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In letters: Court-ordered releases from Lopez Lake threaten South County water supply

In letters: Court-ordered releases from Lopez Lake threaten South County water supply

Yahoo26-01-2025

I'm writing to alert South County residents to an issue that threatens our water supply and will increase water rates. In August 2024, four environmental groups sued San Luis Obispo County over Lopez Dam operations, citing harm to steelhead and other protected species.
In December, the U.S. District Court ruled in their favor, issuing a preliminary injunction requiring the county to increase downstream releases by 50% into Arroyo Grande Creek. These releases began Jan. 15, and are beyond the safe yield for the Lopez Lake watershed.
Opinion
Had this release schedule been in place during past droughts, Lopez Lake would have been drained in 2016 and 2021-2022. With less than 5 inches of rainfall since July and ongoing La Niña conditions, this judgment endangers Lopez Lake, the South County's primary water source. For over 60 years, cities and CSDs including Arroyo Grande, Grover Beach, Pismo Beach, Oceano and Avila Beach have collaborated with SLO County and agricultural stakeholders to manage water supplies while protecting species.
This lawsuit undermines those efforts, diverting critical resources and leaving our water supply subject to outside control. I urge residents to demand that local leaders appeal this decision. Our water supply depends on it!
Brian Talley
Arroyo Grande
San Luis Obispo County needs to prioritize preparing for disasters and reducing risks. This means we all need to work together —government and the public—to take action. We should focus on things like creating safer spaces in fire-prone areas and meeting the state's climate goals. Without strong leadership, we're missing out on important resources, such as California grants for affordable housing and sustainable communities.
The science is simple: A warmer planet means more evaporation, more water in the air, causing longer droughts and heavier rainstorms. SLO County is already feeling the effects of extreme weather. We've seen the Cerro Alto Fire, the Arroyo Grande Creek flood, and storm surges that damaged the Cayucos Pier. These disasters affect everything — public health, agriculture, and even finding affordable home insurance. Fixing roads and buildings is important, but we also need to reduce what's causing these problems: greenhouse gas emissions.
Other counties, like Sonoma and Santa Barbara, are doing a better job. They've started useful projects to reduce risks and cut emissions, and they've gotten big grants from the state to help. With $10 billion in new state funds available soon, tell the Board of Supervisors on Feb. 4 to prioritize climate resilience.
Don Maruska, Los Osos
Erin Pearse, Los Osos
Eric Veium, San Luis Obispo
I strenuously object to the recent article by Hannah Poukich. The headline stated that ever since a Morro Bay coffee shop closed, 'nearby stores are struggling to survive.' Coalesce Bookstore, right next door to the former coffee shop, is thriving now and has been thriving in Morro Bay since 1973. I've been getting my books there for years and I've never been in the store when there weren't several customers among the shelves or at the counter.
Carol McPhee Norton
San Luis Obispo
Who among those of us born in America can say that our citizenship is NOT by birthright?
Even the original members of the Pilgrim families were not American when they got here, but their descendants sure are. My English paternal grandfather entered Canada as a teenager on a cattle boat. He decided to follow the model of his ancestors and train horses for livery. He walked across the Canadian border in the 1800s not to gain citizenship, but because the wild horses he wrangled, trained and traded didn't recognize a border.
He met and married his wife, whose German parents had immigrated from Danzig/Gdansk in the Polish corridor. The family first settled in Montana, then moved west. There is no paperwork to prove that they were ever naturalized as Americans, and I don't know that they ever were.
Nonetheless, their 12 children, their 26 grandchildren (my generation), our children, our grandchildren and our great-grandchildren are unquestionably American based upon the 14th Amendment to the Constitution, NOT because we are white English-speakers.
Carol Nelson-Selby
San Luis Obispo
In a recent headline, an official high in the police union stated that pardoning the Jan. 6 rioters, or should I say insurrectionists, sends a dangerous message. First, people accused of and convicted of harming people who were doing their jobs are absolved of their crimes.
What would he expect?
Our bully of a president pardoned bullies like himself. The dangerous message is not just that the bully's behavior will be tolerated, but also that unlawful and uncivil behavior by an elected felon will become the norm in this administration. We are all in for a long and perilous siege of our democracy.
Fred Raleigh
Templeton
Donald Trump's Department of Health and Human Services has directed all agency leaders to halt all external communications 'until they can be reviewed and approved by a presidential appointee.'
This means, presumably, that HHS might not be able to publish anything that says that bleach injections and Ivermectin are not effective against COVID or that vaccines don't cause autism because that information could be politically inconvenient.
Project 2025 tells us that Trump's government should 'downsize' and 'reshape' federal agencies that do research on climate change ( e.g., the National Climate Assessment), likely because such research could call into question the wisdom of drilling for more oil and gas.
One hallmark of authoritarian regimes is that they suppress all information that doesn't promote the government's agenda. In Russia, the Ukraine war is a 'special military operation,' not a war, and the goal of the 'operation' is to 'de-Nazify' Ukraine although its leader is a Jew. Saying otherwise can land you in jail.
It is said that people voted for Trump because they thought groceries were too expensive. Sadly, groceries aren't getting any cheaper and the collateral damage arising from that decision will be with us for decades to come.
Chris Toews
San Luis Obispo

