
News Briefs: Staggering
Ducks Abound | Spotted Owls in Spotlight
| Fussing Over Fish | Freeways
Plan Eugene's Future | Referendum Manipulation
| Meth Mouth Exposed | Connie
Brown Remembered | Watada Retrial Delayed
| War Dead | Lane Area
Herbicide Spray Schedule |
Slant: Short opinion pieces
and rumor-chasing notes
News:
City Hall Sprawl
City disses its own goals and rules and heads for the burbs
Analysis:
Mayfield's Vengeance
Maligned Oregon lawyer takes on PATRIOT Act
Happening People: David
Wilson
STAGGERING
DUCKS ABOUND
Since the UO and city of Eugene endorsed public
drinking by waiving laws against alcoholic parking lot parties around
Autzen Stadium, drunk Ducks are causing problems.
In the West University area on Friday, Sept. 28,
Eugene police issued 68 citations for minor in possession of alcohol,
five citations for allowing minors to consume alcohol and 2 citations
for urinating in public. The next day, the police issued 16 citations
for open container and 16 citations for minor in possession.
At Autzen Stadium that weekend, police ejected 142
people from the football game, mostly drunks. Two drunk people were
arrested for disorderly conduct and one for trespass. Local and
state police also arrested a total of nine Duck fans for drunk driving.
Retired UO VP of Administration Dan Williams urged
the City Council to waive laws against alcohol at parking lot parties
around the stadium. Duck fans who drive to the game "expect the
ability to consume alcohol," Williams said on Sept. 24. "We cannot
be insensitive to the expectations."
Last fall the UO warned parents of the grave consequences
of alcohol on campus: "Approximately 1,700 college students (aged
18–24) die each year in the U.S. in alcohol related incidents.
Along with the above reported student deaths, 97,000 sexual assaults,
599,000 injuries, and 696,000 assaults were reported. ... In addition,
25 percent of college students report academic consequences from
drinking, including lower grades overall, missed classes, falling
behind, and doing poorly on exams."
Last year 196 people died in alcohol related accidents
in Oregon, a leading cause of death for young people.
But while city police have struggled with beer riots
at the UO in recent years, the UO has made millions on alcohol advertising
tied to sporting events. The UO has made millions more by selling
beer at games in its indoor practice facility and requiring fans
who want choice Autzen parking party spots to make big donations.
—Alan Pittman
SPOTTED
OWLS IN SPOTLIGHT
In the wake of this summer's revelation that the
Bush administration's plan to save the northern spotted owl from
extinction is "deeply flawed," lawsuits filed by local environmental
groups are flying fast and furious.
Last week, the U.S. Forest Service agreed to withdraw
plans to log spotted owl habitat in the Deschutes National Forest
in response to a lawsuit filed by the Blue Mountains Biodiversity
Project, Cascadia Wildlands Project and the Sierra Club. On the
same day that settlement was reached, the same groups filed another
suit to protect the owls from another USFS logging project in a
different area of the same forest.
The Forest Service proposed to log 190 acres of
spotted owl habitat in an old-growth reserve that burned in last
year's Black Crater fire near the Three Sisters Wilderness. Conservationists
argue that such burned forests are still valuable owl habitat. "Owls
have evolved with wildfire," says Josh Laughlin of the Cascadia
Wildlands project.
The lawsuit alleged, among other issues, "distortions
of scientific research regarded spotted owl use of fire-scorched
habitat." The settlement allows for the logging of 27 acres, while
setting aside another 174 acres to naturally regenerate.
The new lawsuit seeks to stop timber sales that
are part of the USFS Five Buttes Project near a popular recreation
area in the Cascade Lakes region. The USFS proposes to log 4,235
acres that includes, as in the case of the Black Crater suit, spotted
owl habitat in old-growth reserves.
The proposed timber sale would log fire resistant
old-growth trees, according to Asante Riverwind of the Oregon Chapter
Sierra Club, which "contradicts Forest Service claims to decrease
fire hazard."
The groups are not against all logging in national
forests. According to Jay Lininger of Cascadia Wildlands, "the way
to reduce fire hazard is to burn the forest after careful thinning
that leaves big trees and their canopies in place."
The Bush administration has been trying to step
up logging on public lands; the conservation groups allege that
the Pacific Northwest Regional Office of the Forest Service has
tripled timber quotas for the Deschutes and other forests, emphasizing
larger logs. Lawsuits have largely blocked the attempted increases.
