
News Briefs: Beam Wins PDX Kudos
| Public Input on Broadway | Operation
Backfire Goes to Appeal | Magaña on YouTube
| A Whopper of a WOPR | Stop
Smith Campaign Cranks Up | War Dead | Lane
Area Herbicide Spray Schedule |
Slant: Short opinion pieces
and rumor-chasing notes
News:
EPD's Shocker
Police plan to use Taser against non-violent people News:
A Greener Place to Play
Pesticide-free parks take root in Eugene
Happening Person: Jane and Eva Happy
BEAM
WINS PDX KUDOS
Beam Development, the Portland firm that has proposed
a local-focused historic restoration of the Centre Court and Washburne
buildings in downtown Eugene has won kudos for a similar project
in its hometown.
As part of its "Best of Portland" issue July 25,
the alternative newspaper Willamette Week praised Beam principal
Brad Malsin's Central Eastside project as "the epicenter of Portland's
radiant future."
WW describes Beam's Portland project as "a
creative class demographer's wet dream" with its tenant roster of
"fashion designers, architects and environmental engineers."
Many urban redevelopers now consider such "creative
class" businesses as key to the success of cities. The theory was
popularized by Richard Florida in his best seller, The Rise of
the Creative Class.
Malsin lost out to Opus development in the Burnside
Bridgehead project in Portland. But while the Central Eastside is
done, the Opus project has yet to "lift even a shovelful of dirt,"
WW wrote.
Malsin's Beam is also in competition with some of
the Opus people in Eugene. KWG includes people who have worked for
and with Opus on the Bridgehead and other projects. In Eugene, the
City Council voted to involve both KWG and Beam in proposed downtown
redevelopment involving a total of about $50 million in public subsidies.
City Manager Dennis Taylor said Beam had agreed
to work together with KWG, perhaps giving KWG control over choosing
tenants for the ground floors.
But Malsin told EW that he'll keep an independent,
community-oriented focus for his project. "We have a different way
of seeing the world," he said of KWG. "We don't do the shopping
mall kind of deals."
Beam's proposal to rehab the Washburne and Centre
Court buildings and build a one-story building in the adjacent Aster
pit could cost Eugene roughly $10 million in subsidies. Beam said
it may also build a second floor of housing above the Washburne
building and build across Broadway from the Centre Court in a later
phase. Beam's proposal had unanimous support on the council, but
three councilors have expressed opposition to KWG's proposal, involving
expensive parking garages and roughly $40 million in subsidies.
A final council decision is expected in late September. —
Alan Pittman
PUBLIC
INPUT ON BROADWAY
A series of meetings are under way regarding redevelopment
of West Broadway. At stake is an estimated $50 million or more in
public subsidies and tax breaks involved in this project, and opportunities
are available for public input and learning more about the proposals.
The mayor's West Broadway Advisory Committee (WBAC)
has been working on the proposals and gathering public comments
this summer. The next meeting will be from 5 to 7 pm Wednesday,
Aug. 15 at the Bascom-Tykeson Room of the Eugene Public Library
downtown. Another meeting to determine the group's final recommendations
to the City Council is tentatively scheduled for Aug. 29.
The topics being discussed are many and include
expansion of the Downtown Urban Renewal District, parking garages,
public parks and open spaces, bicycle and pedestrian considerations,
transition plans for existing displaced businesses, developer profits,
the balance of housing and retail, sustainable construction materials
and methods, the availability of Brownfields Economic Development
Initiative grants and HUD money and city land contributions.
OPERATION
BACKFIRE GOES TO APPEAL
Oregon's eco-sabotage cases are not yet closed though
last week saw the last sentencing of the 10 Oregon defendants as
well as the reduction of one sentence.
 |
| Cavel
West horse slaughterhouse |
On Aug. 1, Jonathan Paul's sentence of 51 months
for burning down the Cavel West horse slaughterhouse was reimposed
by U.S. District Judge Ann Aiken. Aiken sentenced Paul in June,
but his lawyer, Marc Blackman, challenged the legality of the sentencing.