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"The text stated something to the effect of they should prepare for war, they needed to get out of the house and people with guns may be showing up to the house." Boelter's wife was stopped by law enforcement while traveling with her four children to visit friends northwest of the metro area, the federal complaint said. In the car, officers found a safe, all of the children's passports as well as Boelter's, about $10,000 in cash, a revolver pistol in the glove box and another semi-automatic pistol in a cooler, the FBI says in the complaint. Boelter, 57, is accused of killing state Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband, Mark, and seriously wounding state Sen. John Hoffman and his wife, Yvette. The new information about Boelter and his family comes nearly a week after the attack that investigators say Boelter "extensively researched" and planned. 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Federal prosecutors charged him with several counts of murder and stalking. Minnesota authorities say they believe Boelter impersonated law enforcement to gain access to the victims' homes, exchanged gunfire with police and fled on foot outside Minneapolis. Governor of Minnesota Tim Walz called the killing of Hortman a "politically motivated assassination." What else to know about Boelter? At various times, Boelter has claimed to work in the food service industry. In other moments, he's claimed he runs large firms involved with 'security situations' overseas, including Africa, Eastern Europe and the Middle East. The recently unsealed court filings said Boelter worked at Red Lion, a 'security company and fishing outfit in Congo, Africa.' On LinkedIn, Boelter called himself CEO of Red Lion, according to reporting by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, part of the USA TODAY Network, though the Red Lion website linked to his LinkedIn profile was down and Boelter said he was open to work. He also appeared as a speaker for a Minnesota nonprofit serving African immigrant communities. Minnesota Africans United, a Brooklyn Park nonprofit, said in a statement that Boelter participated in an August 2022 virtual webinar about trade and investment in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Boelter's participation as a speaker was facilitated by a third-party, the statement said. He was never hired, paid or contracted by the nonprofit, which had no contact with him since the one-time appearance. A biography for the session described Boelter as having worked in Congo and for a security guard company. USA TODAY previously reported that a LinkedIn page believed to belong to Boelter showed he attended St. Cloud State University. University spokesperson Zach Dwyer confirmed Boelter graduated in 1996. Childhood friend called police on him David Carlson, 59, told Reuters that he has been sharing a house in Minneapolis with Boelter for a little more than a year and last saw him the night of June 13. At about 6 a.m. on June 14, he received a text from Boelter. "He said that he might be dead soon," said Carlson, who called police. Carlson, who has known Boelter since fourth grade, said Boelter worked for an eye donation center and stayed at the house because it was close to his job. Carlson said he feels betrayed by Boelter and heartbroken for the victims, adding: "His family has got to suffer through this." Federal authorities said the Boelter family home was in Green Isle, Minnesota, about one mile from where he was ultimately captured. The Minnesota city of around 600 people is about an hour southwest of the Twin Cities. Green Isle is a small community, Mayor Shane Sheets told USA TODAY. Boelter had no known political involvement or affiliation in the city, he said

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