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© 2006-2008 The Ojai Post
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The views expressed herein are the personal views of each individual author or commenter and are not intended to reflect the views of The Ojai Post or its Authors, Tribal Core or Tyler Suchman as managing editor.

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ALL NEWS IS LOCAL

There can be no greater proof of one of journalism’s prime axioms, that “All News is Local,” than the reaction to Tyler’s recent posting about the new “Jersey Mike’s” sub shop coming to Ojai.

More people responded to this article than the combined responses to all of the other postings at our new web site. Although it was heartening to see people react, it is also somewhat embarrassing to realize that some much effort was focused on a sub shop while other, far more critical issues that effect us both regionally and nationally, are ignored.

During the opening days of the “Ojai Post,” I ran a copy of an article, “The War at Home” about the dumping of Chloride (salts) into the Santa Clara River by the Los Angeles County Sanitation District that – if unchecked – has a greater potential to destroy agriculture, open space, the production of food, water quality and the rural nature of Ventura County with more than any other single event.

The article originally ran in the VCEDA News and was accompanied by individual e-mail able petitions to protest these actions by the Los Angeles County Sanitation District. The initial campaign by VCEDA (the Ventura County Economic Development Association) and the Ventura County Agricultural Water Coalition generated some 500 letters of protest that were sent to the California Regional Water Board that has oversight of this issue. The Regional Water Board is meeting again in several weeks and we need everyone concerned about this issue to flood them with THOUSANDS of these petitions.

The petition is below. All you need do is first copy it into an e-mail. Next, copy the e-mail addresses below into the “To;” line of the address box. Third, copy all of your friend’s e-mail address into the “BCC” address box so they too will receive a copy of the petition. Finally, send it off.

For more details, please read my earlier post, “The War At Home,” also reprinted below following the petition. With your help we can save Ventura County for now and future generations.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
David Nahai, Chairperson
Regional Water Quality Control Board
Los Angeles Region
C/O Jonathan Bishop, Executive Officer
320 W. 4th Street
Los Angeles, CA 90013
Via E-mail: jbishop@waterboards.ca.gov; linda.parks@ventura.org ;
sunger@waterboards.ca.gov ; lweste@santa-clarita.com; csmyth@santa-clarita.com ; jstahl@lacsd.org; vconway@lacsd.org; smayhew@oxnardlemon.com
Dear Mr. Nahai,
We the undersigned are adding our names to the many other petitions you will be receiving on this issue below that requests and acknowledges the following:
The Clean Water Act clearly requires that polluters need to control their wastes to protect downstream users. A valuable water resource is not to be degraded to benefit a single discharger or community at the expense of another;
The Los Angeles County Sanitation District has sought to and continues to seek to alter and raise the standards for the Total Maximum Daily Loads (TMDL) of Chlorides that are released into the Santa Clara River to levels that are clearly detrimental to the citizens, farmers, cities and businesses of Ventura County;
We respectfully request that the Los Angeles Regional Water Quality Control Board of which you are the Chairperson, reopen the issue of Chloride TMDL's at your next meeting in May of 2006, if not sooner;
We further request that at this hearing that the Regional Water Quality Control Board impose Chloride TMDL standards for the Santa Clara River upon the Los Angeles County Sanitation District that have been proposed and are acceptable to Ventura County Agricultural Water Coalition and its members;
Given that the Los Angeles County Sanitation District has repeatedly sought to delay the implementation and enforcement of appropriate standards by various bureaucratic tactics that typically fall under the rubric of "Further Study" we further request that the Los Angeles County Sanitation District be held fiscally and legally responsible for meeting these standards according to an implementation time schedule that is again acceptable to Ventura County Agricultural Water Coalition and its members.
Sincerely,
Name:
Address:
Phone:
E-Mail:
cc: Linda Parks, Chair, Ventura County Board of Supervisors E-mail: linda.parks@ventura.org
Mr. Sam Unger, Regional Water Quality Control Board E-mail: sunger@waterboards.ca.gov
Laurene Weste, Mayor, City of Santa Clarita E-mail: lweste@santa-clarita.com
Councilmember Cameron Smyth, City of Santa Clarita E-mail: csmyth@santa-clarita.com
Mr. James Stahl, Los Angeles County Sanitation Districts E-mail: jstahl@lacsd.org
Ms. Vicky Conway, Los Angeles County Sanitation Districts E-mail: vconway@lacsd.org


VCEDA’s mission is to advocate for policies, legislation and programs that stimulate business and a vital economy as the foundation for a vibrant quality of life in Ventura County.

