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        <title>Sound Off for Oct. 12, 2008 - Sound Off - soundoff&apos;s Blog - Bakersfield.com</title>
        <link>http://people.bakersfield.com/home/Blog/soundoff/35672</link>
        <description>Reader: I noticed your response to a
writer in today&amp;rsquo;s paper who complained
that you removed two paragraphs from an
article that were critical of Sarah Palin. I
admire your decision not to print &amp;ldquo;anonymous&amp;rdquo;
comments. I am concerned, however,
about the following:
A New York Times article, printed in the
Sept. 21 Californian bore this headline:
&amp;ldquo;Vice presidential debate gets more structure
to satisfy Palin concerns.&amp;rdquo; Hmm?
Sounds like maybe the McCain/Palin &amp;ldquo;people&amp;rdquo;
are trying to guide the content of the
debate, doesn&amp;rsquo;t it?
Further down in the article I read the following:
&amp;ldquo;Both the McCain and Obama campaigns
have similar concerns about the vice
presidential matchup in St. Louis: that
Palin, as a new player in national politics, or
Biden, as a loquacious and gaffe-prone
speaker, could commit a momentumchanging
misstep.&amp;rdquo;
I&amp;rsquo;m curious to know why the headline for
that article only mentioned the supposed
concerns the Palin camp had.
--Carolin Reid
Jenner: Palin&amp;rsquo;s campaign staff called for
the stricter rules. The Biden camp was
happy to go along with them, but the actual
request came from Palin&amp;rsquo;s people.
■ ■ ■
Reader: We are very disappointed in the
coverage, or lack thereof, in the 20th District
congressional race between Jim Lopez
and Jim Costa. Jim Costa has been representing
the Central Valley for over 20 years
and today we have over 350 square miles of
fertile farm land lying dormant because his
party, the Democrat Party, has restricted the
development of new water sources.
Congressman Costa has been talking
about the need of water for over 25 years
with no results! Jim Lopez worked in the
fields as a young man and we are convinced
he will fight to get additional water for the
Central Valley. We are convinced that Jim
Lopez will work much harder than Jim
Costa to improve this unacceptable situation.
We are personally sick and tired of
Democrats portraying themselves as being
concerned about the poor and working
class when in fact nothing could be further
from the truth!
&amp;mdash; John Dawson, director of Lincoln Pacheco
Center, signed by 40 individuals
Jenner: We are giving this race attention,
as evidenced by the story on today&amp;rsquo;s Local
cover. We were one of the only news organizations
to attend Jim Lopez&amp;rsquo;s press conference
on Tuesday. Even though Jim Costa is
heavily favored in this race, we are putting
Jim Lopez&amp;rsquo;s positions in front of readers.
We are not tagging along with the candidates
as they campaign. But we will continue
to cover this race as warranted.
■ ■ ■
Reader: First, let me say how much I
enjoy Sound Off. It is informative, entertaining,
thought-provoking and at times
very amusing to read what gets some people
in Bakersfield charged up. I do love the
finesse you have in handling this column. I
feel feedback is vitally important to continue
to offer a quality product.
As a customer of PG&amp;amp;E and a citizen of
Bakersfield, I was very interested in the letter
to the editor regarding the rate hike
which our illustrious City Council voted on
to improve our roads. (Of course, that is on
top of the 6% rate hike which PG&amp;amp;E has
mandated themselves!)
The letter writer
mentioned that the
proposal will be discussed
again in three
weeks, on Oct 8. Well, I checked the date on
the paper I was ready and it was dated
OCTOBER 9, 2008.
Rats, all hope was now dashed of attending
this meeting or having any input at all!
Having said that, I have a couple of questions.
It was obvious that the letter was written
three weeks prior, why was it published
so late? Since it obviously missed the date of
said meeting, why was it published at all?
Thank you in advance for addressing this.
&amp;mdash; Kim Bean
Editorial Page Editor Dianne Hardisty
responds: Kim, I am sorry we missed the
date in the letter. As we near elections, the
backlog of time-sensitive letters awaiting
publication swells. Add to this the economic
meltdown and the volume of letters to
the editor has greatly increased.
We try to spot time-sensitive letters and
place them at the head of the publication
line. This one slipped through the cracks.
■ ■ ■
Reader: I find the new smaller-sized format
and cleaner bolder print to be most
satisfying. I thoroughly enjoy The
Californian and read it every morning.
However, I have a concern about an article
printed Oct. 4 about a government grant
given to Cal State Bakersfield. The way it
read to me was the grant concerning children&amp;rsquo;s
health issues from birth to age 21 was
a mandatory study and not voluntary,
meaning the parents have no decision on
whether or not their child is in the study.
