They’re making selves irrelevant The environmentalist jihad...
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They’re making selves irrelevant
The environmentalist jihad against Coastal Commissioner Toni
Iseman defies all logic.
Without Iseman and the Coastal Commission our last remaining
coastal open space would likely be paved over, lost forever to the
urban sprawl that’s swallowed up the rest of Orange County.
That the Sierra Club and others see Iseman’s votes as a punishable
offense confirms their growing irrelevance in a 21st Century
environmental movement that requires pragmatism, not suicide bombers.
WILLIAM W. McKINNEY
Laguna Beach
Not ‘green’ enough for commission?
Talk about biting the hand that feeds you! I was stunned to read
that certain environmental groups are lobbying to unseat Coastal
Commissioner Toni Iseman because she’s apparently not “green” enough
for their taste.
Only extreme elements of the environmental movement could dream up
the tortured logic to paint the remarkable victories at Bolsa Chica
and the Headlands as defeats.
One must surmise that since Iseman failed to let the bulldozers
bury her in the name of scorched earth environmentalism, the Sierra
Club and others felt it necessary to execute her by political means.
They should be ashamed.
SHEILA CHURCH
Irvine
Iseman should be reseated on panel
The Sierra Club and Surfriders don’t represent the majority of
environmentalists any more than Louis Farrakahn represents all
Muslims or Pat Robertson all Christians.
While these organizations were wringing their hands over one tree,
Toni Iseman and her colleagues on the Coastal Commission were
eliminating hundreds of houses from Bolsa Chica and securing over 50%
open space and parks at the Dana Point Headlands.
Toni Iseman has worked hard for the Coast and deserves
reappointment.
If a change is needed, it should be with the Sierra Club
leadership, not with Iseman.
ANDY SIEGENFELD
Laguna Beach
Turned off by those noisy motorcycles
[The following letter was sent to Police Chief James Spreine]
I am disturbed by the seemingly unchecked problem of noise
generated by the illegally-modified motorcycles which seem to make
Laguna Beach a favorite destination for their recreational travels.
I am aware that some time ago there was a brief period of
increased enforcement after attention was drawn to this issue at City
Council, and that subsequently there was “blowback” pressure from one
or two local businesses who cash in on these offensive visitors to
our community. Despite the mixed-messages you may have received, it
is simply not fair to those of us who live within earshot of Coast
Highway to have to suffer the offensive and illegal noise generated
by these particular visitors.
When experiencing the noise from these riders, I often think that
I would like to ask them if it would be OK for me to drive down their
street and toss garbage out of my car window in front of their home
-- the analogy doesn’t seem far off to me.
In closing, I know that your officers have many responsibilities,
but unless your team puts pressure on this group of offensive
scofflaws they will see no reason not to converge on Laguna regularly
and the message will not be transmitted that Laguna does not welcome
illegally-modified vehicles.
Pleas be good enough to acknowledge my letter with a response.
Thank you.
JAMES DORF
Laguna Beach
Fight L.A.’s attempt to ramrod an airport
The oligarchic L.A. City Council act of voting to pursue any means
necessary to “force” an airport at El Toro is truly outrageous.
Regardless of how you feel about the El Toro airport issue, only
the most tragically short sighted, self serving, anti-democratic
among us would see anything good in having our local land use issues
decided by out-of-county special-interest lawsuits.
What’s next? Will L.A. be placing unwanted toxic waste sites,
prisons, or landfills in our county against our will? Or maybe L.A.
will decide the current curfews and restrictions at John Wayne
Airport aren’t to their liking and will pursue litigation to overturn
those as well.
I urge the people of Orange County to contact their elected
representatives requesting that they make our collective outrage
clear to Los Angeles area officials and stop this latest meddling in
our county’s affairs dead in its tracks.
