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'Tis the Season to be stressed, behind, overwhelmed and over-committed.
And therefore we are all of the above. The TERA E-letter is going to be
somewhat abbreviated, as well as late, this week. And there's a good
chance it won't appear at all next week as we all take a bit of a breather
between December 25th and New Year's day. But as we charge into the New
Year, I want to take the opportunity to thank my fellow TERA Board
members, who have worked so hard this year to ensure we have a successful
year next year.
Kathleen Long, TERA's Vice President, worked long and hard to make sure
that the joint effort of the Eagle Rock Chamber of Commerce, ERCPR and
TERA to celebrate the raising of the Eagle Rock Flag over the intersection
of the Glendale and 134 Freeways was successful. Kathleen was also
instrumental in the implementation of the new look for the E-Letter.
Pauline Mauro, TERA's Treasurer and volunteer and membership
coordinator, has provided leadership in setting up on operating budget for
TERA so that we can more accurately assess what we can and cannot take on
over the next fiscal year and to be able to tell whether or not we have
the resources to successfully pursue various activities, from the
Community Garden to Community Advocacy. And Pauline's work to recruit and
place volunteers has made TERA more effective and given it a broader base
than it has ever had before.
Elizabeth Wagner, co-chair of the Home Tour, stepped up to take over
the duties of Secretary for the TERA Board, when Joanne Turner, former
TERA President and co-chair of the Home Tour, resigned from the Board.
Liz, along with Jeanine Colini, Joanne and Pauline, worked hard to update
TERA's membership data base and bring us into the 21st Century in
providing membership services.
Jeanine Colini donated her time and talent in the field of graphic arts
in producing TERA's new look. She created electronic stationery for us as
well as the new membership cards and brings a level of creativity, common
sense and enthusiasm that makes her a joy to have on the TERA Board.
Hilary Norton Orozco, also a past president of TERA and co-chair of the
ERNC Planning and Land Use Committee, along with her husband Gerard, have
spent countless hours selling Eagle Rock flags, large and small, at
various community events. The proceeds from the sale of these flags will
go into a special fund to pay for the replacement of the large flag which
flies above the Glendale and 134 Freeways, ensuring that Eagle Rock's
special flag flies at the entrance to Eagle Rock for many years to
come.
Keith Louie does a job that I could never do. Keith brings together
TERA's public meetings every quarter, finding speakers, coordinating
calendars, getting food and refreshments donated, setting up and taking
down chairs before and after the event. Keith is also an active member of
TERA's Home Tour Committee, and can be seen working like crazy making sure
things go smoothly on the day of the Home Tour.
Scott Bogue is an active participant in producing not only TERA's
E-Letter, but also TERA's printed news letter. Scott, along with Kathleen
and Jeanine, research and tested TERA's new format for the E- Letter.
Scott is also in charge of TERA's web page.
Mary Tokita is in charge of TERA's beautification efforts and has spent
much of this year creating the Eagle Rockdale Community Garden. Kathleen
and Mary put together a Neighborhood Matching Fund Grant to kick- off the
Community Garden, which is now nearing completion. Mary has taken a dream
and a piece of abandoned City owned right-of-way and has created a
community garden with over 20 raised beds, water on the site, a native
plant section, and unique artwork at the main entrance.
Frank Parrello brings a professional knowledge of historic preservation
issues as well as over 25 years of professional planning experience to the
TERA Board. Frank has taken over chairing TERA's Preservation, Planning
and Development Committee, for which I am deeply grateful.
Michael Zamarripa, owner of the Coffee Table Restaurant, brings a
business person's insight to the TERA Board, in addition to his calm
demeanor and good judgment. Michael also helps Keith Louie with TERA's
public meetings.
To all of my fellow Board members, thank you for choosing to step up
and dedicate so much of your time, talent and efforts to making the
community in which we live a better place.