— Camilla Mortensen
FUSSING
OVER FISH
The confusion over when it's OK to snack on seafood
got a little worse this week after the National Healthy Mothers,
Healthy Babies Coalition issued a press release stating that the
benefits of eating ocean fish outweigh the risks of mercury tainting
the fish. Their recommendation for pregnant and breastfeeding women
to eat a minimum of 12 ounces of fish a week contradicts the advice
of the federal government, which recommends 12 ounces or less.
According to the FDA, for the average person, the
benefits of eating a limited amount of fish outweighs the side effects
of methylmercury exposure. Methylmercury is toxic in high doses.
It can harm the immune system, the gastrointestinal system and the
central nervous system. High levels of exposure can kill you. Methylmercury
is particularly harmful to fetuses and small children.
Mercury poisoning is not just an issue related to
ocean fish. Here in Lane County, fish from the Willamette River
as well as Cottage Grove and Dorena Reservoirs have high mercury
levels. Fish in the Willamette also have high polychlorinated biphenyl
(PCBs) levels, according to the Oregon Department of Health Services.
PCBs lurk in the fatty tissues of fish and, to a lesser extent,
in the muscle tissue.
Mercury comes from natural mineral sources as well
as human sources like mining. PCBs are chemicals that were widely
used in electrical equipment before they were banned in 1976. They
are still entering the food chain and, like mercury, can adversely
affect fetuses and infants.
If you're concerned about sustainability as well
as health, thanks to the Internet and text messaging, you can find
out which fish are OK to eat on your cell phone before you order
a meal.
Text 30644 on your cell phone with the message "FISH"
and the name of the fish you're thinking about eating, and the Blue
Ocean Institute will get back to you within seconds thanks to their
new "Fishphone" service. Or you can use the Internet to access the
Monterey Bay Aquarium's listing of sustainable seafoods that also
notes which ones may be high in mercury: www.montereybayaquarium.org/mobile/sfw/
Currently the guide has farmed and Atlantic salmon
on their "avoid" list as non-sustainable and mercury tainted. Wild
salmon from Oregon, California and Washington are listed as a "good
alternative" and wild Alaskan salmon are a "best choice."
If pets rather than infants are your concern, you
should know to never feed Pacific Northwest salmon to your pup.
Salmon and other freshwater fish in the Cascades can carry a microorganism
that is toxic to dogs when eaten, though it has no effects on humans.
— Camilla Mortensen
FREEWAYS
PLAN EUGENE'S FUTURE
A little-known regional government agency is pushing
big freeway projects that have little to do with official Eugene
plans for compact growth.
The Lane Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO)
has proposed $182 million in new highway projects that seemingly
ignore local land use plans and could drive more urban sprawl, according
to a letter from 1000 Friends of Oregon's transportation advocate
Rob Zako.
The MPO projects include $90 million for two new
freeway interchanges along Hwy 126 in Springfield, a $22 million
revamped I-5 interchange at Coburg, $51 million for more river crossing
capacity in north Eugene and $20 million for widening West 11th
Ave.
All the new freeway work isn't called for in local
land use plans, according to Zako. That means the MPO's highway
plans will drive new, unplanned development, Zako said. "We as yet
see no evidence" that the costly road projects are consistent with
local land use plans or that the projects have "been vetted at the
local level (in particular with public hearings."
Despite the huge decisions it makes, the MPO is
dominated by Lane Council of Governments staff, has an undemocratic
structure and is not directly accountable to voters. — Alan
Pittman
REFERENDUM
MANIPULATION
After two city referendums made it onto the ballot
in November, the city of Eugene moved to make referendum approval
harder for petitioners.
The council passed a change to slightly increase
the number of signatures required, but balked in a 4-3 vote Sept.
24 at allowing the city flexibility in when to schedule a referendum
election.
Councilor Bonny Bettman said the scheduling proposal
opened the door to the city manipulating the timing to make passing
a measure harder. Bettman said the city already has "all the power"
when it comes to defeating citizen referendums. "It is a very challenging
process for the community to be able to do this, and we shouldn't
make it any harder."
But Councilor Alan Zelenka said he was "unconvinced"
by Bettman's arguments. Not allowing the city to schedule a vote
when other measures were already on the ballot "could cost us a
quarter of a million dollars" in election costs, he said. —
Alan Pittman
METH
MOUTH EXPOSED
Is "meth mouth" overhyped? The federal Office of
National Drug Control Policy is featuring graphic close ups of mangled,
rotted teeth in a national ad campaign (some have run in EW).
Some critics have compared current federal anti-drug messages to
laughable, earlier propaganda efforts like the 1937 film Reefer
Madness.
