MAILBAG - March 9, 2000
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Huntington Beach
DUCHENY BILL DISTURBS ACTIVIST
This is in response to articles concerning Assemblywoman Denise Ducheny’s
(D-San Diego) bill, which would override recent decisions protecting
wetlands and habitat and alter the state’s definition of wetlands to
allow development (“Local activists protest Ducheny bill,” March 2).
In 1981-82, the owner of the Bolsa Chica, Signal Land, was able to get
amendments added to Senate Bill 493 that would take Bolsa Chica out of
the coastal zone and put development on a fast track. The bill was
withdrawn twice after the loud protests of the public lead by the Amigos
de Bolsa Chica.
In 1987, Senate Bill 1517 would create a special privately controlled
district to fund and administer Signal’s development of the Marina Plan
(5,700 homes, commercial) on a fast tract. Again, Amigos lead the fight
to have this legislation pulled.
Now in the new millennium, a Democratic legislator with a 90%
environmental rating is introducing wetlands legislation to circumvent
the will of the people.
The citizens of California for more than 30 years have voiced a simple
message -- protect wetlands and open space, don’t pave them.
PROP. 22 DIDN’T BELONG ON BALLOT
Proposition 22 should never have come to a vote. The state Legislature
has simply failed to address the concerns of the gay community in regards
to fairness in the law regarding their committed legal relationships. The
majority of people do not wish to persecute gays, even if they do not
agree with the lifestyle. The state Legislature should simply pass a law
that states gay legal relationships are valid.Once again government, by
design or accident, is dividing us over agendas that do not affect our
freedoms. Should a gay couple be deprived of hospital visiting rights or
inheritance rights, if that is what they intended by entering committed
legal relationships? This certainly is not going to lessen my rights.Good
people both oppose and defend Proposition 22 for some valid reasons. The
state Legislature could have done its job and saved us this unnecessary
public fight. Gays want the rights more than the marriage certificate,
and straight people only want to preserve the exclusivity of the marriage
contract as it relates to their religion and philosophy.I especially want
to give them the right to enjoy the marriage tax the IRS imposes on us. A
few more voices against that iniquity can only help.
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