The War At Home
After 9/11 fear ran rampant over potential threats to American cities, from so-called dirty bombs to the poisoning of our supplies of food and water. One of the many justifications offered up for the war in Iraq is the stated need to stop terrorists overseas before they struck here
Millions of tax dollars were funneled into Homeland Security and other law enforcement agencies to forestall any of these supposed dangers. Police units spread out to guard bridges, dams and reservoirs.
What many failed to realize though was the greatest threat to the food and water supply in Ventura County comes not from any enemy or terrorists but from one of our own government agencies. In the immortal words of the cartoon, Pogo, “We have met the enemy and it is us.”
More specifically the Los Angeles County Sanitation District has de-facto declared war on Ventura County. Under the leadership of James Stahl, their Chief Engineer and General Manager, they have pushed for the Regional Water Board to raise the standards for dumping chloride – more commonly know to us as Salt – into the Santa Clara River.
Why should we construe this as a declaration of war? Because very simply, Chloride kills and by raising the standard 2 ½ times as they propose, it will kill absolutely.
What will it kill? Salts dumped in the Santa Clara River work their way permanently into the very water shed that flows through the center of Ventura County. Half of our cities and most of our growers of fruits and vegetables are directly dependent on the river for their daily water supply. Down stream cities such as Santa Paula and Fillmore will have to spend millions in tax dollars to try to cleanse their water supplies. Homeowners will spend millions more to soften hard water, which in turn creates further problems for our sanitary districts.
Not only will excess salts in our water supply ruin most of the food supplies grown in the county, they will permanently destroy the ability of the land to grow crops into the future.
Agriculture, and the many businesses that service and support it, constitute a Seven Billion Dollar economic impact on our county. There is not one of us in Ventura County that would not be adversely affected by this degradation of our water supply.
The negative economic impact upon us from this assault will be far greater than most any feared terrorist attack if L.A. Sanitation gets its way with the Regional Water Board. We don’t know what motivates the Los Angeles County Sanitation District, but we can surmise that it simply doesn’t want to shell out their tax dollars to do the right thing. LA Sanitation would rather dump the costs for clean up on us.
James Stahl's commentary of 10/17 in the Ventura County Star representing the position of the Los Angeles County Sanitation Districts, strains all credibility when he suggests that "Chloride issue need more study," - up to 17 more years worth - before we can learn the effects of salts upon water quality and crops in Ventura County.
His remarks have to be among the most self-serving bit of scientific gibberish fostered on us by a public agency official.

The impact of chloride salts upon crops has been amply studied - not for decades - but for thousands of years. The classic example came in 146 BC when Rome finally defeated its arch rival in the Mediterranean, Carthage, at the end of the Punic Wars. Not only did the Roman army raze the North African city of Carthage to the ground, they also salted the fields so that no crops could ever grow there again. To this day none do.

The Los Angeles County Sanitation Districts attempt to shirk their responsibility to clean discharges into the Santa Clara River by changing the water quality standards, is nothing less than a declaration of war, not only upon the farmers and growers here, but upon the entire populous of Ventura County that deems its open space, quality of life and agricultural lands an inherent part of our identity and a vital element of our economy.

Were I a public employee of a government agency in Los Angeles, would I risk the wrath of the entire business, agricultural, political and civic community of Ventura County to prop up a bogus standard? I think not.

The Regional Water Board meets again this May. One hopes they have sufficient wisdom to come to the same conclusion.
But they need to hear from us. They need to know now that the citizens, business and government officials of our county will not stand for this insidious assault engendered by a public agency.
Let this be our call to action:
We are asking each and every one of you to join us in petitioning the Regional Water Board to stop this threat.

Comments (3)

Petition sent - thanks for keeping this issue alive, Howard. It's not the "sexiest" issue out there, but has a dramatic impact on our lives. I encourage everyone to take the four minutes to copy-and-paste the email, CC the listed people, and BCC a few friends.

* Nuclear-Free Ojai Valley?

* Walker/Bicyle Heaven?

* Organic? GE-Free??

* Aboriginal Honoring???

* Multi-Cultural Encouraging???

Imagine the ECONOMIC value of quality, compare quantity ...
of respect for self, family, friends, children ...
contrast an economy of abuse ...

Vizualize trade and tourist revenues
going up -- with road-traffic going down ...

Actualize nurturing codes outlawing noise, smoking, drinking,
solicitation, defecation in public -- cleansing the bums from the streets --
'bummers' of all 'class' strata ...

and realize a community of beauty and integrity and cooperation ...

nurturing the return of the green, the peace, the joy-full-ness
of the garden divine ...


Millennium Twain

..

.

I have in the past witnessed two occasions of County Official Abuse.

The most recent occurred today. It scared me to hear what I heard. That is why I am anon in this post.

I overheard a conversation between a homeowner and an animal control officer. The animal control officer in response to the homeowners questions said that animal control could enter and take animals any time it liked from private property. This is without cause, due process, warrants, or other. Does animal control now have a type of immediate eminent domain over personal property that bypasses all civil rights and law?

If so, we should be very afraid of our county officials.

Anon.

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