And to many TERA members, volunteers and supporters, our deep thanks
for your help in working on TERA's many efforts, from the Community Garden
to the Eagle Rock Eclectic Home Tour to the Preservation, Planning and
Development Committee. It's all of you who give our work meaning.
I hope all of you have a happy and safe Holiday season and we'll look
forward to resuming the E-Letter in 2006.
 Michael Tharp,
President
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RED FLAG
STREETS |
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Much has been seen and heard in the various media about "Red Flag
Days" in hillside areas. The City of Los Angeles has enacted an ordinance
which affects portions of EAGLE ROCK, as well as various other parts of
Northeast Los Angeles and other hillside areas within the Los Angeles City
limits.
Therefore, published below are various relevant articles concerning
the potential impacts of the ordinance and red flag days. We hope you will
find them helpful and informative.
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LA TIMES RED
FLAG DAYS |
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Subject: LA Times: Red flag days, December 22, 2005, latimes.com
:Cali fornia
Parking Limits Raise Red Flags
A new L.A. law bans cars from narrow hillside roads on days when fire
is a threat. Residents wonder what to do with vehicles.
By Amanda Covarrubias, Times Staff Writer
Forget the panoramic view. These days, the most prized asset in parts
of the Hollywood Hills and other canyon communities may well be a parking
spot.
A newly enacted city ordinance bans parking on scores of narrow,
winding hillside roads whenever the Los Angeles Fire Department issues a
"red flag" fire warning. Now some residents are burned up.
The law is designed to make it easier for firetrucks to navigate
streets that are often lined with parked cars. But with up to 10 red flag
days a year, usually during the Santa Ana winds of autumn, residents
wonder where they are going to park .
The city's Transportation Department has erected 2,500 signs in
hillside neighborhoods warning that vehicles parked on the streets on red
flag days will be towed. It plans to install a total of 5,200 signs by the
end of January.
The rules cover hundreds of blocks from Eagle Rock to the Westside.
Curbside parking is prohibited on streets less than 28 feet wide, while
parking will be restricted to one side on streets 29 to 36 feet wide.
In the steep, brush-covered hills near Lake Hollywood, resident Jim
Maxwell is one of the lucky ones. He has a carport.
But many others who live on the narrow curving roads north of the
Hollywood Freeway are not so fortunate. With neither garages nor carports
attached to their homes, some fear they would have to walk blocks — if not
miles — to get to and from their cars.
"Across the street is a classic example of the problem," Maxwell said
recently, pointing to a large two-story house near his in the Hollywood
Dell neighborhood. "There are five cars at that house and there's no room
for any of them. They have to park on the street. I'm sure they don't want
to park them somewhere else overnight."
Residents point out that aside from rambling estates in places like
Bel-Air and Los Feliz, many homes in hillside neighborhoods are built on
small lots where usable land is at a premium. If homes have garages, they
are relatively small and can't always accommodate more than one car — and
that's if the owners haven't converted them into living space.
Maxwell's friend Bruce Adams acknowledged that it could be difficult
for firetrucks to maneuver around his neighborhood with parked cars lining
the streets. But he pointed out that a fire could occur even without a red
flag warning, and residents wouldn't have time to move their cars.
"I don't know how they're going to work that out," Adams said. "You're
still going to have chaos."
The red flag ordinance was adopted by the Los Angeles City Council
earlier this month, with little fanfare, at the request of the Fire
Department.
Councilman Jack Weiss, who helped draft the ordinance after consulting
with hillside homeowners groups, said the new rules are crucial to better
protecting hillside homes and residents during major brush fires.
Weiss and other supporters cited the 1991 fire that destroyed hundreds
of homes in the densely populated hills above Oakland. In some cases,
firetrucks couldn't get to structures and residents couldn't escape their
burning houses because the narrow mountain roads were blocked by parked
cars, he said. "There are only half a dozen red flag days in a given
year, maybe 10 at the most," Weiss said. "It's an unusual occurrence, and
the reality is, on those days when you wake up and it's dry and windy,
most people know it's a high fire-risk day."