Surely I must be wrong and the parents
would have to give written consent for this
study. I hope the government isn&amp;rsquo;t deciding
what parents and their children have to be a
part of without it being voluntary on their
part.
Could you please clarify this issue for me.
Thank you for your consideration of my
concern.
Sincerely,
&amp;mdash; Scott Tellermann
Jenner: According to the study&amp;rsquo;s Web site,
participation in the study is voluntary. I&amp;rsquo;m
sorry we didn&amp;rsquo;t make that clear.
■ ■ ■
Reader: I&amp;rsquo;m calling in regard to the content
or lack of in The Californian. I&amp;rsquo;ve been
a subscriber for years. My father was military
editor of the Los Angeles Times. I no
longer can find any substance to your
newspaper. In other words, none of my
stocks are covered, except for once a week,
the Sports has become extinct almost and
there&amp;rsquo;s nothing newsworthy even locally.
You are just absolutely falling apart and
something needs to be done. I know you
have changed with the color and the smaller
size and you are trying to pinch as many
pennies as you can, it looks like to stay in
business. Even the Times has cut down their
size but they have some substance left in
their newspaper. It appears to me the Los
Angeles Times is going to cause an awful lot
of us to discontinue The Californian. It&amp;rsquo;s
sad.
It&amp;rsquo;s been a good newspaper over the years,
but it just keeps getting worse and worse
and worse. I believe this should go on to the
owners, the board of directors and certainly
to the managing editor. There is no substance
whatsoever to this newspaper.
Thank you.
&amp;mdash; Tony Art
Jenner: Tony, I&amp;rsquo;m sorry you&amp;rsquo;ve reached
such a low opinion of our newspaper.
Yes, we&amp;rsquo;re smaller than we were a couple
of years ago. And if you want more national
or world news, the Times does have more.
But if you care about local coverage, I maintain
you still need to read The Californian.
We are committed to providing quality
local coverage, and will continue that focus.
We may be smaller, but I&amp;rsquo;d encourage you to
stay the course.
I believe our community needs us now
more than ever.
This feedback forum is designed to give
readers an easy way to voice criticisms and
compliments or ask questions about news
coverage. </description>
        <itunes:summary>Reader: I noticed your response to a
writer in today&amp;rsquo;s paper who complained
that you removed two paragraphs from an
article that were critical of Sarah Palin. I
admire your decision not to print &amp;ldquo;anonymous&amp;rdquo;
comments. I am concerned, however,
about the following:
A New York Times article, printed in the
Sept. 21 Californian bore this headline:
&amp;ldquo;Vice presidential debate gets more structure
to satisfy Palin concerns.&amp;rdquo; Hmm?
Sounds like maybe the McCain/Palin &amp;ldquo;people&amp;rdquo;
are trying to guide the content of the
debate, doesn&amp;rsquo;t it?
Further down in the article I read the following:
&amp;ldquo;Both the McCain and Obama campaigns
have similar concerns about the vice
presidential matchup in St. Louis: that
Palin, as a new player in national politics, or
Biden, as a loquacious and gaffe-prone
speaker, could commit a momentumchanging
misstep.&amp;rdquo;
I&amp;rsquo;m curious to know why the headline for
that article only mentioned the supposed
concerns the Palin camp had.
--Carolin Reid
Jenner: Palin&amp;rsquo;s campaign staff called for
the stricter rules. The Biden camp was
happy to go along with them, but the actual
request came from Palin&amp;rsquo;s people.
■ ■ ■
Reader: We are very disappointed in the
coverage, or lack thereof, in the 20th District
congressional race between Jim Lopez
and Jim Costa. Jim Costa has been representing
the Central Valley for over 20 years
and today we have over 350 square miles of
fertile farm land lying dormant because his
party, the Democrat Party, has restricted the
development of new water sources.
Congressman Costa has been talking
about the need of water for over 25 years
with no results! Jim Lopez worked in the
fields as a young man and we are convinced
he will fight to get additional water for the
Central Valley. We are convinced that Jim
Lopez will work much harder than Jim
Costa to improve this unacceptable situation.
We are personally sick and tired of
Democrats portraying themselves as being
concerned about the poor and working
class when in fact nothing could be further
from the truth!
