Los Angeles Times

Look at the hills while you can

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Re “Trump poised to revoke state’s power to set car emission rules,” Sept. 18

I don’t know about anyone else, but as someone who grew up playing outside in Los Angeles in the 1950s, I am not ready to breathe dangerousl­y polluted air again.

If I took a deep breath, my chest would severely hurt. Forget about seeing any faraway hillsides.

Having children today experience what I and other kids went through is something I don’t want repeated.

Check other countries that do not have tough car emissions standards, and you see pedestrian­s walking around wearing air filtration masks. Is this what we want in California?

I hope this decision by the Trump administra­tion to strip California of its right to set its own vehicle emission limits is reversed, and we can keep breathing cleaner air. Yolanda H. Lickson

Cypress

Bravo, President Trump, for finally ridding us of the California emissions waiver.

Modern cars are super clean, so having separate California regulation­s only added cost but not benefits. In fact, by reducing the cost of newer cars, his bold action will help lower emissions by speeding the replacemen­t of old vehicles with higher emissions.

Now, if only we could rid ourselves of the onerous and very costly South Coast Air Quality Management District regulation­s. There may have been a use for some of their regulation­s decades ago, but now they do nothing but burden us. F. Stephen Masek

Mission Viejo

There seems to be a simple solution to this problem.

While the EPA has the power to remove California’s right to set its own emissions rules, the state has another option besides litigation. California can still increase the licensing fee and tax the sale of vehicles with higher emissions.

Any manufactur­er who wanted to sell in California would surely offer vehicles that would not be so penalized. Abraham Weitzberg

Woodland Hills

Why on Earth would anyone want to revoke regulation­s that were put in place for our health and safety? The president may as well ban safety helmets and remove all the stop signs and traffic lights too.

I hope the grass at his golf course in Rancho Palos Verdes turns as brown as our air will when vehicle emissions spike. Lorraine Knopf

Santa Monica

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