Letters to the Editor - The Lakeville Journal - 6-30-22

Finding common ground

On June 16, Mark Godburn wrote a letter arguing that “compromise is needed on both abortion and guns”.  This is probably the first time that Mr. Godburn and I have agreed on much of anything, but agree with him I do. Extreme ideologies rarely serve the public good, nor reflect the attitudes of the vast center of public opinion.

In the case of the abortion, the majority of people would probably agree that the decision to have an abortion before fetal viability is the woman’s. After that point, that decision could only be based on rape, incest, newly discovered fetal anomalies that reveal the fetus is not viable, and the woman’s physical and mental health.

Similarly, responsible gun owners and non-gun owners alike could agree on a set of gun violence prevention laws if only the NRA and gun manufacturers didn’t whip up fears that any sensible laws would inevitably lead to all guns being made illegal.  (Connecticut is among the states with the lowest level of gun violence precisely because it has sensible laws.)

So, if Mr. Godburn and I can agree on ways to move forward on two of the most contentious issues in this country, perhaps there is hope to get ourselves out of this muddle.

Barbara Maltby

Lakeville

 

All reproductive rights are critical

The flashing lights and fear mongering of the culture war diminishes our political process. Life is not just ‘pro’ and ‘anti,’ red or blue.  

Gov. Lamont signed Public Act 22-19, a first-in-the-nation law that will protect medical providers and patients seeking abortion care in Connecticut who may be traveling from other states that have outlawed abortion.  

Supporting our fellow Americans is a kind act.

Let’s be clear, this Public Act does not add to the gynecological protections of Connecticut women.

The state of Connecticut and the Reproductive Rights Caucus, of which Maria Horn is a member, need to turn their eyes to a real danger in the rural north of our state, at hospitals in Sharon, Windham and Stafford Springs.

A woman’s right to self-determination is indisputable.  In Connecticut’s rural areas women who want to give birth are denied access to safe birthing. The pressure from corporate healthcare systems seeking profits renders “low volume” hospitals, like Sharon Hospital, obsolete by eliminating women’s gynecological services to save money. This choice by Nuvance risks the lives of everyone in the Sharon Hospital catchment area.  Maternity services require a hospital to have an Operating Room available for use, 24/7, allowing us to have a full-service surgical theatre, without it our healthcare access will be highly compromised.

The distance from Sharon Hospital to Charlotte Hungerford, 25 miles; Vassar Brothers, 33 miles; Danbury Hospital, 41 miles; Fairview Hospital, 25 miles.

Women arriving at Sharon Hospital’s ER in labor cannot be shipped out, putting the life of the mother and child at risk and burden on the ER doctors, our last line of defense. The office of VP Harris says that “Pregnant women who live in rural communities are about 60 percent more likely to die, before, during, or following birth than women in urban communities.”  

The state is building the long overdue Federally Qualified Health Clinic in Canaan, but that facility does not have the capacity to deliver babies or perform surgery. 

Dr. Jerome Chaffee opened Sharon Hospital in 1909, and moved it to the current location in 1916, 96 years ago. He dedicated his life to earning the trust of the community and with it built the hospital. Will Christina McCulloch, the new president of Sharon Hospital, view her job in reverence for the position of honor she holds in our community? Can she be an advocate for all women’s gynecological services, working with the community and the state to formulate solutions?  Up to now, Nuvance has chosen to prioritize immediate profits instead of the long-term health and well-being of our community. 

We need another Public Act protecting ALL women’s reproductive rights in our state and a commitment by the assembly and the governor to support rural healthcare. The Reproductive Rights Caucus must include access to safe birthing as well as abortions in their mission statement.

Join me in standing up for the health and well-being of our community.  Contact me at drittermoore@gmail.com.   And contact all elected officials.

We are stronger together.

Deborah Ritter Moore

Founding Member of

The Committee for Rural Reproductive Rights

Sharon

 

Blame on shootings

While reading Robert Buccino’s letter to the editor June 16, I must agree, he hit the nail on the head. He wrote the plain truth. When we elected our politicians to office, they took an oath to uphold, defend the Constitution of the United States. When mass shootings occur across America, there becomes a shift to blame. We open a Pandora’s box, where there is finger pointing and no one takes the blame.

