The Marin Independent Journal recently featured three letters from readers, each touching on local governance, transportation, and national politics. These letters offer a glimpse into the concerns bubbling up in Marin County towns, from Mill Valley to San Anselmo and beyond.
This blog post pulls together those viewpoints—one person endorses a District 1 supervisor candidate, another pushes for more electric vehicles, and a third urges civility in overseas political talk. All of these opinions tie back to everyday life in Marin communities like Sausalito, Tiburon, Corte Madera, Larkspur, and San Rafael.
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Local voices shaping Marin’s civic dialogue
Walk the backstreets of San Anselmo, Mill Valley, or San Rafael, and you’ll hear these same debates: housing, transportation, and the tone of national politics. Conversations at town halls in Corte Madera and Larkspur echo with worries about growth, resilience, and what prosperity should look like here.
Mary Nielsen endorses Mark Galperin for Marin County District 1
Mary Nielsen, who lives in a Marin neighborhood, endorses Mark Galperin for the Marin County Board of Supervisors District 1 seat. She points to his 30-plus years in U.S. business and engineering, his work on the Marin Housing Authority advisory board, and their shared involvement at church.
Nielsen appreciates his scientific, methodical problem-solving and his persistence. She also values his willingness to challenge orthodoxies, shaped by his experience with corruption in the former Soviet Union.
She likes his ideas on affordable housing, stronger education options, and emergency preparedness. In her view, District 1 voters should give him their support.
- 30+ years in U.S. business and engineering
- Service on the Marin Housing Authority advisory board
- Collaborative work through their church
- Scientific, methodical problem-solving and perseverance
- Willingness to challenge orthodoxies informed by experiences with corruption in the former Soviet Union
The District 1 race centers on housing, economic opportunity, and resilience—issues that folks in Sausalito, Tiburon, and Novato are watching closely as elections approach.
Electrifying Marin: A local call for cleaner transportation
From Mill Valley’s hills to Sausalito’s waterfront, readers are thinking about transportation as a real climate action. Ron Sadler’s letter makes the case that personal vehicle choices affect public health and wallets, urging more electric vehicle (EV) adoption as fuel prices keep climbing and emissions take center stage.
Ron Sadler on electric vehicles from Mill Valley
Ron Sadler, who lives in Mill Valley, says EVs are a practical answer to higher fuel costs, air quality needs, and climate pressure. He points out that EVs produce zero tailpipe emissions, save drivers money, and keep getting better with new tech.
He connects Marin’s busy roads—from San Rafael to Sausalito—to a larger push for cleaner air and healthier streets.
- Zero tailpipe emissions
- Fuel costs about 50% less than gasoline cars
- Maintenance roughly half the cost of internal combustion vehicles
- Improving battery ranges and expanding charging infrastructure
- Available incentives that improve affordability
All across Marin—from Tiburon’s coves to Corte Madera’s town center and Larkspur’s scenic lanes—Sadler’s pitch for EVs feels especially timely as households sort out their own transportation and climate choices.
National discourse and Marin’s perspective on credibility
These letters also remind Marin residents that national diplomacy gets filtered through a local lens. The way national leaders act and speak matters to communities across the county, from Fairfax to San Anselmo and beyond, as folks follow headlines and gather at local meetings.
Peter H. Behr Jr.’s overseas critique
Peter H. Behr Jr., a San Anselmo veteran, doesn’t hold back. He criticizes Democratic politicians for attacking President Trump at overseas forums. He says this breaks a long tradition of keeping our domestic fights at home, especially when traveling abroad.
Behr warns that these public criticisms could hurt U.S. credibility. He thinks such actions might even encourage adversaries and put our alliances at risk.
He feels this behavior could threaten national interests and the safety of military personnel. Behr calls for an immediate stop to this kind of overseas criticism.
- Public attacks abroad may undermine credibility
- Could embolden adversaries and strain alliances
- Risk to national interests and military personnel
- Undermines a tradition of measured, domestic debate
In Marin County—whether you’re in San Rafael, Fairfax, or the shoreline towns like Sausalito and Mill Valley—people seem to want the same thing. They want policy debates to stay rooted in real Marin life: affordable homes, cleaner air, and a steady, principled voice on the world stage.
As District 1 voters weigh their choices from Corte Madera to Novato, these letters give a genuine sense of what matters here. From the hills of Mill Valley to the streets of San Anselmo, the priorities feel clear enough, don’t they?
Here is the source article for this story: Marin IJ Readers’ Forum for May 16, 2026
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