A red flag warning is issued on days when the humidity level is 15% or
lower and winds are blowing at least 25 mph, signifying heightened fire
danger for dry, brush-covered hillsides, said Battalion Chief Lou Roupoli
of the Los Angeles Fire Department.
"A wind-driven fire is almost impossible to stop. I know it's going to
be an inconvenience for a lot of people, thinking 'Where am I going to
park? I got two cars,' " Roupoli said. "But we're doing this to save their
homes and to help them evacuate their neighborhood. They don't want to be
stuck because there's a car blocking the street."
Some hillside homeowners groups have expressed support for the city's
parking ban, saying it's important to give firefighters the help they need
to battle brush fires.
These backers doubt the rules will cause much inconvenience and would
serve to make their neighborhoods safer.
In Laurel Canyon, 12-year resident Michael Maher said neighbors might
have to rely on one another for news of red flag warnings so they know
when to move their cars off the street to avoid getting towed.

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RED FLAG
ORDINANCE |
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Below is the ordinance regarding Red Flag Alert days:
SEC. 80.72. PARKING PROHIBITED OR LIMITED ON CERTAIN STREETS ON RED
FLAG ALERT DAYS
(a) Whenever, with reference to any street or portion of a street in
the City of Los Angeles' Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zone, the Fire
Department determines that parking on one or both sides of the street
would create a hazard to life or property by interfering with emergency
vehicle access and resident evacuation during a major brush fire, the
Department of Transportation is hereby authorized to install and maintain
at that place signs giving notice that no person shall park a vehicle
during a Red Flag Alert in the City of Los Angeles. The Department of
Transportation is further authorized to include notice, on any sign that
prohibits the parking of vehicles on Red Flag days, that vehicles parked
in violation of the sign may be removed.
(b) It shall be unlawful, when authorized signs are in place giving
notice, to park any vehicle on any of the streets or portions of streets
in the City's Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zone in violation of the
signs.
(c) Signs prohibiting parking installed pursuant to this section are
only enforceable on Red Flag Alert days in the City of Los Angeles as
declared by the Mayor or his designee.
(d) The provisions of Section 88.01.1 of this chapter are not
applicable to signs erected pursuant to this section.
Sec. 2. Division 0 of Section 80.76.2 of the Los Angeles Municipal Code
is amended to add the following in numerical order:
SEC. 80.76.2. CIVIL PENALTIES
SECTION DESCRIPTION
80.72 PARKING ON RED FLAG DAY
Sec. 3. Division W of Section 89.60 of the Los Angeles Municipal Code
is amended to add the following penalty provisions in numerical order:
SEC. 89.60 AUTHORITY
SECTION 80.72 DESCRIPTION
PARKING ON RED FLAG DAY
FINE $45
WITH LATE PENALTY $90
WITH SECOND PENALTY $100
Sec. 4. The City Clerk shall certify to the passage of this ordinance
and have it published in accordance with Council policy, either in a daily
newspaper circulated in the City of Los Angeles or by posting for ten days
in three public places in the City of Los Angeles: one copy on the
bulletin board at the Main Street entrance to the Los Angeles City Hall;
one copy on the bulletin board located at the Main Street entrance to the
Los Angeles City Hall East; and one copy on the bulletin board located at
the Temple Street entrance to the Los Angeles County Hall of
Records.

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RED FLAG
BACKGROUND |
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And here is some explanation of "Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zone
and the Red Flag Days:
Communities LAFD include in the VHFHSZ http://www.lafd.org/brush/hazard%
20zone.htm
Where is the Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zone Located?
The Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zone comprises most of the hilly and
mountainous regions of the City of Los Angeles. It includes portions of
the following communities:
Baldwin Hills, Bel Air Estates, Beverly Glen, Brentwood, Castellammare,
Chatsworth, Eagle Rock, East Los Angeles, Echo Park,
El Sereno, Encino, Glassel Park, Granada Hills, Hollywood, Lake View
Terrace, Los Angeles, Los Feliz, Montecito Heights, Monterey Hills, Mount
Olympus, Mount Washington, Pacific Palisades, Pacoima, Palisades
Highlands, Porter Ranch, San Pedro, Shadow Hills, Sherman Oaks, Silver
Lake, Studio City, Sunland, Sun Valley, Sylmar, Tarzana, Tujunga, West
Hills, Westwood, Woodland Hills
How Do I find out if my property is in the Very High Fire Hazard
Severity Zone?
Each local fire station has a detailed map showing exactly which
parcels of property are in the Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zone.
To determine if your property is in the VHFHS Zone, you can check the
City's GIS (Geographic Information Systems) site on the Internet. You may
want to print these instructions before you go to that site.
Go to http://gis.lacity.org/
infola/
What is the History of the Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zone?
The Mountain Fire District was established in January 1963 as a direct
result of the November 1961 Bel Air Fire. A total of 484 homes were lost
during that conflagration.
In April of 1971, The Fire Buffer Zones were established as a direct
result of the wind driven Chatsworth Fire in September of 1971 where 198
homes were destroyed or damaged.
In April of 1981 the Los Angeles Fire Department established the Brush
Clearance Unit to coordinate and conduct inspection sweeps of the Mountain
Fire District and to contract noncompliant properties to be cleared of
hazardous brush.
In February of 1986, as a result of the 1985 Baldwin Hills Fire that
destroyed 53 homes and killed three people, section 57.21.07 of the Los
Angeles Municipal Code was amended to include Mount Washington, El Sereno
and Baldwin Hills in the Brush Clearance Inspection Program.
In 1993, as a result of the Oakland Hills Fire in which 3,403 homes
were lost, 780 in the first hour of the fire, the Bates Bill No. AB 337
was enacted requiring local jurisdictions to identify and establish Very
High Fire Hazard Severity Zones. The Los Angeles Fire Department's Bureau
of Fire Prevention and Public Safety joined with the Planning Section to
conduct a survey utilizing the criteria established by the State Fire
Marshal. The Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zone lies mostly within the
boundaries of the Mountain Fire District and The Buffer Zone.
Subsequent to Assembly Bill No. 337, Assembly Bill Nos. 3819 and 747,
which are more restrictive, have been enacted reinforcing the provisions
of Assembly Bill No. 337.
In April of 1997, section 57.21.07 of the Los Angeles Municipal Code
was amended to increase the clearance of hazardous vegetation to a total
distance of 200 feet from any structure unless otherwise specified by the
Chief.
The Amendment further added criteria for maintenance of landscape
vegetation in such a condition as not to provide an available fuel supply
to augment the spread or intensity of a fire. These criteria included, but
were not limited to eucalyptus, acacia, palm, pampas grass, and conifers
such as cedar, cypress, fir, juniper, and pine.
In February of 1999 section 57.21.07 of the Los Angeles Municipal Code
was again amended, this time establishing a fee for inspections of
properties in the City of Los Angeles to determine if a violation of this
section exists.
When the fee was first introduced, it raised several other issues. The
Fire Department was directed to re-evaluate the current Mountain Fire
District and Buffer Zone to see if the boundaries drawn in 1961 and 1971
respectively were still valid. It was as a result of that assignment that
the Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zone was established.
Red Flag Restricted Areas are just one of the many features you can
request to have displayed on the map. If you start by either Zooming in on
your area, or request a particular address or intersection, you can
quickly locate the area of interest.
You can see the streets in Glassell Park, Mt. Washington, Sycamore
Grove, Montecito Heights, Highland Park hillsides, Eagle Rock and other
Northeast LA areas that are receiving or have received the Tow- Away
signs.
NavigateLA is a web based electronic mapping system used by the
Department of Public Works and Building and Safety at their public
counters.