The sentencing process involved complicated sentencing guidelines,
the application of the terrorism enhancement or equivalent, "upward
departures" in sentence length and criminal history levels (see
EW 6/7).
Aiken heard the legal arguments at last week's hearing
but refuted them and let the sentence stand. Blackman said he plans
to appeal the sentence.
In addition to the sentence, Aiken also assigned
Paul a book report due when he reports to prison Oct. 2. Aiken alluded
to the defendant's use of a "book club" for their meetings as she
discussed her assigned reading. Paul is to read New York Times
bestseller Three Cups of Tea: One Man's Vision to Promote Peace
... One School at a Time.
The book by David O. Relin and Greg Mortenson recounts
Mortenson's efforts to build more than 50 schools in Pakistan and
Afghanistan.
She also read a letter in court from Stan Meyerhoff,
whom Aiken sentenced in May to 13 years — the longest sentence
in the Operation Backfire case. Meyerhoff wrote of his work teaching
English and Spanish to other inmates. Aiken has made a point of
suggesting inspirational books to read, telling motivational stories
and telling defendants to educate others in the future.
Two days later, Aiken heard a similar sentence appeal
from Kendall Tankersley. She had received a sentence of 51 months.
Aiken rejected the legal appeal but still reduced the sentence by
five months.
Tankersley was only involved in the arsons for a
brief period of time, and Aiken pointed to Tankersley's efforts
to lead an "exemplary" life after the arsons. Tankersley had been
applying to medical schools at the time of her arrest. She has also
begun paying restitution for the cost of the arsons. Paul has paid
his restitution as well.
According to a July 5 notice of appeal, Meyerhoff
also intends to appeal his lengthy sentence.
The federal prison system has no parole, but prisoners
can get up to 54 days a year off their sentence in "good conduct
time."
The cases, however, are not yet over. Four people
have never been caught and remain at large. Two people are to be
sentenced in Washington state, and a third, Briana Waters, is the
only defendant who still intends to go to trial. Many expect Waters'
case to address the possible use of National Security Agency warrantless
wiretaps. — Camilla Mortensen
MAGAÑA
ON YOUTUBE
Roger Magaña, the Eugene Officer sentenced
to 94 years for using his badge to coerce sex from a dozen women,
is on YouTube.
The "fuck the police" video (youtube.com/watch?v=5eHweGrPUpY)
appears to be about six years old and allegedly shows Magaña
illegally entering a house to harass and arrest a bunch of skateboarders,
according to the post's description by an anonymous author.
An unidentified officer with Magaña "steps
in, puts me in a full-nelson, throws me face down onto the cement
outside, and puts his knee in my back and handcuffs me," the poster
alleges.
The video post created some stir with 54,826 views
and 326 comments, many criticizing the police and/or debating who
was at fault.
In 2004 the city paid $22,500 to settle a lawsuit
alleging that Magaña and Eugene police officer Mel Thompson
illegally entered a Eugene couple's apartment in a separate incident.
Attorneys for Magaña's sex abuse victims have
accused the city of whitewash for failing to investigate other officers
for not stopping Magaña's abuse despite numerous complaints.
— Alan Pittman
A
WHOPPER OF A WOPR
The Bureau of Land Management plans to release a
draft environmental impact statement of the Western Oregon Plan
Revision (WOPR, pronounced "whopper") Aug. 10. The WOPR will change
the way 2.6 million acres of public lands and resources are managed
in Oregon by the BLM in six districts ranging from Eastern Oregon
to Eugene to Coos Bay.
The WOPR revises the 1994 Northwest Forest Plan
which protected habitat for species such as the northern spotted
owl in Oregon's remaining old-growth forests.
Most of the public lands are areas that fall under
the Oregon and California Revested Railroad Lands Act of 1937, or
O&C Act. This is the same act that tied a portion of federal
timber revenues to county revenues.
