Home » From The Readers, Letters to the Editor » No balloons, helicopters, jeep fleets and ATVs in Sedona

No balloons, helicopters, jeep fleets and ATVs in Sedona

Sedona AZ (March 1, 2016) – The following is a letter to the SedonaEye.com editor:

It’s time to put an END to the balloons, helicopters, fleets of pink jeeps and ATVs that are desecrating Sedona’s wilderness areas.

Exclusive SedonaEye.com photos of balloon unplanned January 2015 descent into a Sedona neighborhood

Exclusive SedonaEye.com photo of a balloon tour’s unplanned January 2015 descent into a Sedona neighborhood

The wilderness commons are being abused by money hungry tourist Outfits that our filling our skies with noisy planes, repeated helicopter fly-overs and invasive morning balloon flights. There are so many helicopters flying over our red rock country that it feels like we’re in Vietnam.

There’s no place one can hike or bike in Sedona’s sacred wilderness without being visually and auditorially assaulted by noisy Tourist fly-overs and jeep/ATV incursions.

If this desecration and insanity is not put to an END willingly, then it will be put to an END by force. By force, I mean by an economic collapse, which is now quickly coming down the pike in America.

The town of Sedona needs to radically scale back the invasive tourist industry here and instead work to build a local economy based on renewable solar energy (we have lots of sun) and locally produced organic food (we can plant fruit and nuts trees everywhere). Let’s us also work to completely terminate all gas-guzzling cars and SUVs from our streets.

It’s time for the town of Sedona to shift to a car-free transportation grid within its city limits. That means shifting to walking, bicycling, electric vehicles and frequent electric free shuttles up and down main st. In the municipality of Zermatt, Switzerland, they have banned all cars from their town. Automobiles are parked 5 miles away in large parking lots with easy access to Zermatt via frequent rail service. There’s no reason Sedona can’t do the same and end the insanity on Main St that only causes gridlock, congestion, frustration, chaos and pollution of our local environment.

Sedona the Beautiful  by Melissa Morrison c2010

Sedona the Beautiful by Melissa Morrison Exclusive SedonaEye.com c2010

Who wouldn’t like to stroll down main st in peace, solitude and quiet reverence, while enjoying the trees, the birds singing, talking to our neighbors, taking in the sun and enjoying the spectacular red rock beauty of nature all around us, without all the noise, chaos and insanity that the automobile brings to our environment?

This invasive tourist based industry needs to terminated. Our nation and our world are being transformed into intelligently designed transportation Grids and green, sustainable modalities of living and being. The quantum shift towards the establishment of ecologically based communities is already underway. Clean water, clean and abundant locally produced organic food, free energy and healthy, upright communities are our birthright on this planet.

Let’s us all now work to put an end to the tourist cancer that is destroying our local community and learn to build the sustainable, green, wilderness protecting community we all are longing to live-in.

Steve Jones
Global environmentalist
Sedona Arizona

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Read www.SedonaEye.com for daily news and interactive views!

44 Comments

  1. Jason novack says:

    Good job Steve. Although your ideas are pipe dreams as those who run this city are either in bed with or themselves run the industries you wrote about it would be great to not have jeeps roaring down residential streets 7 days a week. Same with buses and vans full of foreign tourists. Yes tourism drives this city and always will but it can be curbed. But, that would mean less money for the McMansions the business owners live in-with their 8 passenger SUV for their 2 person families.

  2. Jess Lookin says:

    Great ideas.

    Perhaps with less tourists, the City of Sedona would not need to inject waste water into our aquifer. I would love to have a weekend without bumper to bumper traffic.

    With less tourists we might have a town that would appeal to families, so the schools would not have to close.

    Sadly, I am only a retired resident who wanted to enjoy the natural beauty of Sedona. I am currently stuck in a tourist trap.

    We RESIDENTS can change that.

  3. West sedona resident says:

    @jess looking When you say retired you mean fired correct?

  4. Larry B. says:

    This will NEVER happen. (Response to Jason Novack & Jess Lookin) This city is more interested in doing away with garbage trucks, except their selected company, in order to establish a new method of sending monthly bills to 5000 Sedona residents within city limits. And yet they pay the chamber of commerce to promote businesses outside city limits that do not contribute directly to the tax base.

    Go figure.