Meth does hurt teeth, but not directly, Slate
media critic Jack Shafer has written, citing medical studies. The
decay comes not from direct chemical erosion, but from the dry mouths,
soda habits and poor dental hygiene that are side effects of meth
addiction, according to Shafer. He notes that similar dental damage
can come from many other prescription and legal drugs, such as alcohol.
"But don't expect anybody to call it 'Miller mouth.'" —Alan
Pittman
CONNIE
BROWN REMEMBERED
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| Connie
Brown |
Longtime Lane County activist Constance Peakes Brown
died in Portland Sept. 28 at age 90. She was involved in the Democratic
Party and was a generous donor to many nonprofits working for peace,
health care and the environment. She was the first owner of a hybrid
car in Oregon.
Brown was born in Dover-Foxcraft, Maine, and was
the widow of Robert Brown, who died in 1993. She is survived by
her husband, Lyle Perkins, sons Robert and Christopher and daughter
Aisha Elizabeth. She had nine grandchildren and six great-grandchildren.
A celebration of her life will be held at 3 pm Sunday,
Oct. 14, at the Friends Meeting House in Eugene. In lieu of flowers,
the family asks that donations be made to the American Cancer Society
or the American Friends Service Committee.
WATADA
RETRIAL DELAYED
A federal judge in Washington state has stopped
the retrial of Lt. Ehren Watada, according to an Oct. 6 story in
the Seattle Post-Intelligencer.
U.S. District Court Judge Benjamin Settle granted
the emergency stay in a "rare intervention of a civilian court in
the military justice system," writes reporter Mike Barber in the
story.
Watada's trial was scheduled to begin Tuesday, Oct.
9, in Ft. Lewis (see News Briefs last week) and has been postponed
until at least Oct. 26.
A support rally for Watada, who refused deployment
to Iraq, was held in Eugene Monday, Oct. 8, at the offices of CALC.
A Eugene contingency was planning to carpool to Ft. Lewis to attend
the court martial.
"We thought we'd be sending folks to Ft. Lewis,
and instead we are celebrating," says Michael Carrigan of CALC.
Anselmo Villanueva of the Pan Asian Community Alliance
says, "Judge Settles' ruling vindicates the experts who have long
said Lt. Ehren Watada has a strong double-jeopardy argument barring
a second Army court martial."
A mistrial was declared in a court martial held
in February.
WAR
DEAD
Since the U.S. invasion of Iraq began on March 20,
2003 (last week's numbers in parentheses):
• 3,815 U.S. troops killed* (3,804)
• 27,767 U.S. troops injured* (28,009)
• 122 U.S. military suicides* (122)
• 301 coalition troops killed** (300)
• 933 contractors killed (accurate
updates NA)
• 81,405 Iraqi civilians killed*** (81,119)
• $458.2 billion cost of war ($456.2
billion)
• $130.3 million cost to Eugene taxpayers
($129.7 million)
*
through Oct. 8, 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 to one million
Lane
Area Herbicide Spray Schedule
• Warning to hunters and other forestland
users: Timber companies spray herbicides and other pesticides on
timber units and roads accessing timberland without posting and
without closing units to hunters and other recreational users. If
you encountered sprayed vegetation or roads and were sickened by
the exposure, please share your experience with us.
• If anyone witnessed or was sickened by the
herbicide application to Lake Creek Road which is the access
road to the Hult Mill Pond near Horton, please let us know.
Compiled
by Jan Wroncy, Forestland Dwellers: 342-342-8332, www.forestlanddwellers.org
| SLANT
•
Good news that the new owners of McKenzie-Willamette Medical
Center may be taking a serious look at locating their
new hospital somewhere besides out in the country north of
Eugene. We never could figure out the rationale for either
hospital building far away from population centers. Community
Health Systems now has an excellent opportunity to compete
with PeaceHealth by building medical facilities south of the
river and in or close to downtown Eugene. Patients, doctors
and hospital employees will appreciate a more convenient location,
and that will translate to more business while saving people
and the environment from sprawl. Where to put an urban hospital?
Most of downtown is empty parking lots and poorly occupied
buildings. How about the huge clinic site at 12th and Olive
PeaceHealth has said it will abandon? Another good site would
be the Lane County Fairgrounds. Unfortunately, our community
depends on the whims of a stock market-oriented corporation
3,000 miles away.
•
More good news: Some Eugeneans, including some of our staffers,
were happy to learn that although they still can't get married,
they will soon have a limited number of something resembling
marriage rights. Yes, it's true, the conservatives behind
a ballot initiative to undo the domestic partnerships
bill passed by the Oregon Legislature this year (one that
would give people things like inheritance rights and hospital
visitation rights) failed to get enough people to sign their
initiative. Word is still out on whether the mean-spirited
groups gathered enough homophobic signatures to put a companion
anti-discrimination bill on the ballot, but we hope
Oregonians didn't sign, and wouldn't vote, for discrimination.
