Letters to the editor

May 9, 2012 1:21 pm

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Public transit benefits everyone in the region

In regard to recent transit funding letters with the general theme of "I'm not near a bus line, so why should I care?" I would like to reply in three succinct points:

First, Pittsburgh and Philadelphia provide a greater tax revenue to the state per capita than rural areas. It only makes sense that some of that excess revenue be re-invested back into more productive urban centers.

Second, public transit impacts everyone. Cutting transit would add thousands more cars to the road, driving up the cost of gas, increasing fuel burned while waiting in traffic and increasing the commuting costs for everyone.

Third and most important, many seem to view public transit as a social program. This couldn't be further from the truth. My wife and I are both 26-year-old working professionals with several educational degrees between us. Public transit is a convenient, affordable and safe way to commute to work and experience the city.

It's no surprise that public transportation is a top issue for young professionals in Pittsburgh. Not funding the Port Authority would be a perfect way to "drive" them out of the city. And you wouldn't even need a Port Authority bus to do it.

ANDREW FOURNARIDIS
Shadyside


No gifted guarantees

Let me assure Joel B. Kundin ("CAS Undermined," Jan. 28 letters) that the admission of students who may not have been deemed "gifted" does not mean a lowering of Centers for Advanced Study standards or the end of the world.

Having watched many gifted children grow up over the last several decades, I have learned that not all gifted children are superior in every subject area, some even struggle. Non-gifted children can be and often are -- oh, be still my heart -- equal to and even excel a gifted child in specific subject areas.

Mr. Kundin has done a horrendous disservice if he has taught his son that he is better than others because of his "gifted" designation. I can guarantee that if he hasn't already, his son will encounter many minds superior to his.

I have seen "gifted" children over-impressed with themselves crumble when they went from a little local pond to a great big college lake only to discover that they are no longer the big fish.


First Published February 2, 2012 12:00 am
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