WHAT'S ONE-SIDED?
Try Revenue Dept.
In the July 11 Letter of the Day, State Revenue Commissioner Ward Einess complains about the one-sided reporting of the Star Tribune.
He should be reminded that he and his predecessors have embraced a culture about property taxes that is very aggrieving to most homeowners. The Department of Revenue has embraced the philosophy that property taxes are the most stable taxes. That certainly is a one-sided attitude for government's benefit.
The Department of Revenue has been preaching this philosophy to legislators to prevent any meaningful property tax reform. It won't endorse a revenue-neutral property tax reform -- one that bases our tax on household income rather than a property assessment.
JURIS CURISKIS, MINNEAPOLIS
FUNKY WATER
We are to blame
So the tap water in Minneapolis and surrounding suburbs is unpalatable and we are looking for someone to blame (Star Tribune, July 11). Guess what, folks? It's time to look at ourselves and our neighbors.
Every time we blow leaves or grass clippings into the street, wash our cars in our driveways instead of on our lawns (to allow the soap and dirt to filter through the grass instead of run into our storm drains), use illegal fertilizers to get rid of those unsightly weeds or allow any pollutant into our storm drain systems, we are contributing to stinky and distasteful water.
All those items add phosphors to the water table, which creates algae which causes a stink and bad taste.
It is up to all of us to protect the storm water. Otherwise, our cities will keep adding more and more chemicals to our tap water -- a truly unpalatable idea.