What's that rallying cry — "Oregon is For Haters"? Let's
not go there.
•
After pillaging vast swaths of Oregon's natural beauty, the
Stewart clan of timber barons has its eyes on Waldo Lake,
claiming states' rights are being violated and saying motor
boat noise is not as big a problem as RV generators, boom
boxes and rowdy campers on shore. Heirs of the loggers have
sued to block a Forest Service plan to keep gas-powered motor
boats off the state-owned lake — one of the clearest,
most pristine and unspoiled large mountain lakes in the world.
Motor boat noise carries for miles across the glassy clear
lake, disturbing the very wilderness experience hikers, bikers,
paddlers and sailors came to the lake to enjoy. Outboard motors,
particularly the two-cycle models, also literally pump burned
motor oil exhaust into the water as they run. Careless gas
and oil spills and engines lost overboard are other hazards
associated with motor boats. Quiet electric motors today are
more powerful and have longer-lasting batteries to provide
a way for the elderly and disabled to experience the lake
without spoiling it. Gas-powered boaters already have countless
reservoirs, lakes and rivers to run around on. Leave this
rare natural jewel to the vast majority who want Waldo preserved
as unpolluted, quiet waters.
•
Our editor is getting some grumpy phone messages regarding
Dan Pegoda's "mean-spirited" satirical cartoon Sept. 27 depicting
the new audio crosswalk buttons and their incessant
beeping. We're reminded of Simon Bond's classic 101 Uses
for a Dead Cat. Absolutely insensitive and offensive,
but funny as hell. For the record, we applaud efforts to make
Eugene streets safer and more accessible for those with disabilities.
But the beeping can drive you bonkers.
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•
Check our blog this
week for photos and observations of the Gods of Hip
Hop & Comedy show at Mac Court Oct. 6. What a fiasco,
with the star attraction Lil Wayne busted and behind bars
in Boise and no refunds in sight for unhappy concert-goers.
Not a happy hip hop scene. Were you there? Leave your snarky
rants at blogs.eugeneweekly.com As we go to press we hear
from Dustin Locke at radio station 94.9 Jamz that the station
is trying to bring Lil Wayne back for a make-up performance.
Locke says "the promoters will issue no refunds, and ticket
holders are encouraged to keep their tickets." Sounds like
a discount might be in the works. Meanwhile, the station is
banning stand-up comic Charlie Murphy from any future publicity
or advertising on the station due to Murphy's "childish" and
"obscene" behavior on the stage. Sometimes the most memorable
concerts are the ones that go terribly wrong.
• The Bush White House has never
taken responsibility for the quagmire we find ourselves in
Iraq, the death and displacement of literally millions of
people, and the incredible destruction and pollution of housing,
public institutions and infrastructure. Instead, the administration
is increasingly blaming Iran for the mess, and drawing up
revised attack plans. Instead, we should be cranking up diplomacy
and encouraging talks on how the U.S. and Iran can work together
to restore stability to Iraq. Seymour Hersh outlines the White
House's shifting targets in the Mideast and the likely outcome
of one more violently insane U.S. foreign policy initiative.
Hersh's 4,000-word analysis can be found in the Oct. 1 New
Yorker or at commondreams.org.
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
|

DAVID
WILSON
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Born in Utah to a Mormon father and a Brazilian
mother, David Wilson spent his boyhood in several South American
cities, where his dad taught English to foreign diplomats for the
U.S. Foreign Service. "It was a phenomenal upbringing," he says.
Having survived civil strife in La Paz and a earthquake in Caracas,
Wilson went to high school in Junction City and Bible college in
Portland before he found Eugene and came out as gay in 1976. "I
was born on the same day as Eugene, Oct. 17," he says. "I love the
people here. I've kept the party alive." Wilson has styled hair
since his 1981 graduation from the Creative Institute of Design.
"I've had some clients since beauty school," he says. A flutist
since age 7, he played with Americanistan in the 1990s. "We played
the gypsy stage at the Country Fair," he notes. "It was like Carnegie
Hall for me." His current guise is Orbital Disco Dave in the free-form
trio LaunchPad. He was hospitalized for six days by an infection
in August, and is recovering gradually. A benefit concert to help
with medical costs is set for 9 pm Friday, Oct. 12, at Sam Bond's
Garage.
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