  5. Darryl Z says:

    Ah! In a perfect world…
    but a bit of this sounds like the National Monument nonsense — no use AT ALL of our lovely wilderness areas.
    We need the tourism to drive the economy — it’s just that it’s in over-drive! and the hotels and time-shares are ruining our small town. All the policy is dictated by them. All the laws are created by the greedy.
    If we can come together on a few things — like create trails JUST for mountain bikes and ORV — but where do the restrictions end ? Just because I don’t like the sound of helicopters, I do understand that a family is relying on helicopter tours to eat and have a roof over their head.
    I am worried for my young son and I suppose our days in Sedona are numbered. I’m a single dad working 3 jobs to make ends meet. I used to have our converted garage unit listed on Airbnb, but the city made me stop and ever since then, funds are short. I can’t understand why timeshares can sell points and do short-term rentals, but god-forbid a citizen who is just trying to feed their family and make ends meet should get a few extra dollars by renting out the spare room — that would take money away from the large corporations! who, btw, take the tourist money and send to the HQs out of town, and those dollars never enter the economy! We NEVER had partiers, and most the time folks in the neighborhood didn’t even know someone was staying here. No, the hotels would rather see the citizens suffer.

  6. @Darryl Z says:

    With all due respect, we did NOT purchase homes in single-family residential zoning with the intention of intrusion by short-term or vacation renters. It’s an imposition. It’s happened around us. All are NOT considerate but that isn’t the point. It’s a violation of the law. We support neighborhood watch – have had three robberies. We need to know who’s snooping around. Sorry.

  7. Tonyt says:

    I have a monthly vacation rental and a second home that is used one weekend a month as my neighbors. Due to the geography no other nearby house can see my home.

    It works out to at least 6 months a year I have two vacant homes as neighbors. The other 6 months I have people who speed down the street and don’t care, because they don’t live here.

    The homes are still there. It sure doesn’t feel like a neighborhood.

  8. Brian says:

    I emphathize w/everyone. But where does my tax $$ meet ordinance enforcement? I expect not to have to share my streets w/renters, I don’t like renters. I’m 34 and worked hard to earn downparyment for my house, I don’t want morons screwing w/my quality of life or homeless picking my kids up or peddling drugs off the street. I’d live in Phx or Flag if I wanted that or rent heaven next door! Tiny town, few amenities, work hard, play fair. WAy I and my family like it.

  9. Darryl Z says:

    With all due respect, we were considered “Super Host” and have many positive reviews before being made to take down our listing. We were affordable, the unit behind a fence, offered off-street parking, had respectful guests, and brought money into the community as otherwise many of our guests would not have spent the night in Sedona. If there were a problem, I would have taken care of it immediately. But there never was. I am sorry that you people are so worried about what goes on in someone else’s life that you have NO compassion for those just trying to scratch out a living and doing the best they can. We have a lovely neighborhood and I never received ANY complaints from anyone here. Most didn’t even know I had the unit on Airbnb. I now rent it out to a couple of guys who are way worse tenants than anyone I had here short term – they play music, hang out in the front yard, park on the street, have friends over, party until midnight and play their drums regularly. I have to work so I am not here a lot, but my daughter and son tell me what they’ve been up to. They aren’t breaking any law, but they are noisy when I’m not here. You all need to get a life — obviously you work for the hotel and timeshare industries and think that my little unit is a big threat to your income. It’s not. There’s plenty of business for everyone.

  10. Arianna says:

    With all due respect @ DarrylZ, you’re missing the point. You point out the problem with your current tenants – why don’t you evict them? Money talks for you and you don’t even live here! Airbnb is now a huge source of problems with people being scammed, the new Craigslist. Local means local, we pay taxes, you’re wealthy enough to live elsewhere. If not, sell. Let a family move in. And no problem if your house in out in the counties, that’s fair game with no neighbors impacted but close quarters in this city demands controls. No sympathy here for you. Sell the house. Evict your tenants from hell & be a good neighbor. And let your neighbors count themselves lucky you didn’t attract your current renters types on Airbnb. And there are plenty of Airbnb horror stories. Read them on the site.

  11. What am I missing? says:

    @Darryl Z – Don’t you get it? There’s a city ordinance against short term rentals – simple as that. You are breaking the law when you do it. So your permanent renters you admit are less stellar than temps. However, your neighbors don’t complain – so what’s the deal? You can make more money by breaking the law? Simple solution – move to Coconino County outside Sedona City Limits where it’s legal.

