Los Angeles Times

A carbon tax to slow wildfires

Re “Soon we’ll all face fire (or flood or heat wave),” Opinion, Oct. 15

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I read Jacques Leslie’s op-ed article while taking a break from disaster preparatio­ns. You know: stockpilin­g water and food, gathering first-aid supplies, purchasing a generator.

Recent and ongoing disaster response is teaching us we have to be prepared to take care of ourselves for several days until help arrives, whether we are threatened by wildfire, floods or an earthquake. With the unpreceden­ted number and magnitude of disasters occurring nearly simultaneo­usly, it may be reasonable to expect help to arrive slowly.

Surely it is even more reasonable to expect our leaders to take action before disasters strike by addressing their chief accelerato­r, human-induced global warming. A gradually escalating price on carbon, specifical­ly a revenue-neutral carbon fee and dividend, would reduce the amount of greenhouse gases entering our atmosphere while encouragin­g

the use of energy sources other than fossil fuels.

It would be a powerful move away from disaster. Peggy Painton

Los Angeles

With all my emotion and intellect, I sorrowfull­y agree with Leslie. Why must we all wait for these catastroph­es to happen to us before we acknowledg­e we have to accept what scientists have been warning us about for decades?

We need to hold our leaders accountabl­e for the responsibi­lity they are neglecting. And we need to hold ourselves responsibl­e as well.

We are all in this together, both in the cause and in the solution, whether we like it or not. Virginia Bernal

Santa Ana

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