Council needs to have faith in its residents
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The City Council needs to start trusting the people of Huntington
Beach.
For the second year in a row, a slim majority of the council has
decided that residents are too immature and wild to handle a
fireworks display at the beach.
They are not.
During the Fourth of July riots in the 1990s, the fireworks were
not being held at the beach. They were at Huntington Beach High
School, where they were moved to because of excessive fog at the
beach many years before. There is no correlation between fireworks at
the beach and the problems of years past.
As Councilwoman Jill Hardy told her fellow members Tuesday night,
a fireworks show is a family affair. The partyers will be off
partying.
Police Chief Ken Small told the council last year and this year
that his officers could control the crowds and ensure a safe holiday
with fireworks at the beach. Why call in an expert and then ignore
him?
Cities up and down the East and West coasts have fireworks at the
beach. South Beach Miami -- a serious party town -- has fireworks at
its beach without riots.
Do we really believe that the people of Huntington Beach are the
only ones so wild that they can’t handle it? Do we really believe
that Surf City’s police department is the only force that is
incapable of controlling crowds?
Let’s have a little show of faith for both, please.
The council needs to make the whole Independence Day celebration a
community and family affair. After the 100th Fourth of July parade --
the largest west of the Mississippi -- the city should close down
Main Street and plan a carnival with family activities, a bounce
house for children perhaps.
Give people something to do besides go to the bars between the
parade and the fireworks. Each year, the city draws a big crowd to
the Downtown area early in the morning and then leaves them with
nothing to occupy their time until the 9 p.m. fireworks show. Bars
and house parties fill the inevitable gap for many celebrating the
holiday. If this is a worry for our council, it should provide an
alternative.
The council should reconsider this issue and show a little trust
in the people of Huntington Beach and its police force.
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