
News Briefs: Councilor Changes
Tune on Project | Endangered Ethics | Tattoos
Too Sexy for the Fair? | Torah Repaired
| Solomon Film Showing | Slime
Time Once Again | EW
Wins Awards | War Dead | Lane
Area Herbicide Spray Schedule |
Slant: Short opinion pieces
and rumor-chasing notes
News:
Housing Goes Underground
Demand high for swank
Olympic Trials digs
Happening Person: Ken Goyer
COUNCILOR
CHANGES TUNE ON PROJECT
Opponents of a plan to kick out local businesses
and redevelop downtown with chain stores and condos and $50 million
of public subsidies managed to chip away a councilor this week from
the majority block pushing the project forward.
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| Andrea
Ortiz |
Councilor Andrea Ortiz broke away to vote July 23
against a proposal to use $8 million in federal anti-poverty funds
to help fund the project. The council voted 5-3 to support the project
with Councilors Ortiz, Bonny Bettman and Betty Taylor voting against.
Ortiz said she'd wondered when she'd get to the
point of joining opponents and remains troubled that the big developer
subsidy won't be referred to a vote. "It still takes my breath away
to think of how much money we're asking taxpayers to spend without
their little check at the ballot box."
During the meeting Bettman tried to find out from
staff what the total taxpayer tab was.
But city Finance Manager Sue Cutsogeorge said that
tally wouldn't be available until mid-August.
Bettman questioned how other councilors could vote
for the project without knowing its cost or what else the money
could be used for.
Ortiz also expressed concern that the project could
fall through and the city get stuck with property that it couldn't
sell for the high prices it paid for it. She said she was "really
concerned what direction we're going in the amount of money on the
premise of what if."
City Development Manager Denny Braud said if the
project fell through, the city could have to "resell the properties
in a fire sale." He said the city would have to make up for the
loss by taking money from urban renewal funds to pay back the federal
government.
Ironically, Braud argued that using the federal
anti-poverty money for the upscale project is allowable because
of the low-wage retail and service jobs for poor people the project
will create. "We're targeting entry-level jobs."
But Councilor Taylor questioned whether displacing
local businesses with corporate chain stores would create any jobs.
"Are you subtracting the jobs that are going to be destroyed?"
Councilor Alan Zelenka, now a potential key swing
vote, said the city may pay for "some or all" of the businesses
and nonprofits to be relocated. Zelenka said council actions over
the next two months are needed to make financial tools available
should the council make a final decision by Sept. 25 to proceed
with the project.
"This just sets us up to be able to say 'yes' and
pay for it," Zelenka said. He said the council was being "very prudent"
and compared the financing motions to "wedding planning."
But Bettman said it was "egregious" to rush the
council actions past the public. "What we're doing is offering an
astronomical dowry of over $50 million to a private developer."
— Alan Pittman
ENDANGERED
ETHICS
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFW) will reconsider
eight decisions involving endangered species. The decisions were
"inappropriately influenced" by a political appointee — former
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Fish, Wildlife and Parks Julie A.
MacDonald.
USFW Director H. Dale Hall said he hopes the "blemish
on the scientific integrity" of the agency will be rectified by
the reviews.
The list includes the white-tailed prairie dog,
Preble's meadow jumping mouse, arroyo toad, southwestern willow
flycatcher, California red-legged frog, Canada lynx and 12 species
of Hawaiian picture-wing flies.
At the last minute USFW pulled the marbled murrelet
seabird that is found along Oregon's coast from the list.
According to Hall, the regional listing of the murrelet
as well as a decision on bull trout habitat were removed from review
because MacDonald's impact on those decisions had been within her
"legitimate purview," minimal, or related to law or policy.
MacDonald resigned from her position in May after
the department's inspector general found that she had broken federal
rules. She is accused of browbeating federal scientists and improperly
leaking information about endangered species to private groups.
"Despite no scientific training, MacDonald interfered
in dozens of scientific decisions concerning endangered species,"
said Noah Greenwald, a conservation biologist in Portland.
The review "falls far short of what is needed to
redress MacDonald's role in weakening protection of the nation's
endangered species," according to Greenwald's group, the Center
for Biological Diversity.
"Although we are glad these species will receive
consideration for additional protection, the list of decisions to
be reconsidered is outrageously incomplete," the center said, and
called for more species to be reconsidered.