The Secure Rural Schools and Community Self-Determination
Act of 2000 replaced this timber revenue with federal monies for
six years. It expired in 2006, and Lane and other counties with
large areas of timberland now face potentially severe budget cuts.
The cuts were temporarily staved off when Congress approved a one-year
reprieve for the coming fiscal year.
"Americans shouldn't have to choose between protecting
our remaining old-growth forests or paying for essential county
services," said Josh Laughlin of the Cascadia Wildlands Project.
According to a lawsuit filed by the American Forest
Resource Council (AFRC) and the Association of O&C Counties
— groups representing the forest products industry —
the O&C Act calls for "sustainable" logging on all of the O&C
lands in compliance with other laws such as the Endangered Species
Act and the Clean Water and Clean Air acts.
In 2003 the secretaries of Interior and Agriculture
entered into an out-of-court settlement with the AFRC and O&C
Counties agreeing to revise the management plans. The outcome of
this agreement is the WOPR. This means the practice of establishing
old-growth forest reserves — unlogged areas — could
be ended, except around endangered species habitat.
"Eliminating the reserves is a train wreck in the
making," said Laughlin. People come to Oregon, he said, to see "towering
forests, clear creeks and abundant wildlife, not clearcuts and stumpfields."
The BLM cannot discuss specifics of the draft environmental
impact statement until after its release.
The public will have 90 days from the release on
Friday to comment on the draft of the WOPR. The 1,650-page document
will be available on paper, CD and via the web at www.blm.gov/or/plans/wopr/
— Camilla Mortensen
STOP
SMITH CAMPAIGN CRANKS UP
The Stop Gordon Smith Campaign sponsored by the
Democratic Party of Oregon (DPO) is cranking up its website and
blog to update voters on the Oregon Republican's conservative Senate
voting record. But will Smith, taking flak from both the left and
right, actually run for a third term?
Smith is raising money to seek a third term in 2008
though he has also been rumored to be considering a run for the
governorship. At least one Democratic blog is speculating that Smith
could decide he would have more power as governor than as a minority
member of the Senate (see www.BlueOregon.com).While
campaigning for governor, and even as governor, Smith would also
have more time at home and to tend his family business, Smith Frozen
Foods.
"Smith is restricted in managing the company due
to his Senate job," writes Democratic activist Ernie Delmazzo on
BlueOregon. "He can't put his name on a company loan or line of
credit and his receiving federal government subsidies and contracts
would bring controversy. As governor, little or no legal restrictions
would apply and he could operate every aspect of Smith Foods."
The Democratic website StopGordonSmith.com does
not endorse any potential candidates to oppose Smith.
"If you want to find out about Gordon Smith's more
than 20 votes for the Iraq War, the gap between his votes and his
quotes, or why he votes with President Bush 90 percent of the time,
it's all here," says DPO Chair Meredith Wood Smith.
The website documents Smith's very public campaign
in 2002 to divert Klamath River water to farmers, pushing President
Bush and Vice President Cheney to override environmental rules,
leading to the largest recorded adult salmon kill in the history
of the West.
"Now that 70,000 salmon are dead, countless fishermen
have lost their livelihood and the U.S. House is looking into his
actions, he's suddenly media shy," reads the website. "Gordon Smith
should take responsibility for his actions. If Gordon Smith can
open an irrigation system to release thousands of gallons of water,
surely he can open his mouth and apologize to Oregonians."
