Counterproductive curbs

Dear editor:
Wasted water is a topic worth adding to the list of issues created by the county’s latest push to build more curbs along the town’s roadways. While storm water is collected and channeled along roads, it is often ignored after being discharged into the landscape.

In Idyllwild, this “flush-and-forget” approach has caused significant erosion that can run down slope for long distances. Much of this runoff eventually ends up in Strawberry Creek and other waterways, where it is wastefully shunted off the mountain in flash floods.

The result is less water absorbed on the Hill in the winter, and consequently drier creeks in the summer. This loss of water renders the community’s already drought-stressed forests even more vulnerable to beetle infestations and fire.

Homeowners, camps, schools and businesses can help lessen the impacts by managing their own runoff from driveways and downspouts, and not removing water-retaining needles and duff beyond what is required for defensible space around buildings.

Best practices for water retention include judicious use of curbs together with permeable surfaces, swales, infiltration basins and other features that allow storm water to recharge locally.

I encourage county planners to give more attention to stewarding and retaining precious water in our parched landscape.

Evan Mills
Idyllwild

Counterpoint to ‘What if?’

Dear editor:
A willingness to speak up and share one’s deepest assumptions is an act of courage; it risks ridicule in this unsettled time when conflicting views are so strongly held.

In the heartfelt “What if?” commentary last week, the writer displayed her deepest conviction, beseeching readers to embrace its power and truth.

It also was an act of goodwill to share her thoughts based on the certainty her belief system would solve all life’s problems.

As all of us struggle to make sense of how to co-exist in a troubled world, a counterpoint to each of her “what ifs” is offered as another option.

To start, all accepted religious belief systems encourage humans to treat each other with kindness and care.

The insistence that “my” Supreme Being(s) is the only true one, is a red flag. It empowers its believers to demand their set of rules be followed by everyone.

What if God cared more about how people treat each other, rather than who they love?

What if marriage was considered an act of loyalty rather than an exclusive right? What if we are entitled to live our lives as we choose, if it doesn’t harm others?

What if we embraced immigrants as human beings, who deserve our respect and kindness?

What if we celebrated our differences rather than condemned them?

What if we worshipped the natural environment as if our lives depended on it?

What if T-O-L-E-R-A-N-C-E are the letters to accept? It’s a word that encompasses respect, generosity, kindness and acceptance for each other.

Mary MacLaren Rider
Idyllwild

Similar Posts

  • Readers Write:

    Cost of the new public restrooms Dear editor: I read with great interest in the latest edition of the Town Crier information regarding the new public restrooms that “the construction was funded by $580,570 in federal American Rescue Plan Act funding allocated by Supervisor Washington and the Riverside County Board of Supervisors for tourism and…

  • Readers Write

    It takes a village Dear editor: This couldn’t be truer than it is now. ARF works hard to educate the “village” as to pet care and the importance of spaying/neutering. We all need to be responsible for our own dogs and cats, and we all need to help in curbing the annual kitten explosion. Sadly,…

  • Readers Write

    Rustic tranquility or utter chaos? Dear Editor: Are any other store owners disgruntled with the excessive noise, parking and driving chaos on weekends? What about your loss of normal revenue on weekends? Do you really like the idiotic graffiti? Do you enjoy so much alcohol being offered on the street? There was a time not…

  • Readers Write

    STR dangers to community Dear Editor: A horrible fire tragedy is unfolding in Maui with hundreds of people still unaccounted for as of this writing. The Maui fire is the new deadliest fire in a century, surpassing the Paradise Fire. Paradise is a mountain town much like ours where 85 people died. Similarities include high…

  • |

    Readers Write:

    Houses Painted Black Dear editor: An open appeal to my fellow denizens of this lovely mountain village: Please stop painting your houses black. I suspect that this all started as a prank, a macabre jest to rattle the neighbors, right? But the joke has gotten seriously out of hand when every third house on the…

  • Readers Write

    Merger talks must be legal Dear editor: Regarding an article in last week’s Town crier, it was suggested that Idyllwild Fire, Fern Valley Water and Idyllwild Water were looking into a merger via talks with their legal counsels. In California, according to state statutes regarding independent special districts, all talks regarding mergers must include the…