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Yes on schools

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Thank Heaven for Dierdre Roney and similar parents who are devoted to their children and dedicated to making the Malibu community a better place. They do so by investing in the current and future needs of the public schools and needed recreational facilities by supporting bond issues for the benefit of all. They also sacrifice their precious time to share their many talents for improving schools and their community.

Prop X and Prop Y are succeeding in building better schools and improving school quality and service. This success will continue through the dedicated efforts of our fine new School Superintendent, John Deasy.

There will always be those who respond to real issues with muddy insults, ignorance of facts, denial of reality, backward vision and rejection of plans for the future; Luddites, such as recent hostile writers, whose only goal is to denigrate and destroy through less than civil comment.

Persons, such as Laure Stern, Dierdre Roney and Mona Loo and many like them are only to be praised and encouraged for their foresight, hard work and sincere commitment to the common good.

Ralph H. Erickson

Serra Retreat avoids huge fines for creek crossing

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Homeowners in Serra Retreat were facing fines of $27,500 a day because they repaired a concrete ford across Malibu Creek this past April.

The ford on Cross Creek Road consisted of several concrete slabs that were washed downstream when the creek flooded in January-a frequent occurrence over many years. Routinely, residents have hired a crew to repair the crossing.

But as they were about to rebuild it again this year, they were stopped when the National Marine Fisheries Service declared Malibu Creek a “protected steelhead habitat.” That meant that the concrete ford – called by engineers an Arizona Crossing – was “not permissible” because it was a barrier to steelhead trout trying to swim upstream to spawn.

Although plentiful in the creek decades ago, steelhead trout were thought to have disappeared entirely by the 1990s. But environmental watchdog Heal the Bay reported sightings of small numbers of steelhead in the creek in recent years, and lobbied for their protection.

Serra homeowners appealed to the City of Malibu for an emergency permit to restore the crossing and keep it open for traffic. The permit was granted on grounds that Cross Creek Road is one of only two fire escape routes from Serra Canyon and is essential for fire safety.

The crossing was restored in April. That triggered reactions from the California State Water Quality Control Board and the enforcement arm of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The state threatened a $10,000-a-day fine. The federal agency threatened a fine of $17,500 daily.

Homeowners were given 60 days to come up with a better plan for crossing the creek that would not impede spawning steelhead. One option was to build a sturdy bridge high overhead. But that would cost a million dollars or more.

The solution they proposed was to construct a more advanced version of the old Arizona Crossing. The new structure would be built of one large concrete slab stretching about 60 feet over culverts, or open drains, that would allow fish to pass through. Pylons to make it flood-resistant would reinforce the crossing. Cost to Serra property owners was estimated at about $100,000.

Hold out for Hope

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The National Association of Realtors established the Realtors Housing Relief Funds to raise money to help victims’ families meet their housing costs. NAR has opened the fund with an initial commitment of $1 million.

CAR, our state association, has made an initial donation of $25,000 today. I have made a personal donation and my hope is that you will be moved to make a contribution as well. For now may we continue to hold out for Hope.

Hope for peace and comfort throughout our nation today, and for the days to come. Hope for justice to be served to those individuals who horrified our Great Nation. Hope that God reaches down and lifts up America physically, emotionally and spiritually.

God Bless America in our great time of need. And, we pray that we can continue to hold out for Hope.

Beverly Taki

National Association of Realtors

Prayer for remembrance

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On September 11, 2001, unbelievable catastrophes occurred. Faceless terrorists forever changed our view of the world. All of us have experienced a myriad of emotions that do not let up. Waves of disbelief engulf us. We experience various stages of shock. Our hearts are heavy and we are numb. And most of all we are very sad.

We must forever honor those whose lives have been lost, we must tend to those who are hurt, we must cry with the families and friends who lost a loved one. Each American of every ethnicity, color and creed has experienced a horrible loss.

The United States can look at history for the defining challenges and threats that it has had to face. Each time the American people responded with a steady resolve. Each time the American people determined their course of action and each time the Americans have acted deliberately.

Let us pray for an appropriate, just, and effective response to this terrorist act. Let us pray for those who lost their lives. Let us pray for the family and friends who suffer this loss and let us continually pray for the United States of America and the world at large.

Joan House

Mayor, City of Malibu

View from an Afghani-American

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The following was written by an Afghani-American writer and e-mailed to a Malibu resident.

I’ve been hearing a lot of talk about “bombing Afghanistan back to the Stone Age.” Ronn Owens, on KGO Talk Radio today, allowed that this would mean killing innocent people, people who had nothing to do with this atrocity, but “we’re at war, we have to accept collateral damage. What else can we do?” Minutes later I heard some TV pundit discussing whether we “have the belly to do what must be done.”