One of the officials charged with reviewing the
ethics issues raised in the report on MacDonald, Assistant Secretary
for Water and Science Mark Limbaugh, has since resigned to take
a job with the Ferguson Group. He will work as a lobbyist representing
local and state water agencies with interests before the Interior
Department, the Army Corps of Engineers and Congress.
In a July 20 letter, Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., asked
Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne to clarify how his department
will ensure its accountability and ethics in the after MacDonald's
"scandal" and Limbaugh's new position as a lobbyist. –—
Camilla Mortensen
TATTOOS
TOO SEXY FOR THE FAIR?
Tattooing is a violation of "community standards
of decency," according to a letter from Rachel Bivens, event and
commercial exhibits coordinator for the Lane Events Center to Dr.
Julien's Black Lotus Tattoo of Eugene.
Amy Shuttleworth of Black Lotus said the tattoo
shop had applied for a booth at the 2007 Lane County Fair, but "they
told us their board voted against us." This decision was later reversed
by the Lane County Board of Commissioners.
Tattooing, she said, "was lumped into pornography."
She was told they were not welcome because the fair was "family-oriented."
Shuttleworth didn't see how tattoos were anti-family.
"More than half our staff has a family," she said.
Piercing is allowed at the fair, and tattooing must
pass the same stringent health licensing requirements.
Shuttleworth checked and discovered that the Fair
Board does not currently exist – it dissolved back in January
when the Lane County commissioners voted not to fill two of the
position on the five-person board. The three remaining members quit.
The commissioners currently serve as the acting board.
So Black Lotus took the problem to the commissioners
during a June 27 public comment session.
"Tattoos do not violate our community standards,
mores or morals," said commissioner Bill Dwyer, "I've known judges,
doctors and lawyers that have tattoos. I actually have several of
them myself."
The commissioners heard from fairgrounds manager
Warren Wong on July 11. Wong said the comparison to pornography
was "misunderstood."
He surveyed the policies of other county fairs in
Oregon, including the State Fair, he said. The Oregon State Fair
does allow tattooing.
"It doesn't appear tattooing would work" at the
Lane County Fair, he said, because of the need for hot and cold
running water, nonporous surfaces and a separate area for the actual
tattooing process.
The issue of whether tattooing violates "community
values or not depends on your perspective," he said.
The commissioners decided tattooing does not violate
Lane County Fair policies. They decided that if Black Lotus can
get the proper permits, then the business should be allowed at the
fair.
Black Lotus will not have a booth this year, but,
Shuttleworth said, Black Lotus plans to apply for a tattoo booth
for the 2008 fair. – Camilla Mortensen
TORAH
REPAIRED
A community-wide celebration is planned from 11:30
am to 2:30 pm Sunday, July 29 at Ahavas Torah Synagogue, 3800 Ferry
St. The free event marks the return of a Sifrei Torah that had survived
World War II but was damaged by vandals Feb. 22. The sacred scroll
was repaired by experts in New York.
"This Torah was rescued from the Holocaust, only
to be desecrated in the hate crime here in Eugene where vandals
also threw another Torah out in the rain, hacked viciously at a
volume of the Talmud and damaged many more religious objects," reads
a statement from the synagogue. "The rest of the synagogue was undamaged."
At the celebration, Mayor Kitty Piercy is expected
to talk about the city of Eugene's proposed new anti-hate crime
legislation. "The city will be attempting to get legislation passed
on a state level, but at least a city ordinance that will take a
stand for acceptance and diversity here in Eugene," says the group.
Live music and refreshments will be provided and
all are welcome. For more information, call 334-6772.
SOLOMON
FILM SHOWING
Media critic Norman Solomon will be available by conference call
July 27 following a free screening of his new documentary War Made
Easy.
 |
| Norman
Solomon |
The DVD is based on Solomon's 2005 book, War
Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death.
Solomon is the director of the Institute for Public Accuracy, author
of other books of media criticism and a frequent national talk show
guest. After the screening at 7 pm Friday, July 27 in Columbia 150
on the UO campus, Solomon will answer questions.
The movie "reaches into the Orwellian memory hole
to expose a 50-year pattern of government deception and media spin
that has dragged the United States into one war after another from
Vietnam to Iraq," according to promotional materials. The movie
presents a montage of footage from the Vietnam era with footage
from the Iraq War. President George Bush's arguments that leaving
Iraq would destabilize the Middle East are juxtaposed with former
President Richard Nixon's similar "domino theory" argument about
leaving Vietnam. "It would not bring peace, it would bring more
war," Nixon argued.