  12. Patty says:

    @DarrylZ why don’t you & son move in the garage & rent out house for a yr? that ought to help solve those financial woes!!

  13. Bryan says:

    liked this Tweet!

  14. Darryl Z says:

    Unlike most of you, my tenants are “not from hell” but pretty normal. They also are trying to do their best. The unit is too small for myself, my son and my daughter. My neighbors don’t complain because there’s nothing for them to complain about. I also have a lease with them and they have not been behind on rent. But I make about 1/3 the amount that I made renting it out on Airbnb. Yes, renting short term is against the law, but like Coconino county, laws can be changed. I won’t sell this home as it belonged to my late wife and me and this is where the kids were born and where my wife died – not that it’s any of your business why I choose to live here. There ARE solutions to problems, not that any of you are interested. Y’all just follow like the sheep you are.

  15. J. J. says:

    Darryl, I hear you and I agree. Most of those against short term rentals either work for the hotel/timeshare industry or they have never stayed in an Airbnb place themselves. A superhost! Good work man! Last year I waited too long to reserve a hotel room at the conference I was attending in California and booked with Airbnb. The hosts were marvelous – the owner was a retired Hollywood writer with 16 Emmys and his wife had a beautiful organic garden that provided me with lunch and dinner salads. I had a wonderful time and I doubt I would have had that much fun at the (very corporate) hotel. It was also much cheaper digs than the hotel. Since then I’ve stayed at 4 other Airbnbs and have always enjoyed my stay. Those that point to horror stories just LOVE drama and fear porn. If you look for the Superhost status, you won’t go wrong! I also have a friend (who no longer lives in Sedona) who had a one-page write up about her night sky watch business in the NY Times. She received a letter from the Chamber telling her that the article was worth hundreds of thousands of dollars in advertising. She would often rent out her little cabin and was also told by the city to cease, was placed on a two-year probation, and fined $2500 for DARING to list on Airbnb. She is no longer in Sedona. Terrible. I wish you all the best as you seem to be a great dad and a stellar Sedona citizen. We need to change the laws so that short term rentals do not have to fly under the radar, which they do. Years ago when I worked at Tlaquepaque there was “the list” of places for nightly rent that hung in our break room. Just because it’s not legal doesn’t mean it isn’t happening. Sedona would do well to make it legal and collect the bed taxes, which they are missing now. I’m all for Airbnb. They are great.

  16. Jim Rooney says:

    @Darryl buddy I missed something…you’re an old guy? So much for the young guy with kids trying to make ends meet? Honestly DZ, seems you’re short on honesty & integrity. Not a good spokesman for Airbnb Mr Superhost! Obey the rules, I expect it as a taxpayer like Brian.

  17. Darryl Z says:

    As if my age matters, I’m 42. I have lived in Sedona since 1996. My wife and I bought this home together. After she died, I converted the garage into a little unit and rented it out so I would not have to share my home with a roommate to make ends meet. I don’t know why you say I’m short on honest & integrity – I’ve been very honest here and I started renting on Airbnb when half the neighborhood were doing the same. You obey the rules? Even when they make no sense? baaaa baaaaa baaaa.

  18. Rooney says:

    @Darryl OK point made. Accept this apology for Airbnb when everybody else doing it but you don’t have right to do it when told to cease. Change the rules, don’t break them, there’s ways to change them which exists, set examples for your kids to work in community instead of breaking laws. Enough people agree, you’ll win support, enough don’t, that’s the rule & always been the rule so abide by it or move. That’s honesty & integrity at work.

  19. Darryl Z says:

    @Rooney – I teach my kids to question EVERYTHING. We live in a world where the banks are too big to fail, and when caught laundering BILLIONS in drug money, are too big to jail, where patriots are shot in cold blood when the BLM steals their land so that politicians can sell the uranium to Russia, when lawful protestors are shut down, but unlawful protestors have lives that “matter,” when you’re forced to buy medical insurance and when you can’t afford it, you’re fined for that, when the skies are filled with toxic chemtrails and vaccinations are forced, when GMOs can’t be labeled because Monsanto fills the pockets of the law makers, when our water has toxic fluoride even though it’s AGAINST THE LAW to medicate people against their knowledge/will. And in Sedona, I’m threatened with jail time and a big fine because I want to make a few extra bucks? You’re sound asleep at the wheel, man. You don’t even know the rules because there’s one set for us, and one set for them. Honesty and integrity indeed!

