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Slant: Short opinion pieces and rumor-chasing notes News: Happening Person: BEAM KEEPS LOCAL FOCUS In redeveloping downtown, Beam Development will keep its independence from KWG Development Partners and its focus on providing affordable, historic space for a diverse, local mix of businesses and nonprofits, according to Beam principal Brad Malsin. Malsin said such a local, diverse, community-oriented project was what originally attracted his firm to Eugene. "We think Eugene is one of those cities that has not sold out their heart and soul," he said. "We're just not going to roll over." The Eugene City Council voted last month to reject calls for a public process before committing to Portland developers Beam and KWG's plans for a massive redevelopment downtown. Beam had proposed a historic restoration of the Centre Court and Washburne buildings with affordable rents while KWG had proposed a much larger project, tearing down several blocks to build a mall-like, upscale shopping area. After the vote City Manager Dennis Taylor said Beam had agreed to work together with KWG on its redevelopment plan for downtown. "It may be that they'll form a limited partnership." But Malsin said a KWG-Beam merger won't happen. "We're two distinct, separate firms," he said. "We're in control of our blocks." Malsin said Beam has focused on community-oriented historic rehabs in Portland. "We have a different way of seeing the world," he said. "We don't do the shopping mall kind of deals." Beam has rehabbed more challenging warehouse buildings in Portland, converting buildings that many said should be torn down into highly valued attractions, according to Malsin. He said he'd "be surprised" if the Washburne Building couldn't be similarly rehabbed. Malsin said his firm remains interested in possibly putting housing units in the Centre Court building and set-back, live/work units on top of the Washburne Building. He said it's not decided yet whether Beam or KWG will develop the adjacent pit known as Aster's hole. But Malsin said much depends on what the community wants in the upcoming public planning process for downtown. "We're totally committed to the public process." — Alan Pittman
NO ANSWERS TO HIGHER CANCER RATE Contamination in the soil, groundwater and air from industrial pollution has long been a problem in the Bethel, River Road and Trainsong neighborhoods. Last month the Superfund Health Investigation and Education Program (SHINE) division of the Oregon Department of Human Services completed a health investigation to reevaluate the public health risks of exposure to hazardous air emissions from the J.H. Baxter creosote plant. Despite detecting elevated levels of naphthalene, a polycyclic carbon compound that the EPA classifies as a possible human carcinogen, SHINE concluded that exposure to emissions from J.H. Baxter poses a low risk for developing long-term health problems. Eugene residents and workers continue to express concern about nose and eye irritation and elevated cancer rates. To address community concerns, SHINE collaborated with the Oregon State Cancer Registry (OSCaR) to monitor incidences of cancer. Their report, released two weeks ago, indicated there are increased incidences of acute mylegenous leukemia (AML) and lung cancer in certain areas in the neighborhoods. Medical histories indicate, however, that the majority of people in the cases for both types of cancer had a history of smoking. The report concluded further research was needed in the AML cases to determine if the cancer was affected by environmental exposure or other factors. There was no significant elevation in cases of nasal and brain cancer. OSCaR will continue to monitor incidences of brain cancer at the community's request. In the same neighborhoods adjacent to J.H. Baxter, many years of railroad operations at the Union Pacific Railyard have caused environmental contamination in the soil and groundwater. This contamination may also have had a negative impact on the health of nearby residents and workers. SHINE is hosting a meeting to discuss this environmental contamination in the River Road and Trainsong neighborhoods. Epidemiologist Jae Douglas will review findings from the public health assessment report completed earlier this month. The meeting is at 6:30 pm Thursday, May 31 at the Red Cross, 862 Bethel Dr. For more information see http://oregon.gov/DHS/ph/shine/uprsite.shtmlTo read the cancer report and comment on the investigation in neighborhoods surrounding J.H. Baxter and other industrial sites visit www.healthoregon.org/superfundSHINE invites comments through June 30 — Erin Rokita
PALAST EXPLAINS 'CAGING' Monica Goodling dropped a bombshell in her testimony before the House Judiciary Committee last week, according to journalist Greg Palast, and hardly anyone in the U.S. media blinked.