The documentary, narrated by Sean Penn, includes
footage of Eugene's U.S. Senator Wayne Morse, one of the earliest
opponents to the Vietnam War. "I'm pleading that the American people
be given the facts," Morse said.
SLIME
TIME ONCE AGAIN
Hot August nights are approaching, and one of them
will bring a unique Eugene tradition that the straight-laced among
us would just as soon see fade into history. Yep, it's the 25th
annual coronation of Eugene's new S.L.U.G. Queen, an event viewed
by many as one of the most outrageous and unpredictable happenings
in town. S.L.U.G. is an acronym for Society for the Legitimization
of the Ubiquitous Gastropod.
The new queen will reign (unofficially) over the
Eugene Celebration the second weekend in September. The queen-crowning
"talent" contest is free and starts at 6 pm Saturday, Aug. 11 at
the Broadway Plaza downtown. Dancing music following the coronation
will be provided by JC Rico and Zulu Dragon.
It's not too late for aspiring queens to join the
competition. Entry forms can be found at Saturday Market's information
booth. And as Queen Irspira suggests to applicants, "bribe early
and bribe often." Donations are also being sought to help cover
the costs of the event, says Old Queen Scarlett Slimera.
EW
WINS AWARDS
Eugene Weekly won three journalism awards
from the Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association at its July convention.
The awards, based on 2006 editorial and design content, followed
18 earlier regional awards and one national award from other professional
journalism contests.
EW won third place awards from ONPA for writing,
design and target audience in the ONPA's 2007 associate member contest.
"Oh, wow. The piece on the police department's hiring
practices was great. Very nice work," a judge commented about Alan
Pittman's story concerning the EPD officer sex abuse scandals. Judges
also praised EW's graphic artist Todd Cooper for "strong"
cover design, and said the paper does an "excellent" job of serving
its target audience and "delivers on its goals and promises in each
edition."
WAR
DEAD
Since the U.S. invasion began on March 20, 2003
(last week's numbers in parentheses):
• 3,633 U.S. troops killed* (3,618)
• 26,558 U.S. troops injured* (26,558)
• 292 Coalition troops killed* (287)
• 414 contractors killed** (411)
• 74,336 Iraqi civilians killed*** (73,611)
• $445.7 billion cost of war ($444 billion)
* through July 23, 2007; source: icasualties.org
** estimate; source: icasualties.org
*** highest estimate; source: iraqbodycount.org
Lane
Area Herbicide Spray Schedule
• Oregon Forest Management (896-3757) will
ground spray 264 acres for Giustina (345-2301) near Coyote, Rebel,
and Camas Swale tributaries starting July 25 (#50805).
• Weyerhaeuser (744-4600) will ground spray
659 acres in Blachly and Low Pass starting Aug. 1
(#50801).
• Reforestation Services (503-362-8322) will
aerially spray 51 acres for Freres Timber (503-859-2121) in Horton
starting July 24 (#50810).
• Comments due on BLM Vegetation Treatment
EIS on July 31. www.blm.gov/wo/st/en/prog/more/veg_eis.html
Forestland
Dwellers: 342-8332, www.forestlanddwellers.org
| SLANT
 |
| Anna
Morrison |
Where
is she now? Former Lane County Commissioner Anna Morrison
has resurfaced. She appeared at a recent showing of the
local environmental film Boom, Bust and the BLM, apparently
representing the Association of O&C Counties. The group
of county commissioners is known for their logging and timber
industry advocacy. The association was part of a lawsuit that
has led the way to the possible reopening of the logging of
formerly protected old-growth forests in western Oregon. Conservative
commissioners on the association have even called for selling
large tracts of O&C lands to private timber companies.
We hear
Beppe & Gianni's may have a full orchestra playing
its backyard next summer. Some Fairmount Neighbors are proposing
to use a matching grant from the city of Eugene to help construct
a bandshell in Washburne Park, with one idea put forward that
it could host free Bach Fest-associated concerts. Bandshells
are an attractive addition to any park, but would especially
complement the sloping grounds of Washburne. We hope this
project finds the funding to get rolling soon to debut before
or during next year's Olympic Trials.