  20. @J.J. says:

    Haven’t you made numerous comments on Sedona Eye admitting you do not live within City Limits? That you live in the area of the Red Rock Crossing? More outside dictating from non-residents?

  21. J. J. says:

    Yes, I live outside city limits, but I have two houses inside city limits which I rent out. Not that it’s any of your business where I live.

  22. @J.J. says:

    How convenient – shades of Steve Segner. How come you didn’t apply to fill the vacant council seat?

  23. J. J. says:

    @JJ – My what a bully YOU are. Feel better now?

  24. CFAR says:

    CFAR = “Citizens for an Alternate Route.” Anybody remember them?

    Well, maybe it’s time for a reminder to those holier-than-thou outsiders that have no problem exploiting the benefits of the name “Sedona” and likewise have no problem violating Sedona City Codes.

    It isn’t just those who conveniently have 86336 zip codes outside City Limits, but likewise many out-of-state residential purchasers that exploited Sedona’s real estate marketing during the economic decline and attempt to continue feathering their nests by using Airbnb to solicit illegal short-term rentals.

    That being the case, isn’t it time for CFAR to reinvent itself and continue the pursuit of reopening Red Rock Crossing? Any bets on how many un-conscientious objectors will rise out of Oak Creek and demand “not in my backyard?”

    And, incidentally, the Oak Creek Canyon short-term rental being falsely advertised on Airbnb as being a legitimate “Sedona” vacation rental is lying. Of course your operation is legitimate because it’s located in Coconino County where they are allowed. However, your advertisement misrepresents your facility because it is NOT in City of Sedona.

  25. magickj says:

    OH pleeze!
    The county had a permit to build a bridge off Red Rock Loop Road and they didn’t move forward because it was too costly.
    If you want to get to VOC from west Sedona, use Cornville Road.
    CFAR, you must be a complete idiot. I agree with Darryl and JJ – Airbnb is great is Sedona is missing the boat (taxes). There’s over 300 listings on Airbnb for Sedona, not to mention Flipkey, VRBO and Craigslist. The people HAVE spoken. It’s just that the hotel industry runs the city. That’s about to change.

  26. Hugh says:

    If I were a homeowner in Sedona thinking about selling my house, I’d be somewhat nervous. Why? Because until recently, I’d been dreaming about and planning to purchase my retirement home there. But no longer. The mountain bike, ATV, and jeep tour cancer has metastasized and the Sedona environment is starting to look like Stage 4. You can see the mountain bike social trails springing up in the Bell Rock area on Google Maps at https://goo.gl/maps/EZJXuFmpKAG2 and the black tire marks left by jeeps at https://goo.gl/maps/xcNiewXQNVB2 in the Chicken Point area and https://goo.gl/maps/2kpSL5hsUry in the Soldier Pass sinkhole area. When you can see the damage to the environment from space, folks, things are getting pretty bad. I know many Sedona residents who aren’t retired depend on the tourists to survive, so things are unlikely to change anytime soon. I’ll continue to visit and hike in the areas away from the ones I’ve pointed out above, but I’m not buying a house there.

  27. Darryl Z says:

    First of all, thanks to Magicj for posting the link to the story about the Senate blocking cities from banning Airbnb. I have sent emails to my representatives telling them what a good idea this is and I look forward to being able to once again work with Airbnb in the new year.

    To Hugh – there’s not many places left on God’s green earth that haven’t been affected by pollution. Chemtrails are everywhere, you don’t know what’s in the food you eat, water is fluoridated. It seems everything everywhere has been weaponized against the populace.

    That said, at least the jeeps pretty much stick to one area and those areas can be avoided. The mountain bikers, hikers, climbers, and fishermen have every right to enjoy nature – just as you do. That’s not where the corruption begins or ends in Sedona.

    As you can read on this website, the corruption is within the greed of the city. Hotels are springing up everywhere, tearing out our beloved trees and turning pristine forest into paved parking lots and big name box stores. The western gateway was once forest but it was traded to create a NON PROFIT area that would benefit Sedona. The land was sold out from under the citizens and now it’s being turned into a mega-complex of more timeshares, more hotels, more restaurants — simply more greedy developers.

