Los Angeles Times - 29.08.2019

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A12 THURSDAY, AUGUST 29, 2019 LATIMES.COM/OPINION


OPINION


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T


he proposed Elandsolar proj-
ect in the Mojave Desert has the
potential to play an important
role in Los Angeles’ clean-energy
future, offering the city roughly
the same amount of power as a modest-
sized fossil-fuel-powered plant. And it would
be more affordable power too: The deal
struck by the Los Angeles Department of
Water and Power and Eland developer
8minute Solar Energy would deliver power
at less than 2 cents per kilowatt hour, the
cheapest rate of any solar farm in the U.S.
and less than the cost of power from natu-
ral-gas-fueled plants. It would include stor-
age for an extra fee, helping the city take ad-
vantage of the sun’s rays hours after sunset.
It’s a big deal for Angelenos, cutting cost
and carbon emissions simultaneously. It
would help the state with its ambitious
greenhouse gas reduction goals too. And
who would get the credit for all this environ-
mental wonderfulness? Mayor Eric Garcetti
and his Green New Deal initiative, which
calls for the city to obtain 55% of its power
from renewable sources by 2025.
The Garcetti connection could have
something to do with the last-minute
wrench tossed into the works by Interna-
tional Brotherhood of Electrical Workers
Local 18, which represents the city’s electri-
cal workers. The DWP’s board of commis-
sioners was set to approve the contract with
8minute on Tuesday, sending it to the City
Council, but two of the four commissioners
present didn’t vote for it. One of them cited
potential “problems with labor.” But the
deal includes labor protections, so what’s
the problem?
For its part, the IBEW emailed the Los
Angeles Times a statement asserting that
the DWP “has not complied with its con-
tractual obligations for this deal.” But the
city is under no obligations to get the union’s
approval for projects like these, and the
union has no role in approving the contract.
What it does have is animus for the mayor
and an open disdain for his sustainability
plan for Los Angeles.


Under Bryan D’Arcy’s leadership, the
DWP workers’ union has never been a fan of
Garcetti, supporting his opponent when he
first ran for the mayor’s office. But after
Garcetti led the move earlier this year to
phase out three DWP-operated natural-gas-
fired plants over the next 10 years (a good
move, by the way), things got nasty. The
union went ballistic, launching a public rela-
tions attack on the mayor’s green initiative
across a variety of media and online outlets,
saying it was just a sop to environmentalists
and would eliminate jobs, increase gas
prices and raise electricity rates.
It’s too bad that the city’s electrical work-
ers have taken such a short-sighted ap-
proach to the city’s switch to renewable en-
ergy. Reducing reliance on fossil fuel isn’t a
ideological position, it’s an existential chal-
lenge; after all, climate change endangers
the future of DWP employees and ratepay-
ers alike.
The IBEW’s opposition to Eland might
be nothing more than political payback, but
the union isn’t confining its fight against
Garcetti’s initiative to DWP contracts. It
also played a role in the recent special elec-
tion for the City Council seat in the north-
west San Fernando Valley.
The IBEW’s political action committee
backed the Republican candidate, John
Lee, dropping $290,000 into the effort. The
campaign included dishonest mailers that
portrayed his opponent, scientist and envi-
ronmental activist Loraine Lundquist, as a
socialist with an “extremist agenda.” The
fact that Lee ultimately won with the help of
the IBEW was surely not lost on any of the
city’s elected officials.
Garcetti has taken the high road so far,
and his office insists that a compromise can
be worked out. But this is getting ridiculous.
He appears to be allowing this political bully
to push him and his appointed commission-
ers around. This project needs to start con-
struction by December to qualify for the
30% federal tax credits that are helping keep
costs down; otherwise, the credits will drop
to 26% next year.
The union might have tremendous politi-
cal influence but has no actual power to stop
the city’s transition to renewable energy.
And if it continues to block the project with
baseless complaints, then Garcetti must
stand up for the interests of the entire city —
in fact, the entire state.

