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Editorial: Help Elect Cedar Key News` Board of Directors April 13th, 2003
Editorial: Cedar Key News: A Progress Report March 11th, 2003
Editorial: Mercedes Meets the Mud February 28th, 2003
Editorial: Happy New Year to All December 29th, 2002
Editorial: Letter to the Editor - Thank You C.K. Police for Doing Your Job December 15th, 2002
Editorial: Poll Results: Fact, Fiction, or Propaganda? December 4th, 2002
Editorial: WANTED November 27th, 2002
Editorial: 1,2,3,4 What Are We Fighting For? October 10th, 2002
Editorial: Do We Really Want Law Enforcement in Cedar Key? August 15th, 2002
Editorial: Levy County Emergency Management July 26th, 2002
Editorial: We Have Our Own Heroes July 17th, 2002
Editorial: Take a Little Time! July 3rd, 2002
Editorial: Water Management District Trying Its Best June 26th, 2002
Editorial: Bribery and Misuse of Public Office June 25th, 2002
Editorial: Police Officer`s Improper Conduct Case Fades Away June 24th, 2002
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Editorial: Earth Day 2010 | Editorial: Earth Day 2010Editorial Earth Day 2010 Earth Day, April 22, marks the fortieth year that people have set aside a day to recognize the need for stewardship of the communal home that we share on Earth. That stewardship was recognized by a very early tourist that arrived in Cedar Key in 1867, namely John Muir. Muir later founded the Sierra Club and persuaded Presidents to protect the natural resources and beauty of our country. The conservation movement, begun by Muir and other far-sighted souls, has expanded far beyond preservation of wild lands. We now see the need to protect our rivers and beaches from pollution. Game laws, fishing limits and endangered species legislation are now recognized as necessary to counteract selfish and thoughtless assaults on nature. Recall the whaling industry`s excesses or the pollution of an Ohio river to the point it caught fire. Both cases relate to human demand for energy, in the form of whole oil and kerosene. The conservation movement has grown to include efforts to dampen if not stop the population explosion and establish a sustainable life style. Populations have stabilized in most "developed" nations, a sign of progress. Mountains of trash in the form of sanitary land-fills demonstrate that a sustainable life style is an ideal not yet attained. The Cedar Key Commission has taken a step toward a sustainable life style, and our reputation as a green city, by voting to try once-a-week garbage collection. Once-a-week collection encourages recycling of waste. Furthermore, once-a-week collection reduces the volume of waste taken to the dump and cuts fuel consumption by lumbering garbage trucks. On April 22, Earth Day, we need to give thanks to John Muir for National Parks and wildlife refuges. We need to thank the founders of Earth Day for the expansion of the conservation ethic to the many ways to keep the Earth inhabitable. |
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