We've
been running statistics in our News Briefs section on the
casualites of the Iraq occupation nearly every week
since early June, and these numbers come from the best sources
we can find. Several of our readers have pointed out that
the number of civilian deaths calculated by the British Iraq
Body Count (IraqBodyCount.org) is lower by hundreds of thousands
than estimates by other groups and reports. Iraq Body Count
says it updates its numbers when the organization has "located
and cross-checked two or more independent approved news sources
for the same incident." The group admits its numbers can "only
be a sample of true deaths unless one assumes that every civilian
death has been reported. It is likely that many if not most
civilian casualties will go unreported by the media. That
is the sad nature of war."
So how
many Iraqi civilians have died as a direct or indirect
result of the U.S. invasion? We will never know, but we recall
the British medical journal Lancet last October reported
on a survey of Iraqi households conducted by Iraqi physicians,
overseen by epidemiologists at John Hopkins University. The
study concluded that 655,000 civilians have died of war causes.
Of that number, 601,000 suffered violent deaths. Those numbers
will soon be a year out of date. Hundreds of Iraqis die each
day and more than a billion dollars a week are squandered
as Congress and the White House bicker over benchmarks and
study public opinion polls.
Kudos
to CNN and YouTube this week for organizing one of
the liveliest and most unpredictable presidential candidate
forums we've seen yet. Ordinary folks submitted videotaped
questions via YouTube, and some the questions put the Democratic
candidates on the spot. Despite some dodging and squirming,
the Ds' responses gave us hope for the future. The election
of anyone on the stage Monday night would mean a monumental
improvement in White House accountability, diplomacy, and
environmental and social consciousness. We're looking forward
to seeing Republican candidates facing even tougher questions
in their YouTube forum September. We can't really call these
debates. Despite the innovative format, the candidates were
allowed little sparring among themselves.
Lane County
Animal Regulation Authority (LCARA) has recently earned kudos
from local animal lovers for its attempts to move towards
a No-Kill philosophy. To go along with its kinder-gentler
approach to animal control, unofficial reports say LCARA
will also move to a kinder-gentler name: Lane County Animal
Services (LCAS). No announcements have been made, but several
of the agency's vehicles are reported to be sporting the new
name.
How
green is our brain power? Eugene Mayor Kitty Piercy has
been contacted by the producers of The Science Channel seeking
ideas for environmentally advanced inventions and initiatives.
The popular cable and satellite network is featuring a new
program with the best ideas to share with communities across
the nation. Peace Point Entertainment is the producer of the
new show, and the contact is Michael Chong (televisionresearcher@gmail.com).
One idea
that comes to mind for the TV show is the local Community
Climate Stewards (CCS) program, formerly the Neighborhood
Climate Councils, a program of the UO Climate Leadership Initiative.
Already the city of San Francisco and a nonprofit reaching
out to multiple cities in the Bay Area are looking at replicating
the program and using CCS materials. CCS is also gearing up
for a 35-student fall Climate Masters training. Email climlead@uoregon.edu
or call 346-0786 for more information.
SLANT
includes short opinion pieces, observations and rumor-chasing
notes compiled by the EW staff. Heard any good rumors lately?
Contact Ted Taylor at 484-0519, editor@eugeneweekly.com
|

KEN
GOYER
 |
On the front porch of the house he built in west
Eugene, Ken Goyer shows an example of the SixBricks Rocket Stove
he developed at Aprovecho, in collaboration with rocket stove pioneer
Larry Winiarski. Rocket stoves produce more heat from less fuel
with less pollution than the three-stone open fires commonly used
for cooking in the Third World. A native of Burbank, Goyer has worked
at car repair (Ken's Ten-Buck Tune-Ups) and carpentry since he arrived
in Eugene in 1979. He first saw open cooking fires when he went
to El Salvador 10 years ago to help Sylvia Gregory with her women's
empowerment project. "I made a few stoves," he says. "They were
a great hit." Over the past two years, with funding from the Rotary
Club, Goyer has traveled to Africa to oversee the construction of
brickmaking facilities for refugee camps surrounding Lira in Uganda
and Gulu in Darfur. "We've made 30,000 stoves at Lira," he reports.
"We have nine employees at Gulu." For an photo-essay showing how
the stoves are built and used, visit Goyer's website, aiduganda.org
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