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Opinion

Smith: Superintendent's candidate has his trust

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Written by: C. Richard Smith
Published: 16 May 2010

I worked with Wally Holbrook on the Lake County School Consolidation Task Force. Wally provided leadership and information to the committee that was invaluable in our deliberations.


I served on that committee because I am a former school superintendent and currently teach graduate courses in school administration. I teach my students that a basic requirement of school leadership is to be trusted.


I trust Wally to provide the leadership the county schools need to get through some tough times. You can trust that Wally will be an outstanding county superintendent because he has integrity, and is an honest, ethical and moral man.


He has been a successful school leader in Lake County and has been a leadership coach to many of the other school leaders in our community.


Wally has my support and he deserves yours.


C. Richard Smith, PhD, lives in Kelseyville.

Dunn: Remember Thornton when you vote

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Written by: Karyn Dunn
Published: 16 May 2010

Hello, my name is Karyn Dunn and I am a law enforcement officer in the state of California. I was also a good friend of Lynn Thornton, a recent retiree from a 25+ year career in law enforcement, who was killed by the boat driven by Lake County Sheriff’s Captain Russell Perdock in 2006.


Mr. Perdock will likely never be brought to justice. I hold Sheriff Rodney Mitchell responsible for this terrible and shameful injustice. On June 8, you can too by voting for Francisco Rivero for sheriff.


Mr. Mitchell protected his employee, Russ Perdock, who was second in command at the time of Lynn’s death. I believe Mr. Perdock will never be held accountable for Lynn’s death, which is a grave injustice.


As many of you may know, Bismarck Dinius, who was on the sailboat with Lynn Thornton, was wrongly charged. A jury of Lake County citizens acquitted him – this after a three-year delay in bringing the case to trial and satisfying the statue of limits protecting the man really at fault. The Lake County people on the jury did the right thing in acquitting Mr. Dinius. Rodney Mitchell did not do the right thing by Lynn Thornton, her son, family and friends, or the people of Lake County.


Unfortunately, unless perjury or some other illegal act can be proven, it’s too late to bring Russell Perdock to justice. It was Rodney Mitchell’s job to bring charges forward at the right time. He should have presented a case to the district attorney against his captain, Russell Perdock, just as he did against Mr. Dinius. After all, it was Perdock, who crashed into the sailboat at a high rate of speed in the dark of night. It was Sheriff Mitchell who also did not do the right thing and no amount of explaining can rationalize away his failure!


On June 8, 2010, vote Mitchell out of office!


Frank Rivero is the only active sheriff’s deputy with the strength of character and conviction to speak out against this and other injustices under the leadership of Rodney Mitchell.


Isn’t it time for good character and moral standards to win? Please vote in remembrance of Lynn Thornton.


Karyn Dunn lives in Citrus Heights, Calif.

Willig: Facts are stubborn things

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Written by: Evan Willig
Published: 14 May 2010

“Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passion, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence.”


This statement was made by Founding Father John Adams as “Argument in Defense of the Soldiers in the Boston Massacre Trials” in December 1770. Whatever we may think or what passions we may hold about John Adams defense of British Soldiers involved in the Boston Massacre, this statement instructs us even to this day.


Many times newspaper opinion pages are filled with letters to the editor or opinion pieces claiming certain “facts” or “things easily confirmed to be true” when they are nothing more than one person's spin on current events and history or outright misrepresentations of the facts. You need not accept anything that I or anyone else may present as facts at face value. Organizations like FactCheck.org can be used to sort through the constant drum beat of babel chucked up by biased media, political advertisements, opinion-based blogs and the opinion pages of newspapers.


For example, a recent letter to the Record-Bee stated, among other things, that “This year, for the first time in history, seniors got no COLA increase in Social Security although their health care tax increased. Meanwhile Thompson got himself $3,000 more COLA per month.”


A little research at FactCheck.org can be used to analyze of this combination of fact, misrepresentation and lie.


FactCheck.org: “Since 1975, Social Security's general benefit increases have been based on increases in the cost of living, as measured by the Consumer Price Index. We call such increases Cost-Of-Living Adjustments, or COLAs. Because there has been a decline in the Consumer Price Index, there will be no COLA payable in 2010.”


So based on a three-decades-old law there will be no Social Security benefit increase this year.


FactCheck.org: “Most Medicare premiums haven’t gone up this year at all. For 73 percent of seniors, the basic Medicare Part B premium remains at $96.40 per month. And for all but a few of the rest, the increase will be $14.10 per month.”


The reason some Part B premiums went up has to do with the complicated formulations of law which can be further researched at the Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) Web site.


FactCheck.org: “The fact is that Congress voted in March to give itself a zero pay raise in 2010. The language is in Public Law 111-8, the Omnibus Appropriation Act for the current fiscal year, which was signed March 11, 2010.”


So it’s just a plain lie to say that Congressman Mike Thompson got himself $3,000 more COLA per month.


Left, right and center, we all have opinions. Expressing those opinions is the cherished right of all Americans. Disrespecting your audience with falsehoods is a choice.


Evan Willig lives in Cobb.

Scully: A wonderful, unexpected hour

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Written by: Michelle Scully
Published: 13 May 2010

I had an hour to kill in Kelseyville last Sunday morning and decided to run a few errands I’d been putting off, as I don’t make it to Kelseyville very often (which is actually kind of pitiful on my part as we live in Lakeport!).


There’s been so much negative publicity about Lake County lately, generated by those outside of the county and some within, that I wanted to share some positive thoughts about our community instead.


With this free hour I … saw lots of people enjoying coffee and pastries served outside at Grace Evangelical Free Church before the service … filled up my car at Two Jacks Gas station and was impressed by the courtesy of the employee … had an awesome latte at Studebakers, which was the perfect temperature and as good as any coffee anywhere … stopped in at Perlz and found some cool stuff to repair some jewelry with and was impressed by the breadth of classes they offer and the talent of local artisans … washed my car for only $2.50 and was offered help by the owner who had observed me trying to get my wrinkled dollars to go into the change machine … went to Kelseyville Lumber to buy some plants and was amazed at all the people enjoying themselves in Woody’s Café inside … watched a group of people walk leisurely down Main Street and stop to watch the creek go by under the bridge … all this action and vitality within an one hour’s time and the distance of less than a mile.


Why share this? I will readily admit that I moved to Lake County grudgingly. I will also be the first to say that I have always been impressed by the people here; their commitment to this community, their connectedness to their community, their willingness to put effort into their community, whether fifth-generation pioneer family or newcomer. Perhaps it was that unexpected hour that helped me see anew some of the wonderful things about Kelseyville and Lake County in general.


It’s easy to get caught up in the comings and goings of our lives and sometimes our appreciation is dimmed in the process because of the “busyness” of our lives. It also seems to have become the norm in our society to express the bad things we think about each other while keeping silent on the good. It’s become easier to make anonymous comments on a keyboard than it is to take time to get outside of our houses and participate in life – real life with each other.


Yes, we do struggle with our economic viability, as does most of our country unfortunately. We do live in a rural area but that does not equate to us being relegated to a stereotype. There are so many things to appreciate about our beautiful rural county and the people who inhabit it with commitment to it and kindness towards each other. I wanted to give well-deserved credit where credit was due.


Kelseyville – thanks for the wonderful hour!


Michelle Scully lives in Lakeport.

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