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Dump flimflam flim·flam   Informal
n.
1. Nonsense; humbug.

2. A deception; a swindle.

tr.v. flim·flammed, flim·flam·ming, flim·flams
To swindle; cheat.
 

Re "More opinions on dump EIR EIR n. popular acronym for environmental impact report, required by many states as part of the application to a county or city for approval of a land development or project. (See: environmental impact report)  sought" (April 3:)

At my age, I have been scammed and flimflammed by the best of them, but the firm paid by Waste Management to compile the Bradley Landfill EIR is real good. The aesthetics/view section says the impact of the 43-foot height increase of the dump would not significantly impact the view from the surrounding area.

They illustrated with eight picture site locations. They conceded three were significant impacts on views. Just by moving the carefully selected sites a slight distance, all of the other five would be significant. The ugly mountain not only blocks my view and hurts my property value, but it does the same to hundreds if not thousands of view homes. With just the deception shown in this section, how good were they in the rest of the EIR?

- Butch Johnson For the former Dallas Cowboys player, see Butch Johnson (football).

Richard "Butch" Johnson (b. August 30 1955) is an archer from Woodstock, Connecticut in the United States. He has competed in the Summer Olympics four times, and was a part of the gold medal U.S.
 

Sun Valley

Labor problem festers

Re "Union leaders ousted from council chambers" (April 5):

In the City Council chambers, the president of the Engineers and Architects Association union and three others were arrested for protesting the unsettled labor dispute. Why does Mayor Villaraigosa let this problem fester fester /fes·ter/ (fes´ter) to suppurate superficially.

fes·ter
v.
1. To ulcerate.

2. To form pus; putrefy.

n.
An ulcer.
? The employees are demanding that their wages be tied to the Consumer Price Index, which doesn't seem unreasonable considering that their previous contract lacked this provision, resulting in an effective loss of purchasing power Purchasing Power

1. The value of a currency expressed in terms of the amount of goods or services that one unit of money can buy. Purchasing power is important because, all else being equal, inflation decreases the amount of goods or services you'd be able to purchase.

2.
.

A primary responsibility for the mayor is to conduct city business within its means. However, this does not mean that the existing city employees should be expected to endure pay cuts to make fiscal ends meet. Mayor Villaraigosa needs to get his house in order and settle this contract issue with the employees` union.

- Glenn Haugen

Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850.  

Cleaning City Hall

Re "Pay-to-play returns" (Editorial, April 4):

I don't get it. The Daily News editorial outlines the "crooked crook·ed  
adj.
1. Having or marked by bends, curves, or angles.

2. Informal Dishonest or unscrupulous; fraudulent.



crook
 deal" Fleishman-Hillard had with L.A.`s DWP DWP Department of Work and Pensions (UK)
DWP Drinking Water Program
DWP Dynamic Weapon Pricing (gamin, Counter-Strike: Source)
DWP Department of Water & Power
DWP Drinking Water Protection
. Also, Fleishman-Hillard "overbilled" the city by an unknown amount ... We just know they "settled" for $5.7 million. Third, Fleishman-Hillard funneled incalculable in·cal·cu·la·ble  
adj.
1.
a. Impossible to calculate: a mass of incalculable figures.

b. Too great to be calculated or reckoned: incalculable wealth.
 money to former Mayor James Hahn For the Iowa politician, see .

James Kenneth "Jim" Hahn (born July 3, 1950) is an American politician from the Democratic Party. He was the Deputy City Attorney (1975-1979), City Controller (1981-1985), City Attorney (1985-2001) and Mayor of Los Angeles, California
`s campaign, gave him "free P.R. advice" and "got a sweetheart, $3 million-a-year deal with the DWP."

There is only one question: Why isn't James Hahn being prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law along with the rest of them? That messy city needs a good house cleaning starting at the top.

- Betty Arenson

Valencia

Corrupt politicians

Re "DeLay's exit" (Editorial, April 5):

So Tom DeLay, who is surrounded by aides who have already pleaded or will soon plead guilty to multiple corruption charges, decides to resign. He says he is doing this to spare the voters from a bitter emotional re-election campaign. What a farce.

Does this idiot, one of the most powerful people in Congress, really think the voters are as stupid as he is? Whether it's corruption in Washington or all the corruption charges that persisted in the Hahn administration unless and until those who are guilty are handed some significant jail time it will be business as usual. These little rinky-dink fines that are imposed when the politicians plead guilty are not a deterrent.