    But we do have a lovely community of highly spiritual, highly conscious people and it does not go unnoticed. You’re welcome to join us if you’d like – or go elsewhere and you’ll find rules and regulations, a lack of freedom, and others as closed minded as you.

    We wish you the best.

  28. Jess Lookin says:

    @Hugh

    You’re not alone in no longer wanting to live in Sedona. You notice the school enrollment is DROPPING. Something is seriously wrong when people don’t want to live in one of the most beautiful places in the country.

    (It’s the City , Hint , Hint)

    I would not move here under these conditions and I am planning to sell, if the market ever gets better.

    I seem to remember a story about killing the goose that laid the golden egg. If the Canyon Calls, just hang up.

  29. Jess Lookin says:

    @magickj

    Travel to West Sedona Via Cornville Rd?

    If you are in the Village of Oak Creek, what it the drive distance, about 30 miles?

    What did the woman say to the man wearing the transparent swimsuit? ” I can clearly see you’re nuts !!!”

  30. VOC to Cottonwood Distance says:

    OK, rather than tell you, here’s the proof. It’s shorter than my old trip every other day or two to the grocery store in California in my old neighborhood. LOL – Get real folks. Couldn’t get it shorter if you were crows. Old crows you are.

    Distance from VOC to Cottonwood:

    19.6 mi. About 28 mins

    1. Head south toward E Cortez Dr
    56 ft
    2. Turn right onto E Cortez Dr
    105 ft
    3. At the traffic circle, take the 3rd exit onto AZ-179 S
    0.2 mi
    4. At the traffic circle, continue straight to stay on AZ-179 S
    0.3 mi
    5. At the traffic circle, continue straight to stay on AZ-179 S
    2.9 mi
    6. Turn right onto Beaverhead Flats Rd
    6.1 mi
    7. Turn right onto E Cornville Rd
    8.1 mi
    8. Continue onto E Mingus Ave
    1.9 mi
    9. Turn left onto S Main St

  31. West Sedona to Cottonwood Distance says:

    Forgot to add this: Even less time from West Sedona to Cottonwood than my old grocery store trip. C’mon folks. It’s a straight shot and a pretty drive. In my old Cali town, it was stop and go every red light about every other block. I LOVE THIS DRIVE.

    17.6 mi (about 24 mins with traffic) per same mapping website

  32. Travel Math Website says:

    Here’s what I use for my clients. Check it out to know your travel costs instead of guessing. If you think you want to build a road or bridge, then think again Sedona. You’ve got it damn cheap to travel to Cottonwood or Flagstaff or wherever and you don’t have the crap that cheap commercial development brings with it. Appreciate what you have. Stop wanting what you don’t need.

    The cost of driving from West Sedona, Arizona to Cottonwood, Arizona is:
    $1.02 one-way / $2.05 round trip

    Distance: 16 miles
    Gas mileage: 25 mpg
    Fuel grade: regular
    Gasoline price: $1.601 (US Dollars/gallon)
    Gas consumption: .64 gallons litres
    TOTAL COST: $1.02 one-way (USD) $2.05 round trip (USD)

    http://www.travelmath.com/cost-of-driving

  33. Sophie says:

    No more traffic!!!!!!

  34. magickj says:

    I saw in the Red Rock Snooze someone was (again) bringing up the bridge at Red Rock Crossing. As per usual, the writer’s argued that having a bridge would save lives!!! Someone ought to tell that guy that 1) emergency vehicles already have access to that bridge, 2) the county decided NOT to pursue building a bridge due to costs, 3) The speed limit on Upper Red Rock Loop Road is 25 and 15 in front of the school and it’s actually faster to use the Cornville road from VOC, 4) Tourist and jeep tour drivers stop IN THE MIDDLE OF THE LOOP ROAD often for photos. You can be coming around a blind curve and nearly rear end or hit someone intent on getting that perfect photo and 5) Loop Road is in Yavapai County and why should they spend money to help uptown Sedona traffic issues when it’s not even their county? The residents in and around the Cathedral Rock Valley see what has happened to 179 – how it was completely ruined by traffic controls (curbs, two lanes, 35 mph speed limit) and they want nothing to do with having those issues in their neighborhood. So stop with the bridge idea – it isn’t going to happen.

