Wildlife is a part of living in...
Wildlife is a part of living in a developing county
I sympathize with Park Newport resident Claire Friend, concerning
her experience with the coyote, in which her cat was attacked. All of
us who live in the houses on Eastbluff are quite aware of the
neighborhood coyote. He comes into our backyards, and in the streets
often. All of us have lost, or heard about someone losing, a pet.
Recently, a neighbor had their small dog snatched from their back
patio.
But it is unreasonable to expect the city to dispose of coyotes.
First, many do not live in the Back Bay but travel 20 miles in one
night, hunting. Most live on the land around UC Irvine and beyond. As
long as the development of the land around us continues, we will have
to live with the wild animals that have had their hunting grounds and
prey disappear.
All we can do is make sure our small and older animals are indoors
at night and in an area during the day where coyotes cannot get to
them. These wild animals also jump fences and squeeze into small
areas, so putting our animals inside would be the safest.
MARILEE STOCKMAN
Newport Beach
Our jobs can be filled without foreign help
To weigh in on our President’s plan to get the Hispanic vote by
opening our borders to lawbreakers; I am deeply disappointed in our
President on this one. And I have sent him an e-mail telling him so.
Seems like I’ve been saying this a lot lately, but I am a 22-year
veteran from World War II to Vietnam. Like most WWII vets, I’ve kept
my silence about my service for years, as it was a job to defend an
protect our country. But, this past year, I have felt the need to
speak out more.
I don’t care what excuses they use, these people break the law
when they come over our borders illegally. I get tired of hearing
that if we didn’t have the illegals our state and our country would
go belly up. I get sick of hearing that our economy would be in the
cellar without them.
When I was in the Navy, I met a lass in Scotland. Later she came
to the States and we wedded. To bring her parents over here, legally,
I to go through months and mountains of paperwork. I had to show the
State Department that I had a job, housing and financial
responsibility for them. After 14 years, we divorced and I came to
California -- which is another story.
I was an experienced building engineer but the best I could do was
a janitorial job at $2.25 an hour. There were jobs, but the illegals
had them and were getting paid $5 to $7 an hour. If they hired me,
they would have had to pay benefits. They hire the illegals because
they don’t have to pay them benefits. Most employers pay them under
the table.
They don’t need benefits anyway because they get everything free.
I have never been on welfare, unemployment compensation or taken any
kind of charity. I give.
I’m a 22-year veteran and am losing my home of 26 years in El Nido
Mobile Home Park but I don’t hear anyone worrying about me or my
neighbors. I’m 75 years old and I, like other legal residents, can do
any job that any illegal can do, and I don’t break the law. Thank you
Mr. President, you have lost my respect.
DICK MATHERLY
Costa Mesa
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