Goodling, a staffer for Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and liaison to the White House, testified that Gonzales' Chief of Staff Kyle Sampson perjured himself, lying to the committee in earlier testimony. The lie: Sampson denied Monica had told him about Tim Griffin's "involvement in 'caging' voters" in 2004," writes Palast at www.gregpalast.com "The perplexed committee members hadn't a clue — and asked no substantive questions about it thereafter," says Palast. "Karl Rove is still smiling." So what is "caging"? "The Bush-Cheney operatives sent hundreds of thousands of letters marked 'Do not forward' to voters' homes. Letters returned ('caged') were used as evidence to block these voters' right to cast a ballot on grounds they were registered at phony addresses," says Palast. "Who were the evil fakers? Homeless men, students on vacation and — you got to love this — American soldiers. Oh yeah: most of them are black voters." Palast says caging is a felony offense and Griffin, Rove's right-hand man, was directing the illegal purge. Griffin was then named U.S. attorney for Arkansas, at Rove's insistence. U.S. media are are "missing the real story behind the firing of the U.S. attorneys," says Palast. "It's not about removing prosecutors disloyal to Bush; it's about replacing those who refused to aid the theft of the vote in 2004 with those prepared to burgle it again in 2008." "How do I know?" he asks. "I have the caging lists … I have them because they are attached to the emails Rove insists can't be found."
PEPPER SPRAY ANNIVERSARY On Friday, June 1, it will be exactly 10 years since the 1997 spraying incident in which 11 activists climbed trees to delay the cutting of 40 of the largest trees in downtown Eugene. The Eugene Police Department sprayed every can of pepper spray they had on the protestors and borrowed more cans from Springfield and Lane County. The protestors were attempting to delay the cutting of the trees for one day, until a public hearing could be held. The trees were cut, and Broadway Place, an apartment complex with retail stores and parking garages was built. The police cut open the pants of one of the treesitters, Jim Flynn, and sprayed his anus and genitals, an act Amnesty International called "torture." Tear gas and pepper spray were also used against the surrounding crowd. Flynn said in an email message, "It made me realize that the EPD does not protect public safety, they protect the interests of the developers." He said, "They just wanted me out of that tree by any means necessary with no concern for my life." Flynn and two other protestors sued the city. The resulting settlement required the city to pay the defendants $30,000. Also as a result, the city changed its pepper spray policy. The policy forbids the use of chemical weapons on "nonviolent protesters," but police may use deadly force if their chemical spray has been turned back on them. When asked if the recent rulings on eco-sabotage might stop future actions such as the Broadway treesit, Flynn said, "The Earth is being killed by greedy corporations. Until that changes, people will take action to stop it regardless of the consequences." To commemorate the protest and focus attention on civil rights and the environmental movement, there will be a "Green is the New Red" event June 1 at Wandering Goat Coffee Company. Speakers will include Flynn, local civil rights attorney Lauren Regan and journalist Will Potter. The event is free and starts at 7 pm at at 268 Madison. – Camilla Mortensen
Lane County Herbicide Spray Schedule Near Triangle Lake School: Weyerhaeuser (744-4600) will log 51 acres starting June 12 which is usually followed by burning of slash and spraying with herbicides (No. 781-50579). Call Tom McClellan to request that burning and herbicide spraying not be conducted near the school. Reforestation Services (503-362-8322) will aerially spray 220 acres with 2,4-D, Garlon 4 and other herbicides for Seneca Jones Timber (689-1231) near Fish, Lake, Jackson, Hawley, Douglas and Barlow creeks and tributaries (781-50581). Compiled by Jan Wroncy, Forestland Dwellers: 342-8332, www.forestlanddwellers.org
Natalie Whitson
Voted "best girl artist" at her school in West Chicago (a small town in Illinois), Natalie Whitson won a scholarship to study art at UCLA. "I ran for student body president as a member of the Perfect Students Union," she says. "We did performance art to get people involved." Married a week after graduation, she and her husband, Mark, lived for three years in Holland. "We liked the rain," she says, so they moved to Oregon on their return in 1989. "I picked up the Oregon Peaceworker and thought, 'It could use my help.'" Since December of 1989, every issue of the magazine (10 per year) has featured her drawings. She earned a UO MFA in painting in 1993. Her day job since 1998 is development director for Northwest Youth Corps, a nonprofit job-training and outdoor education program. "Fencing is my art now," she says. "I showed up at the Eugene Fencers Club in February 2000 and I've never left." Whitson teaches a fencing class at NYC in the spring and trains in the summer at the Olympic Training Center in Colorado. "I'm certified in level one foil and epée," she says. "This summer I'm going for saber."
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