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Opinion

Hughes: McRae was falsely accused

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Written by: Alan Hughes
Published: 28 December 2010
I have known Wendie McRae for 20 years. I was her and her husband's neighbor for 17 years and now live in Santa Rosa.


Wendie is THE most honest person I have ever met in my 47 years. She is the most kind and giving person you will ever come across.


She is the kind of person that will go out of her way to help someone. The idea that she could do such a thing is utterly unbelievable.


When the facts come out and the truth be known it will be obvious that Wendie was falsely accused.


Alan Hughes lives in Santa Rosa, Calif.

Evans: State boards and commissions necessary part of government

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Written by: James Evans
Published: 25 December 2010

Most state boards and commissions meet periodically. Board and commission members are paid per meeting.


Many members are experts in their field and their service on the boards or commissions is valuable to the operation of the state. It is far cheaper to pay these people for minimal part-time work than to create full agencies with full time highly paid experts to do the same work.


Most if not all of these boards and commissions are necessary to implement the state laws or to gather information for the state. The state would not function well without them. Most boards and commissions have a small full-time paid staff that take direction from the board.

 

I'm not an expert but I have served on a voluntary board and I can attest that it is work and of value.

 

The only other alternative I can think of to replace boards and commissions would to be to have the legislature make all those decisions which would require a massive increase of legislative staff including high paid experts and the legislature still would not be able to conduct all that business.

 

These boards and commissions are a necessary part of the state governance architecture. They were created by Democratic and Republican legislation. Complaining about them by the Northern Division of the California Federation of Republican Women is just more hypocrisy.

 

Obviously some boards, commissions, agencies, departments, centers, authorities, bureaus, centers and councils are more useful than others and some may have outlived their usefulness. Some may exist only on paper and not do anything or be allocated a budget line item.


Yes there are a lot of them and their cost to the state is in the millions of dollars, but a blanket condemnation of all of them is wrong.


For the most part they are the cost of running the state. Hopefully the new governor will go through the list and eliminate or reduce the budgets for them as needed.


James Evans lives in Clearlake Oaks, Calif.

Rhoades: Thoughts from a last-minute Christmas shopper

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Written by: Lake County News Reports
Published: 22 December 2010
So do you have all of your Christmas shopping done? Got everything on your list? Are you one of those wonderfully organized people who wrapped the last present and stored it in the closet for Christmas before Labor Day? If so, well good, good, goody for you. I am not one of you, and never have been. I tell myself each year I will do more, and do it earlier. But I cannot.


I can’t shop early. I can’t stand buying Christmas gifts until the air is cold, and there’s either rain or show falling. No holiday lights means no Christmas shopping in my world. I don’t shop early. I don’t shop late. I shop very, very, very late. I’ve been seen doing my Christmas shopping on Dec. 24, Christmas Eve. In fact, very, very late on Christmas Eve.


It’s not that I don’t know what to get. I usually know that, for my wife at least, a couple of months before December. Gifts for others, not so much. But actually getting out and doing it is another thing. I can’t buy Christmas presents while wearing shorts and a Hawaiian shirt, when the air is still matching my body temperature. It’s just wrong.


Same with buy Christmas presents while the Halloween costumes are still on the racks, or the stores are advertising pumpkin pies with yams and turkey stuffing ingredients. It has to wait until the other holidays are passed, and the focus is entirely on Christmas, and only Christmas.


Who wants to think about warm woolen mittens while watching the All-Star game in July? Or even while watching the World Series (which may be in late October, and yes, cold but still before Halloween)? And can you honestly consider holiday presents and hum “White Christmas” while walking around in a T-shirt when the temperature is still in the 80s? It’s just wrong, on so many levels.


I have a problem even shopping for Christmas presents during daylight hours. It’s supposed to be a winter event. Cold, or at least cool. Dark, as in the dead of winter. The only illumination should be the stars, or the bright lights, even stop lights, blinking a bright red and green, as the shoppers rush home with their presents. (Apologies to the composer of “Silver Bells.”)


So this year, like every year past, I have one or two gifts already laid away in the closet at home. But until the air freezes, the light in the sky dims at 4:30 p.m. and the store lights guide my way, I’ll wait.


Then the Chamber of Commerce, together with the wreaths on the street lamps, the music in the stores and on the radio, the stars in the sky as they approach (or pass) the Winter’s Solstice, will beckon me onward. Come, celebrate the season with your cash, your card, and spirit on this last night. Urgency requires you shop now. You have not another day to wait, for tomorrow is Christmas.


So if you’re like me, I will see you, list in hand, on a cold winter’s night. It will be Christmas Eve. Again.


Doug Rhoades lives in Kelseyville, Calif.

Strasser: We could have found a better alternative

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Written by: Nelson Strasser
Published: 21 December 2010
“Somebody better investigate soon.” – Bob Dylan


A few years ago, I read the book “The Three Trillion Dollar War” by Nobel economist Joseph Stiglitz. By now, the War in Iraq has probably cost another $1 trillion. And, I heard on the radio this week that the cost of the war in Afghanistan is over $1 trillion. That is $5 trillion! That equals the cost of the entire Cold War (and counting).


What is truly ironic is that the purpose of this “resource war” is to secure fossil fuel, which is contributing to global warming, and, according to MIT, global warming will be disastrous before the end of the century, and depending on some models yet to be worked out, even sooner.


As I recently emailed Congressman Mike Thompson, with $5 trillion, we probably could have come up with a viable, cost efficient, environmentally friendly alternative to burning fossil fuel.


Meanwhile, we are discussing tax cuts. Not that a tax cut is not an important topic, but it is akin to discussing what color rug you want to install while the house is burning down.


There was a Pogo comic strip that I read, many years ago. The caption was: “We have met the enemy, and they is us.” And, we are.


Nelson Strasser lives in Kelseyville, Calif.

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