Letters to the editor, Oct. 10, 2007
Written by Sentinel Readers   
Tuesday, 09 October 2007

Help carry on Tom’s dream

Dear Editor,

Tom Stefani, the gentle giant of a boy who was born and raised in this community, died October 4 in Afghanistan.  An Eagle Scout, honor student and professional Range Manager with the US Forest Service, Tom volunteered to go to Afghanistan where he was killed by a roadside bomb. Only last fall, he left his beloved job in Nevada’s Ruby Mountains, the new home he’d just purchased, and the family he loved,  and headed out to volunteer for the non-violent US’s Foreign Agriculture Service “campaign” to salvage the environment of Afghanistan amidst all the war.

In Afghanistan, he was teaching farmers how to heal and renew their wasted soil and to replant denuded hillsides with trees. He built relationships with Afghan tribal people in them same open and quiet way that he worked with ornery Ruby Mountain ranchers. This senseless loss of a young life is a blow to every parent’s heart and to every world citizen who grieves at the human cost and the waste of conflict.

Tom was the kid who knew how to work hard and proudly showed his prize sheep at the Gold Country Fair. The kid with the big cowboy boots and hat and that sweet sideways, shy smile. Always polite, always kind and always doing the right thing.

Barbara and Steve Stefani, his parents, are well known in the community. Always working as a team, they are the muscle and brains behind nearly every local community event. Tom was regularly at his mom and dad’s side during these events as a child.

Tom cared about the earth and he cared about people. He was so young and so full of promise and hope. His short life’s work was devoted to public service.  Only Tuesday, his Dad was on my porch  sharing a glass of wine and discussing work for me at Placer Nature  Center, future projects for his family and Tom. Steve told me Tom had a project in mind for Afghanistan. Not unlike his parents, Tom saw a need outside of his regular work assignments and he wanted to fill it.

Through the years of war in that sad country, all the playground equipment in all the schools had been stolen, destroyed or looted. Tom wanted to bring play equipment back to the children and set his dad to work collecting equipment here in the US. He wanted slides, kick balls, soccer balls and sport shoes. 

In Tom’s memory, if anyone out there has new or lightly used sports equipment that they would like to donate to the children of Afghanistan, please call me and I will collect it. Each donation of equipment must also come with a donation for shipping costs. One container ship box costs $8,000,  so all donations for this expense will be appreciated. Working together, perhaps we can fill a container full of quality play equipment for the struggling children as Tom intended.

I will come by to pick up sports gear and donations. Please call 530-878-0738 to schedule. 

Leslie Warren, Director, Placer Nature Center



Legal immigrants are welcome in U.S.

Dear Editor,

No one is against immigrants regardless of their race, providing they have not broken our country’s laws arriving here. The question is not race, but lawfulness. Once laws are broken and go unpunished, the trespasser feels emboldened and has no qualms about breaking other laws – present or future.

As a recent letter writer in the Auburn Journal stated, the President is responsible for enforcement, or neglect of enforcement, of our laws controlling the borders of our country. The taxpayer and public citizen is paying the price for this neglect.
This does not leave the large corporations off the hook either, who thrive on cheaper labor and larger profits and provide the employment availability. One could possibly suspect a close relationship between Presidential leadership and corporate non-responsibility.

Perhaps the President’s lack of concern for border control has something to do with his secret agreements with Mexico and Canada for the borderless North American Union. His plan also includes a trans-continental highway from Mexican ports, through the Mid-West (USA) and on into Canada. We have already seen the first part of his plan in action by allowing un-inspected Mexican trucks on our highways (Sacramento Bee, Sept. 13, 2007).

Little publicity has been given to these tri-national agreements. Why the lack of information for public consumers?

Do the perpetrators feel it might create some opposition from the American public?
Do not expect much help from a change of political parties for the hard left (Pelosi, Kennedy, Boxer, Reid, Feinstein and Clinton) are also for open borders with Mexico.

Dean K. Hoffman, Auburn

Discuss this article on the forums. (0 posts) 

Comments (0)Add Comment

Write comment
quote
bold
italicize
underline
strike
url
image
quote
quote
smile
wink
laugh
grin
angry
sad
shocked
cool
tongue
kiss
cry
smaller | bigger

security code
Write the displayed characters


busy