Names of possible Democratic candidates to face
the Pendleton senator include political activist Steve Novick, state
House Speaker Jeff Merkley, former Ashland public radio talk show
host Jeff Golden, Portland businesswoman Eileen Brady, medical equipment
executive Ty Pettit and state Sen. Alan Bates. On the Republican
side, political activists Bill Sizemore and Kevin Mannix have voiced
interest in the Senate seat. — Ted Taylor
War
Dead
Since the U.S. invasion began on March 20, 2003
(last week's numbers in parentheses):
• 3,676 U.S. troops
killed* (3,651)
• 26,558 U.S. troops injured* (26,558)
• 292 Coalition troops killed* (292)
• 414 contractors killed** (414)
• 74,927 Iraqi civilians killed*** (74,403)
• $449.7 billion cost of war ($445.7 billion)
*
through Aug. 6, 2007; source: icasualties.org; some figures only
updated monthly
**
estimate; source: icasualties.org
***
highest estimate; source: iraqbodycount.org; based on confirmed
media reports; other groups calculate civilian deaths as high as
655,000
Lane
Area Herbicide Spray Schedule
• Near Walterville Elementary-Middle School:
Oregon Forest Management Services (896-3757) will ground spray 55
acres with Arsenal and Chopper herbicides plus Methylated Seed Oil
adjuvant for Weyerhaeuser (741-5211) between July 30 and Sept. 30
(#55805).
• Western Helicopter Services (503-538-9469)
will aerially spray 90 acres with Triclopyr Ester, 2,4-D, Sulfometuron,
Metsulfuron, Imazapyr and Glyphosate herbicides in Low Pass near
Jones Creek tributaries for Plum Creek Timber (336-6224) between
Aug. 15 and Oct. 25 (#50888).
Compiled
by Jan Wroncy, Forestland Dwellers: 342-8332, www.forestlanddwellers.org
| SLANT
EW
has cranked up several blogs by editorial staffers at
http://blogs.eugeneweekly.com
or via our website. Read about bad cops in Thailand being
forced to wear "Hello Kitty" armbands; see the YouTube video
showing EPD's infamous Roger Magaña busting skateboarders
for no apparent reason; visit cat blogs; take a drive through
Portland suburbs; compare Harry Potter with Jesus; see scary
photos of Michael Jackson; take a cheap road trip to Ashland
via Crater Lake, etc. The blogs will also provide breaking
news, updates on stories we've written, stories that never
made it into print, and snarky comments on just about any
topic. And of course readers can leave their own snarky comments
as well.
Air
America affilliate KOPT-AM shut down its local programming
last week after growing a loyal audience since 2004. It will
be missed. News hounds Rick Little, Sarah Ferren and Sean
Shoppe were staying on top of local news, and talk show host
Brian Shaw was conjuring up some righteous leftie monologues
and dialogues. Barbara Nixon, Leigh Anne Jasheway-Bryant and
David Kelly had scheduled shows; and regular voices included
Mayor Kitty Piercy, county commissioners, UO and LCC profs,
nonprofit leaders, environmental activists and even EW's
Ted Taylor.
We appreciate
the investment Churchill Media (Susanne Arlie and John Musumeci)
made in this money-losing adventure, though the programming
has always been a puzzle — Musumeci once funded the
vicious Gang of 9 and its anonymous campaign to discredit
progressives on the City Council. Cynics among us wonder about
the timing of this decision. Progressives had a strong and
growing voice on KOPT, and several of them, including Piercy,
are up for re-election in 2008.
Now what?
KOPT is for sale, and maybe someone will pick up the pieces
and rehire these talented journalists and hosts. Meanwhile,
a void exists and public radio KLCC has a golden opportunity
to finally put together the kind of daily live talk show that
has worked so well for Ashland's Jefferson Public Radio (JPR),
rebroacast on Eugene's KRVM. KLCC already has a strong news
staff and we think KLCC's audience and underwriters would
support a talk show with a moderate and respectful tone, hosted
by someone like Jeff Golden of JPR. Coincidentally, Golden
is currently unemployed while he decides whether or not to
run for the U.S. Senate. If he decides not to run …
Ashland's loss could be Eugene's gain.
