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Editorial: Air Boats and the Golden Rule
February 2nd, 2004

Editorial: A Year of Opportunity
January 24th, 2004

Editorial: Sports on TV
January 15th, 2004

Editorial: Mad Cow Disease in the US
December 26th, 2003

Editorial: Jeb`s Water War
November 25th, 2003

Editorial: Citizen Input Needed
October 27th, 2003

Editorial: Congrats to Our Commission, Now We Must Help
October 17th, 2003

Editorial: Remember Owens Valley
September 29th, 2003

Editorial: Gold Plating Reality, Reconstruction Chic
September 21st, 2003

Editorial: The Responsiblities of a Journalist
August 27th, 2003

Editorial: A Fable: The Great Guano Concord
July 24th, 2003

Editorial: Music for Children
May 26th, 2003

Editorial: Speak Out
May 15th, 2003

Editorial: Parking: Our Biggest Problem?
May 2nd, 2003

Editorial: Vote and Vote Well
April 22nd, 2003

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Remember Owens Valley

Remember Owens Valley

Editorial

The movie "Chinatown" dramatized, but did not exaggerate, the chicanery and greed of 1920`s developers who grabbed the water rights in the Owens Valley for Southern California. The Owens Valley was once a rich agricultural community on the eastern slope of the Sierra Nevada. With its water piped to Los Angeles the jobs and people of the Owens Valley dried up and blew away.


In 1928 history was repeated when the Colorado River was tapped so that Los Angeles could expand. Las Vegas also sucks up water from the Colorado, so much that the river barely trickles into the Gulf of California. Southern California growth and the subsequent political power then pushed through the California Aqueduct in the 1950's. Now Northern California water flows four hundred miles south to LA.


Governor Jeb Bush has been advised by his political friends that Northern Florida water should be piped south to allow more development. If that advice is followed, urban growth will continue to mushroom and rural communities will lose political representation. Furthermore, water resources for irrigation, recreation and commercial bottling will be lost.


Hello: Tampa, Orlando and Miami, should we help make you all reach gridlock? We would like to keep our water for irrigation, recreation and bottling. This is not a partisan issue. State Representative Will Kendrick (D) told Cedar Key News that he is "very much opposed to shipping water south." State Senator Nancy Argenziano (R) and the Levy County Commissioners have opposed sending our water south. This is protecting natural resources versus greed.

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