How dare they look at these poor children whose life’s dreams are taken away to leave empty hearts and everlasting sadness to the parents and friends. Gun restrictions, no matter the change, the tougher they get, aren’t going change a thing. The NRA raising banners and protest blame mental illness, which is always their best defense and no one ever disputed any difference. Why not.

Michael Parmalee

North Canaan

 

RTC is once again vibrant in Salisbury

Despite windy and chilly weather, more than 70 Republicans turned out on June 18 for a Meet The Candidates Event in Lakeville sponsored by the Salisbury Republican Town Committee. The audience heard from most of the statewide candidates running in the November election as well as candidates for Congress, the State legislature and Probate Court.

Following an enthusiastic Pledge of Allegiance, we first heard from Laura Devlin, gubernatorial candidate Bob Stefanowski’s running mate for Lt. Governor.  Ms. Devlin is a formidable legislator from Fairfield County who has served in the General Assembly since 2016. While the Democrats swept every statewide office in 2018, Stefanowski came the closest to winning and has been extremely active in getting out his message for more than a year.  Mary Fay, who is running for Comptroller and has spent her entire career in finance, stressed the State’s need to get control over its budget and especially its unfunded pension and benefit liabilities.  Three candidates for the U.S. Senate and two for Secretary of The State, all of whom will compete in the August primary, were also heard from.

The most dynamic speaker was George Logan, an African-American businessman and two-term member of the State Senate who is running for Congress.  George is a forceful candidate with a winning personality; he elicited numerous standing ovations at the 5th District convention where he was unanimously nominated.  Steve Harding, a Danbury attorney who  represents Brookfield in the General Assembly, is the party’s candidate for the 30th Senate District, a seat long held by the popular Craig Miner.  Chris Dupont of Goshen, an executive in a consulting firm, was recently tapped to run for the 64th General Assembly District.

This event was a vivid demonstration that the Republican party has a wealth of highly-qualified candidates and that the party is looking forward, not backward, to the Fall election.

Tom Morrison

Chair, Salisbury Republican Town Committee

Salisbury

 

Mere partisan amatuerism now for the USA?

I felt like crying for him, and for us.

It’s not that I get weepy all that much when I watch the January 6th Committee hearings or anything. But, in this case, how could you not choke up watching such a lifelong  staunch defender of conservative law and order, retired Federal Appellate Court Judge Luttig near the end of the latest hearing, struggle to plumb the murky swirling depths of emotion roiling inside. This, as if a lifelong cherished partnership of shared worth and value was exposed for all to see -as a newly minted fraud of epic, nay, historical proportions.

He forced himself to confront, on a worldwide political stage of fact-finding and conscience, the consequences of a recent (and still active) power-mad conspiracy, filled with dangerous decision-making that only this country, ‘the last best hope for the world’ could produce. He finally, painfully, uttered the most chilling words this country has heard since John Wilkes Booth infamous “Sic semper tyrannis! (Ever thus to tyrants!) The South is avenged,” after assassinating President Abraham Lincoln.

Judge Luttig called former President Trump a “clear and present danger” to United States democracy. “The former president, his allies and supporters pledge that in the presidential election of 2024, if the former president or his anointed successor as the Republican Party presidential candidate were to lose that election, that they would attempt to overturn that 2024 election in the same way they attempted to overturn the 2020 election—but succeed in 2024 where they failed in 2020.”      

Where do you start to attempt to wrap your brain around the implications of such a dark cavernous assessment of our near future? Especially since this grim warning comes from such a well respected devotee of that very same political party.

We, the United States of America, are now faced with what I call ‘the professional’s dilemma’. ‘You know the standards of conduct are high for a very good reason, - to protect the public interest. And it will take a supreme dedication to honesty to fulfill the promises made.’

The founding of our country was an undertaking that required passion, character and a shared dedication to selflessness. Can we find it within us to rededicate ourselves to fulfill the timeless principles of our forefathers (and mothers), to rise above the narrow selfishness of “I” and fully embrace the inspired aspiration to serve the common good, to do the necessary and difficult work to sustain the dream?

Are we, as a country, capable and willing to reinvest in our national character to rediscover what it means to be a truly professional nation?   Or, have we simply, selfishly and lazily,  devolved down to mere partisan amateurism?

As Benjamin Franklin answered while exiting the Constitutional Convention to the question of what form of government the Colonies had adopted “A Republic, if you can keep it.”   

Michael Moschen

Cornwall Bridge

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