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Pollution in our backyard

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‘We call this cancer alley,’ ” Column One, Sept. 24

Thanks for the article. I live far away from the ports now, but I won’t feel right until everyone has the clean air that I do.

I watch television and talk on cellphones and drive a car -- all products that probably came through our local ports. It isn’t right that people should suffer so that I can have my life.

As I sail or drive by the port several times a month, I remember my roots. My father worked on Terminal Island; he was a hardworking, good man who died with asbestosis.

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I want the port to remain, but I want to be proud that our port is the cleanest and greenest in the world -- a model for the way shipping and transportation can be.

David Lindquist

Laguna Beach

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I was wondering if the train tracks and freeways were there when the residents bought their homes or signed their leases?

This is akin to buying a home just south of the Burbank airport and then complaining about the noise. Living right next to a freeway, any freeway, is never desirable.

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Instead of slapping another industry with crippling regulations and driving more industry away, residents and politicians should focus on growing and retaining businesses that provide higher-wage jobs.

Steve Morrell

La Crescenta

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