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CENTER FOR THE
ARTS |
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The Center for the Arts Eagle Rock is seeking end of the year
donations. The Center is one of the many community institutions which help
make Eagle Rock unique and we at TERA strongly support its programs and
activities. Jenny Krusoe, the Center's Executive Director, writes the
following:
What does the Center for the Arts, Eagle Rock mean to you?
"The Center takes art and weaves it into the fabric that is Los
Angeles." Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa
"One of my favorite things about living in Eagle Rock is the Center for
the Arts. It's fearless, surprising and eye-opening. It makes the
community a better place for you." Grant Gershon, Artistic Director, Los
Angeles Master Chorale, and Eagle Rock resident
The Center for the Arts, Eagle Rock means different things to different
people: a family night out for the Eagle Rock Music Festival, a theater
program for youth on probation, the Eagle Rock Dance Company performing at
Sylvan Amphitheater on a summer evening.
At this time of year, we ask for your financial support. The Center has
ambitious plans for 2006 to bring art into local classrooms and to provide
an after-school Arts Conservatory for middle and high school students in
dance, music, theater, and video. And of course we will continue to
present the Music Festival and our on-going programs. We cannot do this
without your generous support. Please take the time to make a generous
contribution to the Center on our website (centerart
seaglerock.org). And while you're there, check out our accomplishments
and up-coming events.
Best,
Jenny Krusoe, Executive Director

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STREET
REPAIR |
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The Eagle Rock Neighborhood Council is actively seeking input on
streets in Eagle Rock which need resurfacing and repair. The ERNC is
actively seeking your input on which streets should be made eligible for
repairs funded by these funds. Please read below and then contact the ERNC
with your nominations for street repair.
ERNC WILL SOON RECOMMEND STREETS FOR $100,000 IN SPECIAL 2005-6
RESURFACING FUNDS. NOMINATE STREETS OR JOIN THE ERNC PUBLIC WORKS
COMMITTEE HANDLING THIS PROGRAM!
Does your street need repair, or do you drive on one that does? Please
let us know! As you may know, $100,000 for each elected neighborhood
council has been placed in this year's budget to be used for street
resurfacing. The specific streets to be resurfaced are to be chosen by
each neighborhood council in consultation with the Bureau of Street
Services. Streets which are already scheduled for repair/resurfacing may
be selected, which would move other streets up on the priority schedule.
Or other streets can be added to the schedule.
If you know a street which would be a good candidate for the special
resurfacing funds program, or would like to join the special ad hoc Public
Works Committee which will be in charge of recommending Eagle Rock streets
for this special project, please let us know! Please reply to this email
as soon as possible, or contact info@E
agleRockCouncil.org We look forward to your input and look forward to
working with you!

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LA RIVER
PLAN |
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Subject: LA River Revitalization Master Plan meetings >"folar"
<mail@folar.org
>
LA City River Revitalization Master Plan meetings 1/21, 24, 28
River Folks - Come on down to a January workshop to give input on the
city of LA's LA River Revitalization Master Plan.
From the city of LA:
LA river planning meetings, round #2, Jan. 21, 24, 28, 2006
Join with us in shaping the future of the Los Angeles River. Please
invite your family, friends, neighbors and colleagues for the second
series of public meetings for the Los Angeles River Revitalization Master
Plan, an 18-month planning process where the community will be invited on
an ongoing basis to help craft the future of the River.
In October, we kicked off the project by hearing from the community
about your visions, dreams and aspirations for the river; now, after we've
considered what we heard from you to date, we will discuss with you our
thoughts about opportunities, constraints and a framework for the L.A.
River.
The format for the meetings will be a presentation, followed by a
discussion session where you will be invited to address your areas of
special interest.
The meetings will start promptly and continue for approximately 2 1/2
hours. Refreshments as well as children's activities will be provided!
