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LettersPublished on February 29, 1996Flush With Success Down the toilet. Thank God for Patricia Calhoun! I, too, was irritated to the point of hysteria by Western Pacific's cheerfulness. I would gladly pay more for less of the games and good humor. And for those passengers, like Ms. Calhoun, who are horrified by the Colorado Springs airport's baggage area, remember those words made famous at Denver International Airport: Carry on. Judith Robinson Land of Opportunity Admittedly, some vacant land which is only nominally agricultural is really held by speculators, waiting for it to fully ripen for subdividing or industrial use. Even so, how is that unfair? The owners receive little or no income from it, but government still collects a tribute based on the land's historical use while providing no services. Haven't we had enough of coercive government without empowering it to bludgeon citizens into selling their property before they are ready? But it is the attack on small rural acreages that gores my ox. People who buy such property drill their own water wells, install their own septic systems and forego the full range of government services for which they pay taxes. The houses they live in are evaluated just like houses in the city, but the acreage surrounding them is not equivalent to so many vacant city lots waiting for buyers. The land itself has no premium value except for the aesthetic satisfaction it provides the owners, plus whatever income there is to be earned from small-time agricultural use. Zoning it agricultural is only justice--which must be why some bureaucrats chafe. Raising taxes on rural homeowners would force some of them to sell out, and give others an incentive to subdivide into smaller tracts, if the zoning authorities would let them. What is needed in the name of fairness is not legislation to make some rural property owners pay more taxes. What is needed are more legal restraints on the government's appetite for money. With 45 percent of our income already taken by the various levels of government, Dexheimer is on the wrong story. How about one detailing where the money is spent? Norman Ely I have no problem with these tax breaks for agriculture, because the result of "fair" taxation would be too chilling to contemplate. There would be nonstop concrete from Fort Collins to Pueblo. Is this what we want? I personally enjoy seeing livestock, even bees or nothing at all, on privately owned, undeveloped land in Colorado. Debbi Knox Blood Will Tell I have been an investor in Somatogen for over five years and must confess that the only time I really understood the company was after reading Mr. Prendergast's article.Three cheers for some great in-depth reporting. H. Alan Dill A Cellar's Market We have met the enemy. He is us. Now what are we going to do with ourselves? Look! Up in the Air! Jacqueline Moorhead Social Studies I read these two articles with great interest. You see, I have been a foster-parent receiving home for the past seventeen years in Arapahoe County. My wife and I have been caretakers for more than 500 children during this time. I have also served on the Arapahoe County Foster Parent Association board as president, vice president and secretary, and I am currently treasurer.
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