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Letters

  • Published
    April 21, 2010

    Letters to the editor, April 21, 2010Is bias in the eye of the beholder?

    Kind of funny, in a sad way: The Press Herald prints another “it’s not global warming, it’s a liberal plot” letter the same day it is reported that the glaciers in Glacier National Park are melting for the first time in 7,000 years (“Supporter and critic discuss columnist’s work,” April 8). When the glaciers are […]

  • Published
    April 20, 2010

    Letters to the editor, April 20, 2010Trade deals punish paperworkers

    I remember a time when the state of Maine was one of the leading producers of shoes and textiles in the world. I also remember when it was an easy task to buy American products in this country. Nowadays it’s akin to searching for the pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. The […]

  • Published
    April 19, 2010

    Letters to the editor, April 19, 2010Earth Day has lessons for us all

    Because the 40th anniversary of Earth Day is approaching on Thursday, I felt it appropriate to highlight its history and importance to Mainers and all Americans. The first Earth Day in 1970 sprang out of America’s reaction to environmental degradation that had reached unacceptable levels. Ohio’s Cuyahoga River caught fire in June 1969 and focused […]

  • Published
    April 18, 2010

    Letters to the editor, April 18, 2010Blowing hot and cold on wind

    Although erecting wind turbines in pristine areas may not be ideal, it is better than the alternative. To those opposing the wind power projects, I challenge them to consider where the energy used in the United States comes from currently. Coal, one of the top three energy sources in the United States, mined by blowing […]

  • Published
    April 17, 2010

    Letters to the editor, April 17, 2010Library made hard choice, respect it

    There seem to be so many misconceptions about the Portland Public Library in this dire economic time. Do the city councilors have such short memories that they have forgotten that two years ago the main library staff was cut by 10 percent instead of the system’s closing down one branch due to flat funding? The […]

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  • Published
    April 17, 2010

    More letters to the editor, April 17, 2010Real change hoped for, but all that’s new are the names

    After the first year of the administration of the candidate who ran on a platform of change, the biggest change is the name on the door. Under President Obama, the United States still has military in the Middle East, is still bailing out businesses that went bankrupt due to uncontrolled greed, is still disrespecting fundamental […]

  • Published
    April 16, 2010

    Letters to the editor, April 16, 2010Bonds for highways miss human needs

    I recently received e-mails from my state senator and from Senate President Libby Mitchell asking for support of the bond package that the Legislature has approved. In the past I have voted for almost every bond package on the ballot. With so much money being cut from the educational programs across the state, should it […]

  • Published
    April 15, 2010

    Letters to the editor, April 15, 2010Lacrosse player’s plight: Fair or foul?

    Regarding the parents of a Yarmouth High School lacrosse player suing to overturn her three-week team suspension for apparently drinking beer: As a parent of one former and one current high school athlete, I am familiar with the honor code signed by student athletes. It is a pledge on the part of the student athlete […]

  • Published
    April 14, 2010

    Letters to the editor, Aprl 14, 2010Maine’s water too precious to sell

    It looks like The Portland Press Herald is unaware of the facts and problems that drove large numbers of Wells voters to reject water extraction last year. The paper’s editorial of April 6 (“Water use battles play out in rate hike talk”) shows a deep ignorance of the well-established facts and problems that resonated with […]

  • Published
    April 13, 2010

    Letters to the editor, April 13, 2010:Learning not a mechanical process

    Thanks to Chris Queally for a wonderful April 7 Maine Voices column outlining the pitfalls that abound when attempting to pin teacher evaluations to students’ performance. There have been a host of calls to enact this form of teacher assessment from a business-minded population that imagines education to be like running a factory or a […]