Letters to the Editor - January 26

A tribute to Ann Cooley Buckley

I’ve just seen your warm obituary (January 5) on Ann Cooley Buckley, who was surely one of the most wonderful human beings to have graced our country these past 80 years. You  speak  about  how  she  felt  she had a mission after the terrible accident that left her crippled from the neck down. That was a graceful tribute, but what I remember from that period elucidates strikingly the huge love in her character.

My  sister,  Jane Buckley Smith, had been dying all this while of emphysema. Just before Ann’s accident, Janie had had to be rushed to the hospital. As soon  as I heard about the terrible thing that had happened to Ann, I began calling from where I live in Camden, S.C. On the second or third day following, she was able to speak into the mouthpiece of the telephone. These were her words: “Reid? Reid? How is Janie doing?”

Reid Buckley
Camden, S.C.

Letter went undelivered

At a time when we read that the U.S. mail is in serious trouble, a recent incident makes me think they deserve to be in trouble.

I sent a condolence note to friends in Lakeville who suffered a terrible loss. I looked up their address in the phone book. It had a street number. Post office boxes are not listed. Twice my letter came back and finally I sent an email. They told me the Lakeville post office won’t deliver mail to people with PO boxes when said box is not addressed.

I had never sent this family a mailing before and had no idea they were to be addressed via a box rather than a street address.  How would anyone know? Down with 06039!

John Miller
Cornwall Bridge

 

FFA members show appreciation

The Housatonic Valley FFA would like to thank the community for all of their support during our recent holiday sale. We would especially like to thank our alumni and the community members who helped at our production nights. Our community’s support is really appreciated and assists us tremendously.

This year was a success for the Housatonic Valley FFA and we were happy to share our profits with the community by donating to our four local food banks.

Brian Saccardi
Housatonic Valley FFA
Falls Village

 

Hospital values community partnerships

 

On behalf of the team at Sharon Hospital, I would like to express our sincere appreciation to the staff at Geer Village for hosting our “New Year — New You” event this past Saturday in the midst of a snowstorm. The event went very well and the support of John Horstman, Linda Pierce, Lynn Goldman and Sam Yasmer was very much appreciated.

Sharon Hospital is proud of our community partnership with the team at Geer Village. To our staff who traveled from near and far to host this community wellness screening and lecture on a snowy Saturday morning, thank you. To Dr. Rashkoff, Jim Hutchison, Letha Walters, Anne MacNeil, Melissa Braislin, Jessica Bannerman, Rachel Sobol, Jackie Gordon, Jenna Maranzano, Monica Hay, volunteer Sara Musselman and yoga instructor Roberta Roll, your dedication to the health of our community and to Sharon Hospital is greatly appreciated.

And to Nancy Vaughn, Malcolm Mackenzie and the staff at The Hotchkiss School, thank you very much for hosting our hospital family Saturday evening. Everyone who came to skate really enjoyed themselves. It was a wonderful evening. Thank you for the hot chocolate and cookies. We truly appreciate our partnership.

Jill Groody Musselman
Sharon Hospital
Sharon

 

Another view of Cordray, Dodd-Frank

 

This is in response to Earl Brecher’s letter of Jan. 19.

Marc Dann (D) was elected attorney general of Ohio in 2006. Fifteen months later he resigned in disgrace. Nancy Rogers was appointed to the office by Governor Strickland (D). She served eight months but declined to run in the special election in 2008 to complete Dann’s term. Enter Richard Cordray, who did run and beat Republican Michael Crities, in part no doubt by outspending Crities in the election 30 to 1. Cordray ran for his first full term in 2010 and though he may be just the man to go “after fraud in lending to the public” in Mr. Brecher’s words, that opinion wasn’t shared by the voters of Ohio; two years after winning a special election by 17 percentage points, he lost. Maybe his constituents were not impressed with Cordray’s on-the-job-training either. Maybe his qualifications for Consumer Finance Protection Bureau director are political?

The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act is hailed by Mr. Brecher as the vehicle to “stop irresponsible mortgage lending by unregulated mortgage brokers [and] unregulated real estate racketeers like Countrywide Financial.” The finance/investment system was badly damaged but Dodd-Frank will not fix it; it will go a long way to taking the “free” out of “free enterprise” and replacing it with stifling government control — 848 pages of it.

Congress created the mess with 30 years of lending regulation designed to make it possible for every American to purchase a home — with little regard to the person’s means or preparedness. Without the meddling of Congress, this crisis never would have come to be. But it did.         

Despite President Bush and his administration publicly warning of the dangers underlying the practices of these two mortgage giants no fewer than 18 times, and despite proposing clear steps that could be undertaken to avoid a financial meltdown. Why? I give you Congress, specifically Dodd and Frank.

Dodd, who received in 2003 nearly $800,000 in cut-rate mortgages from the Countrywide “racketeers” as chair of the Senate Banking Committee and Frank, who led the field to block reforms to Fannie and Freddie by Bush as both senior Democrat member and at times chair of the House Financial Services Committee. Frank labeled the mortgage giants “financially sound,” called the dangers of collapse “artificial” and labeled Bush’s attempts to institute reform “inane.” Ordinary citizens, which members of Congress are supposed to be, would be in prison for actions like these. Having Dodd-Frank author this legislation is like having the SEC hire Bonnie and Clyde to create a white paper on bank security.

Finally when the bill was voted upon in 2010, Republicans did not control the House. The bill, signed into law on July 21, 2010, was passed by the 111th Congress where in the House Democrats held a 257 to 178 edge and in the Senate a 57 to 41 edge not including two independents who caucus with the Democrats.

Let’s return to rule of law by restricting Congress and Presidential fiat; that would be meaningful reform.

Brian Kavanagh
West Cornwall

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