And I thought about the issues being raised especially hard because I am from Afghanistan, and, even though I’ve lived here for 35 years, I’ve never lost track of what’s going on there. So I want to tell anyone who will listen how it all looks from where I’m standing.

I speak as one who hates the Taliban and Osama bin Laden. There is no doubt in my mind that these people were responsible for the atrocity in New York. I agree that something must be done about those monsters. But the Taliban and bin Laden are not Afghanistan. They’re not even the government of Afghanistan. The Taliban are a cult of ignorant psychotics who took over Afghanistan in 1997. Bin Laden is a political criminal with a plan. When you think Taliban, think Nazi SS. When you think bin Laden, think Hitler. And when you think “the people of Afghanistan,” think “the Jews in the concentration camps.”

It’s not only that the Afghan people had nothing to do with this atrocity. They were the first victims of the perpetrators. They would exult if someone would come in there, take out the Taliban and clear out the rat’s nest of international thugs holed up in their country.

Some say, “Why don’t the Afghans rise up and overthrow the Taliban?” The answer is, they’re starved, exhausted, hurt, incapacitated, suffering. A few years ago, the United Nations estimated that there are 500,000 disabled orphans in Afghanistan-a country with no economy, no food. There are millions of widows. And the Taliban has been burying these widows alive in mass graves. The soil is littered with land mines, the farms were all destroyed by the Soviets. These are a few of the reasons why the Afghan people have not overthrown the Taliban.

We come now to the question of bombing Afghanistan back to the Stone Age. Trouble is, that’s been done. The Soviets took care of it already. Make the Afghans suffer? They’re already suffering. Level their houses? Done. Turn their schools into piles of rubble? Done. Eradicate their hospitals? Done. Destroy their infrastructure? Cut them off from medicine and health care? Too late. Someone already did all that.

New bombs would only stir the rubble of earlier bombs.

Would they at least get the Taliban? Not likely. In today’s Afghanistan, only the Taliban eat, only they have the means to move around. They’d slip away and hide. Maybe the bombs would get some of those disabled orphans-they don’t move too fast, they don’t even have wheelchairs. But flying over Kabul and dropping bombs wouldn’t really be a strike against the criminals who did this horrific thing. Actually, it would only be making a common cause with the Taliban-by raping once again the people they’ve been raping all this time.

So what else is there? What can be done, then? Let me now speak with true fear and trembling. The only way to get bin Laden is to go in there with ground troops. When people speak of “having the belly to do what needs to be done,” they’re thinking in terms of having the belly to kill as many as needed. Having the belly to overcome any moral qualms about killing innocent people. Let’s pull our heads out of the sand. What’s actually on the table is Americans dying. And not just because some Americans would die fighting their way through Afghanistan to bin Laden’s hideout. It’s much bigger than that, folks. Because to get any troops to Afghanistan, we’d have to go through Pakistan. Would they let us? Not likely. The conquest of Pakistan would have to be first. Will other Muslim nations just stand by?

You see where I’m going. We’re flirting with a world war between Islam and the West. And guess what? That’s bin Laden’s program. That’s exactly what he wants. That’s why he did this. Read his speeches and statements. It’s all right there. He really believes Islam would beat the West. It might seem ridiculous, but he figures if he can polarize the world into Islam and the West, he’s got a billion soldiers. If the West wreaks a holocaust in those lands, that’s a billion people with nothing left to lose; even better from bin Laden’s point of view.

He’s probably wrong. In the end the West would win, whatever that would mean. But the war would last for years and millions would die-not just theirs, but ours. Who has the belly for that? Bin Laden does. Anyone else?

Tamim Ansary

Expression of sorrow

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On behalf of the Optimist Club of Malibu I would like to extend my thanks to all of the Malibu citizens who have made our success in supporting the youth of our community possible. As many of you know our main focus is on support of local causes.

The Board of Directors of the Club, in expression of our sorrow for the nation’s loss in New York and Washington, D.C., in an emergency meeting voted to donate $1000 to the Salvation Army to support its direct work for the citizens of those communities. In light of the magnitude of the tragedy we felt it appropriate to make this somewhat out of character donation to a national cause.

We join with all other citizens of this community, I am sure, in expressing our condolences to the families and friends of all those affected by this national catastrophe. Again, our thanks to the members of this community who made this donation possible.

Bill Sampson

Congressman Brad Sherman’s

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Sept. 11 statement on terrorist attacks

All of us in the San Fernando Valley react with sorrow and sympathy for thousands who lost loved ones in today’s terrorist attacks.