The IBEW vs. green power


The L.A. electrical workers’ union


opposes a vital solar plant. Mayor


Garcetti needs to rescue the deal.


U


nder even the bestof circum-
stances, the departure of the
United Kingdom from the Eu-
ropean Union will make life
harder for the people of Britain
and both parts of Ireland. But it seems in-
creasingly likely that Brexit will occur under
the worst of circumstances — with no agree-
ment between the U.K. and the EU to cush-
ion the economic and political damage.
On Wednesday, Prime Minister Boris
Johnson asked Queen Elizabeth to suspend
or “prorogue” Parliament from the second
week in September to Oct. 14, when she will
deliver a speech outlining the government’s
priorities. Johnson’s critics noted that the
suspension will give members of Parliament
even less time to debate and rally support
for measures to prevent the U.K. from leav-
ing the EU on Oct. 31 without an agreement
with Brussels. Jeremy Corbyn, the leader of
the opposition Labor Party, complained
that Johnson’s move was “an outrage and a
threat to our democracy.”
Johnson insisted that his motive in seek-
ing the suspension was to end a session that
had gone on too long and to focus Parlia-
ment’s attention on his government’s “bold
and ambitious domestic legislative
agenda.” Besides, he suggested, there would
still be time for Parliament to act if he were
to conclude a withdrawal agreement with
Brussels to replace the one negotiated by
his predecessor, Theresa May, which Parlia-
ment repeatedly refused to approve.
But Johnson’s past statements suggest
that he isn’t overly concerned about the
consequences of a “no-deal” Brexit despite
ample evidence that an abrupt rupture
would be disastrous for the British econo-
my.
In campaigning for the Conservative
Party leadership, Johnson promised to take
the U.K. out of the EU on Oct. 31 “do or die,
come what may.” He has blithely suggested
that any problems associated with Brexit —
such as the possible reimposition of a “hard
border” between Northern Ireland and the


Republic of Ireland — can be solved by tech-
nology and a ”can-do spirit.”
Such insouciance delights Brexit sup-
porters, who have been frustrated by the de-
lay in implementing a 2016 referendum in
which 52% of voters favored abandoning the
EU. It also has won Johnson the admiration
of President Trump, who tweeted Wednes-
day that “Boris is exactly what the U.K. has
been looking for.” (Trump also predicted —
perhaps correctly — that Corbyn would be
unsuccessful in seeking a parliamentary
vote of “no confidence” in Johnson.)
But there is a reason why implementing
the referendum has been arduous. Extricat-
ing the U.K. from the intricate commercial,
legal and political relationship it has devel-
oped with the rest of Europe is a devilishly
complex proposition — a reality about
which many “Leave” voters were blissfully
ignorant. It’s no accident that the withdraw-
al agreement May negotiated with Brussels
was 585 pages long — and still didn’t perma-
nently define trade relations between the
EU and the U.K.
Furthermore, despite Johnson’s gospel
of “can do,” many who have labored to bring
peace to Northern Ireland fear that Brexit
will undermine the peace process by erect-
ing barriers between the North, which is
part of the U.K., and the Republic of Ireland,
an independent nation that will remain in
the EU. That’s why the agreement May ne-
gotiated with the EU was accompanied by a
“backstop” provision that would have align-
ed the U.K. with the European customs
union (and preserved a close relationship
between Northern Ireland and the EU) until
final arrangements were agreed to.
Johnson has declared the backstop
dead. But if he intends to move forward with
Brexit, he needs to take seriously the impor-
tance of negotiating some alternative ar-
rangement with the EU that will inspire con-
fidence in those who have worked to bring
peace to Northern Ireland.
Ideally, voters in the U.K. would be given
an opportunity to reconsider their decision
to withdraw from the EU in light of the enor-
mous difficulties that have emerged since


  1. Unfortunately, a second referendum re-
    mains a distant hope. But if Brexit is inevi-
    table, “no deal” is not an option. Johnson
    should apply his “can do” philosophy to
    avoiding that outcome.