The fate
of Palace Bakery, once a friendly supplier of breads,
pastries and other desserts to Café Zenon, Perugino and
its loyal customers, will now depend on its new owners, Full
City Coffee, and their grand plans. While all of Palace's
former employees were laid off and the bakery will no longer
bake bread nor craft specialty desserts and cakes, the name
will be retained — though may as well be changed to
Full City Bakery. To wit, there is discussion on knocking
out the wall separating Full City and Palace to allow for
growth of the coffee chain. Café Zenon will now serve
desserts from Sweet Life Pâtisserie. The new Palace Bakery
will undoubtedly switch from Wandering Goat to Full City brand
coffee. While change is inevitable, it is disheartening to
see mergers and acquisitions on such a small scale, mostly
because of the displaced workers but also because of the fewer
options for consumers. Another restaurant will serve Sweet
Life desserts, and another place to buy breads and specialty
cakes bites the dust. Small business diversity, especially
in a city as close-knit as Eugene, is the key to a healthy
economy.
McKenzie-Willamette/Triad
is working its way through the planning process to build its
new medical center north of Eugene, and the next step is approval
or denial by the Eugene Planning Commission. The project is
on the agenda at 11:30 am Monday, Aug. 13, and it could go
either way. But our metro area's history of urban planning
favors developers with big bucks over livability and common
sense. Valley River Center, Hynix, and PeaceHealth's RiverBend
are just a few examples of developments that defy sound urban
planning. Will we see the same pattern with McKenzie-Willamette's
new hospital? Planners in the past have found ways to sidestep
even clear rules and goals by imposing conditions. One big
obstacle facing the hospital is the Metro Plan's requirement
that developments be "designed and located in a manner that
preserves and enhances desireable features of local and neighborhood
areas and promotes their sense of identity." We and the residents
of the area will be watching to see if the Planning Commission
can mitigate that one.
One of
the topics discussed at last weekend's West Broadway Advisory
Committee workshop was the possibility of a downtown theater,
maybe an arthouse run by a chain. We're excited about the
idea of a downtown theater but also concerned that a national
chain's faux-arthouse multiplex could suffocate the Bijou,
one of Eugene's gems. Chain theaters have distribution clout
and would likely wind up with the more popular, money-making
indie releases (Regal, not the Bijou, showed Sicko).
Other options? A downtown Bijou, perhaps? A second-run theater
pub, like Portland's Mission and Bagdad theaters (both run
by McMenamin's), that could also support fun events like weekly
Buffy nights? Another two- or three-screen independent
arthouse theater would be an interesting option and one that
might make for fairer competition. The new Regal theater at
Valley River Center should have been built downtown, but it's
too late for that.
This issue
might seem small and of import only to film fans, but in truth
it's reflective of the entire downtown debate: Do we bring
in newer, bigger, shinier businesses without thought for the
damage as well as the good they might do, or do we weigh the
impact on the community and then decide what best suits Eugene's
existing life and character? Voice your opinion at the committee's
next public forum, 5 pm Aug. 15 at the Downtown Library.
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
|

JANE
AND EVA HAPPY
 |
"When I was a kid, there was a farm at the end of
the street until I was 9," says Jane Happy, who grew up in Salem.
"We could go play in the field all day long. I was heartbroken when
it was developed." Now a social worker at Sacred Heart, a resident
of Eugene's Friendly Neighborhood and the mother of 10-year-old
Eva, Happy has taken an active role this year in the effort to save
Madison Meadow, two acres of remnant meadow and orchard. "I was
making fairies for Eva's birthday party fairy hunt," she says. "I
had an inspiration to make them to benefit the park." Constructed
from artificial flowers, costume jewelry, and other thrift-store
materials, the Happy fairies were a hit for $10 each at the Mount
Pisgah Wildflower Show. "I've been making two every night ever since,"
she reports. "Eva makes one or two. We've sold a thousand dollars
worth at garden tours." Though the Madison Meadow nonprofit has
raised $379,000 since incorporating in 2003, they need another $143,000
by December to save the land from development. Learn more at madisonmeadow.org
|