The San Fernando Valley is one of the most diverse areas in the world. I am sure we will pull together–Christians, Hindus, Muslims, Jews, Buddhist and people of all faiths–to provide comfort to the grieving, to assure security for our families and to support such anti-terrorist actions as necessary.

I note, with particular sorrow, that one of the airplanes that was lost was bound from Dulles International Airport (Washington, D.C.) to LAX, a route which my Los Angeles colleagues and I fly weekly. I pray for the safety of the many DC-LAX commuters and flight crews I have come to know over the years.

Congressman Brad Sherman

Congressman Brad Sherman serves on the Middle East Subcommittee of the House International Relations Committee.

City Council lists priorities for open-land bond

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Councilmember Sharon Barovsky insists on ‘open natural space’ to be high on list.

By Ken Gale/Special to The Malibu Times

The City Council acted Monday on three issues that reflect different aspects of future land use in Malibu. One issue involved setting priorities for using land to be purchased by the $15 million bond issue, known as Proposition K, if it is passed in the upcoming November election. In an attempt to appease opponents of the bond who have criticized it as not being specific about how the money will be used, the council wrestled with a list of top priorities, in order of importance. A first motion set priorities as construction of playing fields, then playgrounds, community centers, parks and trails. But Councilmember Sharon Barovsky insisted in putting “open natural space” high on the list. She prevailed. After proposing many different configurations, the council finally settled on a compromise list: 1) Playing fields and playing grounds for active recreation; 2) Open space for passive recreation; 3) A community center; 4) Trails. A second issue involving land use concerned priorities and objectives for establishing wetlands in the Civic Center and for cleaning up lower Malibu Creek as well as expanding and improving Malibu Lagoon. These objectives come from a highly complex UCLA study that was the fruition of nearly 10 years of planning for the restoration of the Malibu Creek watershed and Malibu Lagoon.

The Malibu Lagoon Task Force presented the objectives to the council. They include acquiring land adjacent to the lagoon, which now includes a golf course and an open field opposite the Chevron station on Pacific Coast Highway, for expansion of the lagoon. Water channels would also be dug to redirect the flow of water coming in from the ocean in order to flush the lagoon with the tide. Also, small island habitats for birds would be built in a channel next to the nearby Adamson house. Further, land surrounding City Hall as well as the Chili Cook-Off parcel across the street would be turned into natural wetlands that would be serve to treat water runoff from higher land. A long range objective would be to move some shops in the Civic Center “out of harm’s way” in order to allow Malibu Creek to “find its own direction.” The wetlands plan also includes exploring several different methods for controlling polluted water flow into the lagoon and Surfside beach as well as more efficient septic tanks and other forms of wastewater treatment. Much of the plan would hinge on property owners being willing to sell their land. In a separate but related item on the agenda, the council approved the plan to use $667,000 state grant for a two-year study on underground water resources and wastewater management solutions for the Malibu Creek-Lagoon watershed. City Building and Safety director Vic Peterson said the study would “bring some science” to the problems involved in treating wastewater and controlling water flow. Also at the council meeting, Malibu district Fire Chief Michael Dyer warned the dry season is due in the region in mid-October. He cautioned all residents to make sure they have cleared the brush around their properties, as required by law. He also said the fire department also now has new firefighting helicopters at their disposal. One, called a “praying mantis,” can snorkel up to 1,300 gallons of water from a pool as shallow as 17 inches in a minute or two. It then can fly much lower than fixed-winged “super scoopers” for a more accurate water drop. Two converted army Blackhawks, now called Firehawks, can also snorkel water, but they also can be used for medical evacuations.

The end of his rope

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Business is genuinely bad. My property taxes are expected. All I see on my last years’ tax bill are more and more Malibu City and Malibu School District add-on assessments. This year’s property tax bill is due out. How much more can I pay? You are butchering me! The Santa Monica-Malibu School District and the City of Malibu are basically killing the Malibu taxpayer to see who’s got the better imaginary friends and putting the debt on my property taxes. No more taxes, no matter how small, no more lies, and that is the way I will vote.

William Hudson

Don’t string them along

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My son, James, (9 years old) is very concerned for the workers picketing outside Pepperoni (sic) University. He has asked me over five times to write a letter to the paper and, of course, Pepperoni. Apparently Pepperoni is using scab labor for their massive construction project. This past week we saw people representing all trades: iron workers, fire sprinkler installers, and others with satin banners with their trade numbers, picketing. We don’t understand how a Christian university, like Pepperoni, can be so callous to the cause of a living wage. We beg and plead them to negotiate and come to resolution as soon as possible.

Mary and James Altoona

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