For more information, please call 323.669.9100 or look us up online at
http://www.lacity.org/councilcmte/lariver/l
ariverplan.htm
San Fernando Valley area, Sat. January 21st, 10:00 am to 12:30 p.m.,
Reseda High School, 18230 Kittridge St., Reseda
South Los Angeles area, Tues. January 24th, 6:00 to 8:30 p.m.,
Exposition Park Intergenerational Community Center, 3890 S. Menlo Ave. (at
MLKing Blvd.) Los Angeles
Atwater/Glendale Narrows Area, Saturday, January 28th, 10:00 a.m. to
12:30 p.m. Chevy Chase Recreation Center, 2165 Chevy Chase Dr., Los
Angeles
flyer: http://www.lacity.org/councilcmte/lariver/lariverplan.h
tm

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KIDSPACE |
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KIDSPACE INCLUDES MINI IRON CHEF AND NOON YEAR'S EVE WITHIN 1ST ANNUAL
KIDSPACE WINTER WONDERLAND, DECEMBER 26- JANUARY 8
Join Kidspace for Mini Iron Chef Stuffed Snowflakes on December 27 and
29, Noon Year's Eve on December 31.
PASADENA, CALIF. (Dec. 15, 2005) - During the 1st Annual Kidspace
Winter Wonderland, Kidspace Children's Museum, located in Pasadena's
Brookside Park, near the Rose Bowl, will invite children and families to
celebrate the traditions of the season including the Mini Iron Chef
Stuffed Snowflakes Challenge on December 27 and 29, and Noon Year's Eve on
December 31.
Make your own edible snowflake at the Mini Iron Chef Stuffed Snowflakes
Challenge, December 27 and 29, 12 noon and 1:00 p.m. A guest chef from
Wolfgang Puck Catering will provide guidance and ingredients during this
cooking challenge for children ages five and above. Mini Iron Chef is a
Kidspace program series devoted to the exploration of cooking. Space in
the Mini Iron Chef-Stuffed Snowflakes Challenge will be limited, so come
early on December 27 and 29 to request tickets. Tickets will be available
in the Kidspace Nature Exchange.
On December 31, the New Year will be celebrated with a kid-friendly
Noon Year's Eve, including a countdown to 12noon, giant balloon drop, and
a sparkling apple cider toast. The excitement will begin at 12noon.
During the 1st annual Winter Wonderland, December 26-January 8,
celebrate the magic of the season with a multitude of programs and
activities dedicated to helping children understand and enjoy the many
facets of winter. Real snow-making, a spectacular light display, and more
will take place daily. A complete schedule is available at www.kidspac
emuseum.org . Please note that Kidspace will be open on New Year's
Day, but closed on January 2 and 4.
Kidspace Children's Museum is open daily from 9:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Tickets are $8 for children and adults (infants under 1 and Members are
free). Kidspace is located at 480 N. Arroyo Blvd., in Brookside Park,
Pasadena, Calif., just opposite the Rose Bowl. Free parking is available
in Rose Bowl Parking Lot I.
Kidspace Children's Museum is a non-profit 501(c) 3 organization that
exists to enrich the lives of children. Kidspace is an interactive
learning environment that is fun for children, families, educators, and
caregivers. For further information, please visit our Web site:
www.kidspacemuseum.org

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BUNGALOW
HEAVEN |
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The folks from Bungalow Heaven Neighborhood Association are changing
their e- mail address. Please take notice.
Please update your records/address book with the new e-mail address for
the Bungalow Heaven Neighborhood Assn.:
b
ungalowheaven@sbcglobal.net
We will be closing down the old e-mail address (bhna@earthlink.net) as
of the first of the year.
Thanks, Mike Lange
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LETTERS |
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I just want to
apologize to my neighbor Mike, whose e-mail was accidentally deleted when
I moved my computer (flimsy excuse) but wanted to thank him for his kind
words about the new format. Two other e-mails were received, which had
good suggestions and will be reported in the next e-letter. Continue to
write to us and let us know what is on your mind in 2006.
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