‘DEAR RON’ LETTERS
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I agree with the view you expressed in the two columns I’ve read in
which you say that when an agency such as the California Coastal
Commission prohibits the owners of property from using it commercially in
a reasonable and useful way, they should be compensated (“It’s a matter
of opinion, not integrity,” Feb. 22 and “Do the ends really justify the
means here?,” Jan. 25).
I didn’t read the editorial you mentioned, nor the letters pro and
con. So I’m sorry that I can’t comment on their reasoning.
I have some, though limited, claim to environmentalism. In the dim and
distant past, I was a biology professor at a university where I taught
among other things a course in environmental toxicology, and wrote a
widely used textbook, “Environment of Life,” long out of print. I’m a
passionate conservationist who views with increasing dismay and sadness
the erosion of resources that will be seen as lost treasures in years to
come. I wish we would do much more about it.
But I long ago distanced myself from “environmentalists.” Although in
most cases, I agreed with and still agree with their aims, these
well-meaning folks sometimes use their influence to flout common sense or
simply use their clout under the cover of shallow ethics. Compensation is
a case in point.
I’m appalled and embarrassed that anyone with similar views to mine
would ask for property to be set aside for the common good without
offering to share the cost, but instead demand that only the property
owner, sometimes one person, make the sacrifice.
In my view, what benefits all should be paid for by all. If we’re not
willing to pony up, let’s quit bellyaching and admit that we don’t want
it that much.
KENNETH E. MAXWELL
Huntington Beach
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