The crisis of a no-deal Brexit


U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson


seems determined to make this


process as difficult as possible.


The teen reading


crisis that isn’t
Re “The death of serious
reading among teens,”
Opinion, Aug. 23

As a high school stu-
dent used to older relatives
complaining about the
decay of my generation, I
found that Jeremey Ad-
ams’ op-ed article lament-
ing the decline among
teens of “serious reading”
struck a familiar note.
I love reading, but the
glorification of it over other
forms of entertainment
(embodied in Adams’ brag
that there are treasures
only readers understand)
needs to stop.
It often seems as if a
hierarchy of the arts is
enforced, with books at the
top, and everything else far
below. But books don’t
have more intrinsic value
than anything else. It’s the
thought and work put into
art that makes it valuable,
not the medium that con-
veys it.
Reading “The Picture of
Dorian Gray” changed my
outlook on life, but so did
the fantasy podcast “Rab-
bits.” The “Harry Potter”
books gave me endless
hours of entertainment
with their beautiful world-
building, but Minecraft
allowed me literally to
build my own. Does Adams
really believe that by hav-
ing this access to un-
bounded creativity — as
opposed to reading, say,
“Fifty Shades of Grey” —
teens’ “imaginations will be
stunted”?
Lee Gutman
New York

::


Around 20 years ago,
before the advent of social
networks, I attended a
dinner. Present was a
professor of English from
one of Los Angeles’ major
universities.
Hearing he taught
freshman English classes, I
asked what the students
were doing, and he replied
that he had assigned them
“Ordinary People” by
Judith Guest. I asked if his
students enjoyed the book.
“Oh, they didn’t read it,”
he replied. “I ran the movie
for them.”
John H. Mayer
Camarillo

::


Adams notes the stat-
istical drop in teen reading
between the 1970s and
today. My first thought is,
teens are busier now than
their counterparts from 50
years ago, with jobs and
extracurricular activities
crowding their non-school
hours.
My second thought is
that in the public library
system where I work, the
teen book collection boasts
healthy circulation stat-
istics. Publishers know
profit potential when they
see it: I happened to be a
teenager in the 1970s, and

young people today enjoy a
much broader selection of
reading material than I
ever did.
We all need to curb our
screen time. There are far
too many loud cellphone
conversations going on
around us. Mothers and
fathers stare at their
palmed phones while their
children attempt to engage
them.
Maybe this is not so
much a reading problem as
it is a screen addiction
problem.
Bethia
Sheean-Wallace
Fullerton

::


Adams has identified
the reason the world is
going to hell. No one reads
and no one thinks critically.
I take that back. We love
to read Facebook and
enjoy the selfies people
post, like the one of the guy
on the glacier in Greenland
or the one of the guy zip-
lining in the Amazon rain-
forest.
Yeah, those are classics.
Tony Wood
Claremont

If only he didn’t


have a gun


Re “Parents say they
begged officer not to shoot
them, son at Costco,” Aug.
27

The tragic shooting at
the Costco in Corona last
June shows why we need
more gun control.
The National Rifle
Assn. would have you
believe that only “bad” or
mentally unstable individ-
uals misuse guns. In fact,
all humans have moments
of anger, jealousy, drunk-
eness, depression or just
bad judgment that access
to a firearm can turn lethal.
I have a personal connec-
tion to the son of a police
officer who killed himself
while showing his friends
his father’s weapon.
What would have hap-
pened if the off-duty police
officer at Costco who killed
a man with schizophrenia
and seriously wounded his
parents had been un-
armed? Perhaps he would
have hit the young man
with his fists and that
would have ended it? And
why on Earth were the
aged mother and father
also shot?
Recently, when I went
to visit my husband at his
care facility, the employees
were being given instruc-
tions on what to do if there
was an active shooter. Is
this the type of country we
want to live in now?
Rita Skinner
Riverside

