re more responsible, we have the capability to deter and greatly reduce the impact of these firestorms in the future.

How and where do we begin? Before the start of the 2008 regrowth period, we should establish a fixed three- to five-mile-wide firebreak inland, north to south, border to border. We’ve already unnecessarily dillydallied for far too long in seriously addressing our omnipresent firestorm problem.

All of the unpopulated areas in this strip would be made sterile — similar to what the Romans did (salted) to the city of Carthage after Carthage was destroyed — and maintained permanently without vegetation. In addition to ground-control operations, crop duster-type airplanes and other aerial firefighting types of equipment would/should blanket the remainder of the terrain.

In addition to the 2.9 million citizens who deserve this protection, San Diego also has the largest population of endangered animal species and plant life in the U.S. Preventing these firestorm disasters would be for their survival too!

We all know the cycle of nature’s fire rampage will roar back again in San Diego County. We can do nothing and have history keep repeating itself, or with stellar leadership by implementing the foregoing plan it will significantly reduce future San Diegan firestorm threats. Time is of the essence.

Fred Harden III
via email

It Sounds Bad

After reading “Off-Road on Private Land” (“City Lights,” July 24), I felt I had to respond. My sons and I have been off-roading at Ocotillo Wells for years, and I taught them to be responsible desert users. Two years ago I was speaking with an old friend who has a trailer in Ocotillo Wells and is out there almost every weekend. She told me that some “Iranian guy” had bought some property and was fencing off popular off-road sites. She related how her and her partner were tearing down the fences and vandalizing his property, and others were organizing to do the same. I was incredulous! This was a side of her I had never seen before. I asked, “So this guy legally bought land and is trying to protect it, and you’re vandalizing his property to drive him out?!” She got quiet with the sudden realization of how bad that sounded.

Now I see that the gentleman received no help from our legal system (what a big surprise) and is now guilty of protecting his own land! This is a travesty of justice. Mr. Inn should be exonerated and have his legal fees paid by the system that was supposed to protect him.

John Cox
via email

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