DOUGLAS K. BLAUL
Trabuco Canyon
Goat-herder labor issues need airing
I am glad that there is renewed debate about the benefits versus
the costs of the so-called “goat program” here in Laguna Beach.
In his letter to the editor (May 13, Coastline Pilot), Michael
Beanan argued convincingly against having the goats in the hillsides
by describing the harm that they do to the environment.
Two years ago I went before the city council because of my concern
for a separate aspect of the goat program, that being the violation
of labor and human rights by the organization that brings the
Peruvian men to this country to do the work of goat-tending.
Don Barnes, the owner of the EZ Bar ranch, the outfit that does
the clearing, is a member of the Western Range Association. This
organization recruits and brings to this country the poorest of the
poor from the Central Highlands of Peru because they know how
desperate these men are for work. Most of the guys are sent out to
remote locations to work as sheepherders and for an excellent
overview of what their lives are like in this country please visit
the website of Chris Schneider, an attorney in Fresno, California who
has been working for several years to help improve the lot of these
men. The web address is: www.centralcallegal.org
Compared to the loneliness and isolation of the herders in the
deserts of Nevada or the mountains in Wyoming, the goat gig here in
Laguna is the best job going for these guys. Nevertheless, they live
lives that no American would ever stand for.
They are on-call 24/7 month after month, year after year. They are
forbidden from having any but the most cursory contact with
Americans. (Savvy Lagunans already know this and don’t press for
contact with the herders who will quickly move on after a friendly
hello is exchanged).
As for their living conditions: only after repeatedly being asked
to do so did Barnes upgrade the trailer that one of the herders lived
in two years ago, a trailer that appeared to be at least 30 years
old, cramped, ugly, hot, dirty and awful. When I first looked into
how they lived I saw that only one of the men had a portable toilet
next to his trailer, this in Laguna Beach, and the other had to walk
2 1/2 blocks down the road to use it. I don’t know what Barnes pays
the herders since the cities contract with the EZ Bar that I was
given to read did not include a cost-of-operation breakdown. I am
sure they are not paid anywhere near what an American citizen would
be paid. Finally, anyone who believes that indentured servitude is a
thing of the past in this country is advised to examine the specific
conditions of the goat/sheepherders brought here by the WRA.
When I hear council members’ ignorant comments about the goat
program being neat because the goats are “cute” I am offended. Two
years ago the only council member who responded to my concerns was
Toni Iseman. I suspect the others couldn’t have cared less. Citing
“cuteness” as justification where such matters are concerned is
beyond irrelevant; it is immoral. It is time to revisit the beloved
goat program with a far more discerning and skeptical eye; something
the city manager and council have so far failed to do.
MARY DOLPHIN
Laguna Beach
Fire danger warrants goat-grazing effort
Re: “Grazing not good for wildfire protection”
For the past month we have been reading letters from Bill Rihn,
president of the South Laguna Civic Association and Michael Beanan of
South Laguna. Their issue is that it would be better environmentally
if ways were explored “to prevent wild fires while at the same time
preserving protected plants, supporting wildlife and their habitats,
and minimizing erosion of steep hillside terrain”. They don’t feel
that the goats are able to meet the level of being eco-sensitive.
My years on the Planning Commission and City Council taught me
that information about a subject is the key to good decision making.
The council agreed with a request from the South Laguna Civic
Association and gave them a check to conduct the studies necessary to
implement an eco-sensitive test program. Mr. Beanan was to be in
charge of that program. While I don’t remember the exact date of this
request to the council, it had to be at least six years ago because I
left the council in December, 1999. I’ve recently learned that the
South Laguna Civic Association has returned a portion of the money
without an explanation and without a report on the study.
The goats are costing the city about $200,000 a year and are doing
a credible job. Certainly they’re not perfect, but I for one would
need to see a lot of careful testing of alternative methods that will
provide quality fire protection while preserving plants and wildlife
before I would support eliminating the goats. This is an issue I
would not want to risk the safety of our community on.
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