  35. Can't Have it Both Ways says:

    Here we go again @magickj.

    You jolly well don’t want encroachment in your territory (bridge at RR Crossing) and yet you don’t hesitate to tell incorporated Sedona how to run their business. Why not do something really useful and pursue annexation into the city to incorporate all areas within both Fire & School Districts? Put your money where your mouth is or shut it up.

  36. We need a bridge at RRC says:

    Madge, you are wrong! Sedona needs a bridge at RRC. Yes the FD has access to the low water crossing, but needs to open gates, travel on unmaintained roads and go way out of the way to get there!!! Get a clue. You probably fought the fight to get the ineffectual roundabouts on 179 and now you are fighting a circulatory traffic flow system. Traffic flows similar to water. Sedona current has a “dead-end” system and needs a circular flow pattern!!!

    Typical, move in from out of state and scream “close the gate” now that you’re here.

    WE want a bridge at RRC!!! …in the name of public safety AND travel convenience!
    NIMBYs and BANANAS (build absolutely nothing anywhere near anything) no longer control Sedona!

    Just cause you live down there doesn’t make you the Road King!

  37. James Harrington says:

    Sorry, “We need a bridge at RRC” – Not to dispute the need to restore that access as an alternate route, but it isn’t the roundabouts on 179 that are “ineffectual.” It’s the fault of the uptown, amateur road designers and engineers that reconfigured the less than one mile of the city owned SR89A that has caused the huge backups.

    Need proof? Consider the hours it now takes to get from Flagstaff to Sedona since that ridiculous decision to narrow the highway uptown. There are NO roundabouts coming from the north to Sedona except the one at the top of the switchbacks prior to entering Oak Creek Canyon.

    Traffic comes to a halt every time a car backs out of a parking space uptown which wasn’t the case when ADOT owned and maintained the entire highway – before the city made the stupid decision to narrow the interstate in exchange for wider sidewalks. OMG – rocket scientists = NOT!

    I rest my case.

  38. magickj says:

    It’s unfortunate that people like “We Need” have to resort to insults and rudeness when information does not go their way.
    ALL emergency vehicles have access to the bridge in LaMerra. I have seen FD go thru there several times.
    I did not move in from out of state – stop spreading rumors. There’s no doubt in my mind that I’ve been here a lot longer than you and I’m a native of Arizona.
    We DO NOT want a bridge at Red Rock Crossing. Sure you want TRAVEL convenience but public safety has NOTHING to do with it. You are just like everyone else who uses FEAR and PANIC to get what you want – a short cut through my neighborhood.
    This is our neighborhood and we’ll do what we must to protect it. Just because YOU came from a big out-of-state city doesn’t mean that you can come here and bully your way into making our pristine forest and meditation areas into a freeway! It took nature about 21 million years to create the beauty here, and one idiot who wants TRAVEL CONVENIENCE to destroy it.
    Get a life.

  39. Jerry, Sedona City Limits says:

    @James Harrington, nice evaluation but you left out the uncontrolled impact the million $$$ plus funding for alleged destination marketing has factually contributed to the increased number of day-trippers. Bad, bad planning all to accommodate special interests that, as pointed out by “magickj” serve to destroy the natural beauty of the area. And now they are proposing laser light displays during the upcoming “Holiday Central.” Go figure.

  40. Warren says:

    @ Jerry, Sedona City Limits — R U serious? The laser light show proposal is back again? I thought that was considered and rejected a while back.

  41. Jerry, Sedona City Limits says:

    @Warren – yes it’s true according to a front page article (RRN, Friday, March 18). It gets worse by the moment. And tomorrow (3/23) they will be deciding abut moving forward with the decision to control how we dispose of our garbage.

    These last two councils are completely in outer space when it comes to controlling our destiny for YEARS to come. Arrogance of power? Can hardly wait for the “sustained pilgrimage” to move forward although for the time being that might have taken a back seat. They need to get those 5000 signed up in order to sent out monthly bills to pay for contracts with Red Earth Theatre and other such nonsense – at OUR expense. What an opportunity!

  42. Karen says:

    follow the money

  43. West sedona resident says:

    Amen, Steve Jones.

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