Los Angeles Times

Keep ANWR wild

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Re “Not a good place to drill,” Opinion, Oct. 23

Thanks to Bill McKibben for reminding us that our natural open spaces are more important than ever for maintainin­g a habitable planet.

His reference to the bipartisan Climate Solutions Caucus in the House is especially apt. Thanks to our four local Republican representa­tives who have joined the caucus — Darrell Issa (Vista), Steve Knight (Palmdale), Mimi Walters (Irvine) and Ed Royce (Fullerton). If they resist the administra­tion’s efforts to turn the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge over to the developmen­t of fossil fuels, it will be a very significan­t step in demonstrat­ing that there are Republican­s who recognize the need to deal with climate change.

I am reminded of Henry David Thoreau’s quote that we are rich in proportion to what we can afford to leave alone. Let us be rich and make a sincere effort to preserve our natural heritage by leaving the refuge and other unspoiled places alone. Ann Rushton Sherman Oaks

As a lifelong Alaskan, I oppose drilling for oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, or ANWR. Why?

Because Alaskan villages, no longer protected by sea ice, are eroding into the ocean. Because the Gwich’in people rely on the caribou, which birth in ANWR. Because the 60degrees-below-zero winters of my youth are gone. Because polar bears are drowning as the ice melts. Because Alaskan roads are sinking as permafrost melts. Because my children are 19 and 21.

ANWR is one of the last great wilderness places on Earth, and oil is of the past and renewable energy is the future. This is why I am opposed to drilling in ANWR. Diane Preston

Fairbanks, Alaska

 ?? Getty Images ?? THE BUDGET under considerat­ion in Washington would allow drilling in a pristine part of Alaska.
Getty Images THE BUDGET under considerat­ion in Washington would allow drilling in a pristine part of Alaska.

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