&amp;mdash; John Dawson, director of Lincoln Pacheco
Center, signed by 40 individuals
Jenner: We are giving this race attention,
as evidenced by the story on today&amp;rsquo;s Local
cover. We were one of the only news organizations
to attend Jim Lopez&amp;rsquo;s press conference
on Tuesday. Even though Jim Costa is
heavily favored in this race, we are putting
Jim Lopez&amp;rsquo;s positions in front of readers.
We are not tagging along with the candidates
as they campaign. But we will continue
to cover this race as warranted.
■ ■ ■
Reader: First, let me say how much I
enjoy Sound Off. It is informative, entertaining,
thought-provoking and at times
very amusing to read what gets some people
in Bakersfield charged up. I do love the
finesse you have in handling this column. I
feel feedback is vitally important to continue
to offer a quality product.
As a customer of PG&amp;amp;E and a citizen of
Bakersfield, I was very interested in the letter
to the editor regarding the rate hike
which our illustrious City Council voted on
to improve our roads. (Of course, that is on
top of the 6% rate hike which PG&amp;amp;E has
mandated themselves!)
The letter writer
mentioned that the
proposal will be discussed
again in three
weeks, on Oct 8. Well, I checked the date on
the paper I was ready and it was dated
OCTOBER 9, 2008.
Rats, all hope was now dashed of attending
this meeting or having any input at all!
Having said that, I have a couple of questions.
It was obvious that the letter was written
three weeks prior, why was it published
so late? Since it obviously missed the date of
said meeting, why was it published at all?
Thank you in advance for addressing this.
&amp;mdash; Kim Bean
Editorial Page Editor Dianne Hardisty
responds: Kim, I am sorry we missed the
date in the letter. As we near elections, the
backlog of time-sensitive letters awaiting
publication swells. Add to this the economic
meltdown and the volume of letters to
the editor has greatly increased.
We try to spot time-sensitive letters and
place them at the head of the publication
line. This one slipped through the cracks.
■ ■ ■
Reader: I find the new smaller-sized format
and cleaner bolder print to be most
satisfying. I thoroughly enjoy The
Californian and read it every morning.
However, I have a concern about an article
printed Oct. 4 about a government grant
given to Cal State Bakersfield. The way it
read to me was the grant concerning children&amp;rsquo;s
health issues from birth to age 21 was
a mandatory study and not voluntary,
meaning the parents have no decision on
whether or not their child is in the study.
Surely I must be wrong and the parents
would have to give written consent for this
study. I hope the government isn&amp;rsquo;t deciding
what parents and their children have to be a
part of without it being voluntary on their
part.
Could you please clarify this issue for me.
Thank you for your consideration of my
concern.
Sincerely,
&amp;mdash; Scott Tellermann
Jenner: According to the study&amp;rsquo;s Web site,
participation in the study is voluntary. I&amp;rsquo;m
sorry we didn&amp;rsquo;t make that clear.
■ ■ ■
Reader: I&amp;rsquo;m calling in regard to the content
or lack of in The Californian. I&amp;rsquo;ve been
a subscriber for years. My father was military
editor of the Los Angeles Times. I no
longer can find any substance to your
newspaper. In other words, none of my
stocks are covered, except for once a week,
the Sports has become extinct almost and
there&amp;rsquo;s nothing newsworthy even locally.
You are just absolutely falling apart and
something needs to be done. I know you
have changed with the color and the smaller
size and you are trying to pinch as many
pennies as you can, it looks like to stay in
business. Even the Times has cut down their
size but they have some substance left in
their newspaper. It appears to me the Los
Angeles Times is going to cause an awful lot
of us to discontinue The Californian. It&amp;rsquo;s
sad.
It&amp;rsquo;s been a good newspaper over the years,
but it just keeps getting worse and worse
and worse. I believe this should go on to the
owners, the board of directors and certainly
to the managing editor. There is no substance
whatsoever to this newspaper.
Thank you.
&amp;mdash; Tony Art
Jenner: Tony, I&amp;rsquo;m sorry you&amp;rsquo;ve reached
such a low opinion of our newspaper.
Yes, we&amp;rsquo;re smaller than we were a couple
of years ago. And if you want more national
or world news, the Times does have more.
But if you care about local coverage, I maintain
you still need to read The Californian.
We are committed to providing quality
local coverage, and will continue that focus.
We may be smaller, but I&amp;rsquo;d encourage you to
stay the course.
I believe our community needs us now
more than ever.
This feedback forum is designed to give
readers an easy way to voice criticisms and
compliments or ask questions about news
coverage. </itunes:summary>
        <language>en-us</language>
        <pubDate>Mon, 20 Oct 2008 09:45:15 PDT</pubDate>
                
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