- George Timko

West Hills

European time

Re "A hundred years in the making" (April 4):

Actually, the time/date sequence that only happens every 100 years will take place on May 4. The Europeans place the day before the month, e.g. "4 May 06" or 04, 05, 06. And given that our time is determined by Greenwich Mean Time Greenwich mean time or Greenwich meridian time (GMT), the former name for mean solar time at the original site of the Royal Observatory in Greenwich, England, which is located on the prime meridian.  at the meridian Meridian (mərĭd`ēən), city (1990 pop. 41,036), seat of Lauderdale co., E Miss., near the Ala. line; settled 1831, inc. 1860. , then the standard sequence would be European method. So on the fourth of May it will be 1 hour, 2 minutes, 3 seconds, fourth day, fifth month, sixth year.

Perhaps one could say it happens twice every 100 years and both in the same year depending if you are American or European. Ah, aren`t we Americans so egotistical to think that everyone in the world does things the way we do.

- Gary Lowe Gary Richard Lowe (born May 4, 1934 in Trenton, Michigan) was an American football defensive back in the NFL for the Washington Redskins and the Detroit Lions. He played college football for Michigan State University.  

Toluca Lake

Maybe deserved

Re "DWP articles" (Your Opinions, April 3):

Cheril Linn linn  
n. Scots
1. A waterfall.

2. A steep ravine.



[Scottish Gaelic linne, pool, waterfall.]
 Powers stated she was tired of all the constant bashing of the Department of Water and Power. Making sure that everyone knew that she was writing her message on her 15-minute break. Would that be the same 15-minute break that I observe between four and 10 DWP trucks parked in a fast-food restaurant in the 9300 block of Reseda Boulevard, Northridge, at 7:10 a.m. and 7:45 a.m. on just about any weekday?

It is my understanding that these men start work at 7 a.m. and are having breakfast on the taxpayers' time after being on the clock for 10 minutes. Just maybe DWP needs to be bashed.

- Ron Roth

Northridge

Need mental institutes

Re "Antonovich responds" (Your Opinions, April 4):

I agree with Supervisor Antonovich when he says that monies for the homeless should be funded from the health and mental health budgets. It seems to me that when we gave the mentally ill "their rights," closed institutions and let them go, it coincided with the vast increase of the homeless.

Any society has a percentage of those who drop out. We used to call them "hobos." I think that if we eliminated the mentally ill and the drug and alcohol addicts from the homeless, L.A.'s percentage would plummet. Veterans can get help through the VA, but we need mental institutions again where people will continue their medications and enjoy a decent life.

- Terri Andrews

Castaic

Let's be fair

For a number of years, I was a teacher at a trade school that had a largely international student body. We had students from countries in Asia, the Mideast, Europe, South America South America, fourth largest continent (1991 est. pop. 299,150,000), c.6,880,000 sq mi (17,819,000 sq km), the southern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere. , etc. Though only coming here for one or two years of training, they all arrived here fluent in English. Those who stayed on to find employment earned that right by going through the legal process of acquiring work visas and, in some cases, green cards.

It would be grossly unfair to ... folks like these, who have followed all the proper procedures, to allow any person or group to circumvent cir·cum·vent  
tr.v. cir·cum·vent·ed, cir·cum·vent·ing, cir·cum·vents
1. To surround (an enemy, for example); enclose or entrap.

2. To go around; bypass: circumvented the city.
 the law or be given preferential treatment.

- Bob Ahrens

Los Angeles

Good news

Re "Valley lift-off"(Editorial, April 3):

Yes, Airbus is indeed interested in bringing some of its many jobs to the Valley. This is very good news for thousands of skilled aerospace workers who live in and near the San Fernando Valley San Fernando Valley

Valley, southern California, U.S. Northwest of central Los Angeles, the valley is bounded by the San Gabriel, Santa Susana, and Santa Monica mountains and the Simi Hills.
.

Headlines and lead stories in newspapers and TV are mostly about bad news. Here is news that will bring work, bread and happiness for many and we hope you will continue to report on the progress of how well the "red carpet" is being rolled out by our city officials.

- Frank and Herta Neumeister

Sylmar

No living wage

Re "Death of middle class" (Your Opinions, April 4):

Pat Ramirez's letter and Dana Summers' cartoon both appearing on April 4 do invite a reply. Pat is correct on the "death of the middle class," but Summers' cartoon tells us why this has happened. The businesses that Summers identifies only hire illegal aliens because they are the only people willing to work for starvation wages starvation wages nplsueldo sg de hambre . I am willing to cut lawns for reasonable pay.

Construction workers were earning $15 to $20 per hour with benefits. Today construction workers will do the jobs for $10 per hour and no benefits. As Pat wrote, the employers won't pay a living wage. The president is correct, too, when he says these are jobs Americans won't do. He just leaves off the statement that our society won't pay a living wage.

- Don Evans

Canoga Park
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Title Annotation:Editorial
Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Article Type:Editorial
Date:Apr 6, 2006
Words:1270
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