::


Los Angeles Police
Department Officer Sal-
vador Sanchez’s lawyer
said, “It’s just a terrible
tragedy that we have two
sets of well-meaning, good

parents who were trying to
help their children.”
He neglects to mention
that one parent had a gun
and shot the other “well-
meaning, good parents”
and their adult son.
There’s a good reason
California isn’t a “stand
your ground” state: Being
scared is a normal human
reaction and shouldn’t be
the excuse for shooting
unarmed people.
Barry Davis
Agoura Hills

Trump, money


and the G-


Re “A new ethical low for
Trump at G-7,” column,
Aug. 27

David Lazarus’ piece
about President Trump
offering his resort in South
Florida to host next year’s
G-7 summit appeared in
the Business section of the
Los Angeles Times, but it
should have been on the
Opinion page.
Lazarus called it an
infomercial and a blatant
commercial exploitation of
the presidency. Even
though the president
stated that he does not
intend to make money
hosting the event, Lazarus
called that assurance a
silly sentiment. Brian
Murphy, the expert in
colonial-era economics
(really?) quoted by Laza-
rus, stated that the Foun-
ding Fathers never directly
profited from their public
service.
I repeat: Trump stated
that he does not intend to
make money hosting the
event.
Connie Veldkamp
Laguna Niguel

::


Lazarus does an excel-
lent job explaining the
obvious conflict of interest
were the next G-7 summit
to be held at Trump Na-
tional Doral Miami.
There’s actually a fairly
simple solution available to
the president if he seriously
wants to move forward
with the idea. He insists he
doesn’t care about making
money, so he could simply
donate the entire resort to
the U.S. government.
Lazarus points out that
George Washington, who
heavily invested in real
estate, founded the Po-
tomac Co., which was
designed to increase the
value of his holdings. He
eventually willed his shares
in the company to an en-
dowment to create a uni-
versity in Washington.
So, there is a historical
precedent for Trump to
donate his company’s
property, an action from
which he would come out a
hero. Besides, if he’s truly a
multi-billionaire as he
insists, it’s no big deal,
right?
Peter Marquard
Northridge

::


Lazarus correctly
points out that Trump’s
plug for having next year’s
G-7 summit at his South
Florida resort is an egre-
gious conflict of interest.
Here’s another problem
with the suggestion: The
United States is a big coun-
try, and of all the beautiful
places where the G-7 could
meet next August, who
would choose Miami dur-
ing hurricane season?
Richard Merel
Hermosa Beach

Not his DMV


Re “DMV defense,” letter,
Aug. 27

One letter writer said
his appointment at the
DMV took less than an
hour.
When I recently re-
newed at the Costa Mesa
DMV with an appoint-
ment, it took just over four
hours. I had ample time to
observe the dysfunction
and thought of numerous
ways the DMV experience
could be vastly improved.
Michael Somogyi
Balboa Island

A rich man’s ‘service’


Re “Developer accused of skirting punishment,” Aug. 25

Since the time of Aristotle, political philosophers have
discussed the principle of governance with the consent of
the governed. This involves acceptance of the rule of law
and the perception of fairness in application of the law.
Since the public must see that the law is applied
equally to rich and poor alike, why would the Los Angeles
County Development Authority not release a report
showing that Mohamed Hadid, the developer who
pleaded no contest to criminal charges over construction
of a massive Bel-Air mansion, did in fact complete his
“community service”?
Moreover, what constitutes community service? Can
the Cochran Avenue Baptist Church be held accountable
for making sure Hadid did his work, or can it be bought
off with a new refrigerator and vacuum? If so, is that
considered fraud?
Hadid was sentenced to 200 hours of service, the
equivalent of five weeks of full-time work. It would not be
difficult to find out if he actually showed up.
Joel Jaffe
Beverly Hills

Francine OrrLos Angeles Times
MOHAMEDHadid pleaded no contest to charges
tied to the construction of this Bel-Air mansion.

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