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Missing
Editor:
Thank you for the descriptive profile of Denver Nelson, and for letting us know we’ve lost a beloved community member (“Remembering Denver Nelson: 1941 to 2021,” March 11). I’m sure many people are feeling this loss deeply.
I’m glad Nelson had the opportunity to ride his jet boat up the Klamath to see the 2002 fish kill, and that it led him to work to protect the river. I appreciate the reporting on his friendship with Connie Stewart and his willingness to speak his opinion regardless of the impact. I’m grateful to be informed about people who’ve made a difference in our community.
However, after reading the two-page profile of Nelson in the opening pages of the Journal, I was stung to turn to the Calendar on page 20 and read a passing one-sentence mention of Jene McCovey’s death, which I hadn’t known about and which wasn’t previously reported anywhere in the Journal. Jene was a disabled Yurok woman who dedicated her life to the local environmental movement, and had a meaningful impact on many, myself included. Though she spent most of her life confined to a wheelchair after a car accident in her youth, McCovey was very actively involved in a variety of local causes, from stopping pesticide spraying on Yurok land to Klamath dam removal and well beyond. She was at many of the
Terry Torgerson
local rallies and protests I’ve attended over the years, often leading the group in song and prayer.
McCovey died three weeks before Nelson. Where is the profile of her?
In the Feb. 11 Times-Standard (thank you, T-S, for covering McCovey’s death), her friend Patty Clary is quoted as saying, “She wasn’t an aggressive person in any way at all … she was very peaceful in her actions.” I wish the Journal would dedicate some pages to celebrating the life of this peaceful yet passionate activist who made meaningful and long-lasting contributions to our community. Maggie McKnight, Arcata
A ‘Massive’ Cost
Editor:
J.A. Savage (“Reward Water’s Worth,” March 11) says, “Water-wasting industries like nuclear power plants and pulp mills of the 1960s were the old, clear-cutting, resource-wasting Humboldt County. We will never go back to that kind of industry, nor do we want to.”
Unfortunately, we still have the Humboldt Sawmill power plant in Scotia, which burns mill waste to produce energy and massive global warming emissions. How massive? In 2019, the California Air Resource Board said the plant emitted 284,800 metric tons of CO2 (or gases with equivalent warming potential). Since the county planning department says passenger vehicles in 2018 emitted 394,362 metric tons of CO2, curtailing the emissions from this one plant would be equivalent to converting 72 percent of our passenger cars into zero emission electric vehicles.
But global warming emissions are only part of it. Burning mill waste for power is much more polluting even than burning coal. A recent peer-reviewed study found that if we eliminated air pollution in California, “The annualized monetary benefits ($215 billion) exceed the Green House Gas abatement cost ($106 billion) by $109 billion.”
Unfortunately, the Redwood Coast Energy Authority (RCEA), is proposing to give the biomass plant a new 10-year contract. At the same time, the RCEA Community Advisory Board has just sent a report to the RCEA Board pointing out that there are alternative uses of mill waste that would provide employment but sequester CO2 rather than blasting it into the atmosphere. Since the cost of emitting CO2 is $51 per ton, the RCEA is proposing to impose avoidable costs of $142 million on the world over the next 10 years.
Please tell your representative to RCEA to drop biomass power and contract for solar until offshore wind is available. It’s not too late to cancel this contract with the past.
Daniel Chandler, Trinidad
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