
TWO-FOR-ONE
DEAL
As the city considers subsidizing development downtown,
it might be wise to consider those who are already subsidizing the
quality of life in this city: the underpaid employees of the nonprofit
organizations that look after the emotionally ill, the developmentally
delayed, the abused or neglected children, the homeless and others
struggling on the fringes of our economy. These nonprofits have
benefited over the years from a ready source of well-educated and
committed young college graduates who could afford to work for low
wages and wished to stay in a city they loved.
The high rents and increased burden of college loan
payments are shrinking this pool of talent, and often workers move
on quickly, which means the agencies experience high turnover instead
of experienced employees. Additionally, as more and more retirees
settle here, the need for lower paid hospital and nursing home staff
will increase.
It would be to our city's advantage to provide low-income
housing downtown for this largely younger workforce. They are the
people who will patronize the kind of businesses we say we want
downtown. We could have a two-for-one deal: higher quality caregiving
and patrons for restaurants and nightlife.
August Sabini, Eugene
IT
WON'T HURT SCHOOLS
By using a statewide figure to make a point about
the relationship between education and urban renewal, your cover
story on Measure 20-134 may have given your readers a mistaken impression.
I am writing to correct that.
You state that the urban renewal district will
divert $28 million from school funding statewide. However, the local
number is far smaller: $17,000 this year under the district now
in effect. While that number may grow as investment in the urban
renewal district grows, we must also take into account that the
urban renewal district will employ more people, generating new income
taxes that are the principal source of education funding today.
In fact, the urban renewal district may actually
help generate more funding for schools in cases like Eugene where
voters have approved local property tax levies. That's because taxes
generated in urban renewal districts don't apply toward the constitutionally
imposed limit on property tax funding for education.
I'm a passionate advocate for schools, volunteering
countless hours along with my colleagues to our educational mission,
and yet I can't tell voters that all tax dollars should flow to
schools. We also need a vibrant downtown, quality health care, affordable
housing, good streets, mass transit and parks — all necessary
for a livable community.
We are so fortunate to have a community that values
its schools, but that doesn't need to come at the expense of other
important values. Schools are part of the fabric of a community.
Right now our community fabric is torn in the center. What better
way to fix it than to use taxes generated by investment in the district
itself — investment that likely would not have happened if
the district didn't exist?
Individually, members of the Eugene School District
board have endorsed Measure 20-134, because we think it's the right
thing for our community. Mayor Kitty Piercy was a devoted educator
herself. She has also endorsed Measure 20-134. I trust your readers
to understand that if Measure 20-134 hurt schools, none of us would
support it. Yet we do.
Beth Gerot, Vice Chair, Eugene
School Board
DEAL-KILLERS
A 13 percent profit guarantee? Portland developers
are demanding that the city of Eugene pay exorbitant prices for
downtown property and then resell it to them for pennies on the
dollar to guarantee their standard 13 percent profit. Absurd. Every
businessperson reading this should march down to City Hall and demand
a 13 percent profit for fiscal 2007. If they refuse to sign you
up for the giveaway, then refuse to give them their play money.
Another Measure 20-134 deal-killer is that $10 million
of the $40 million will be spent on administrative expenses: salaries,
benefits, pensions, and lame PowerPoint presentations for overpaid
bureaucrats: the same folks who brought us the Sears pit and the
eyesore parking lot at 8th & Charnelton. If they can't turn
the Sears and Aster pits into beautiful, affordable housing and
retail with the $29 million they already have, then they need to
be fired. Incremental development will gradually bring us a downtown
filled with a variety of spaces, places and people. Don't let the
proponents fool you with their "all or nothing" red herring. We
can make a big impact with existing funds. Vote no on 20-134.
Charlie Magee, Eugene
DOWNTOWN
DAN?
After lambasting the R-G one year ago for
"sticking the finger through the line between advertising and news"
and being "more and more willing to cross ethical lines for ad money,"
(EW, 10/26/06), and, three months later, gleefully reporting
that the R-G had received the journalistic equivalent of
a Darwin award from the Columbia Journalism Review for the
same bit of trashy advertising (EW, 1/18), how does the Weekly
justify the advertisement/advice column Downtown Dan, a political
action committee ad masquerading as a Savage Love knockoff (down
to the acronym names for people supposedly asking "Dan" for advice)?
Truthfully, I don't care very much about the political
issues surrounding this latest cash fight for downtown, and I sure
as hell have never been a huge fan of the R-G. I'm simply
nauseated by this attitude of "It's OK if we do it" that
seems so typical these days, and typical of the Weekly more
and more.
EDITOR'S
NOTE: The ad in question was submitted to our advertising department,
which operates independently of our newsroom. Part of our mission
on the news side is to point out what we observe as ethical blunders
in other local media, such as when advertising and editorial commingle.
A parody on a sex column doesn't raise a red flag for us; a big
advertising finger sticking up into a news story does.
M50
SAVES LIVES
Should we raise prices on cigarettes? I think we
should! Cigarettes are bad for our health and bad for people's health
around us, and we could be giving the money to children's health
care.
Smoking is bad for our health. Smoking creates bad
habits for thousands of people; it also kills people from lung cancer
and many other diseases. Not only is it bad for the smokers, it
is bad for the people around the smokers.
There are so many Americans getting sick and dying
from second-hand smoke. There are many Americans who have never
smoked a day in their life, yet they're dying from other people's
smoke. If we raise the prices of cigarettes maybe some people will
stop smoking, and we wouldn't have that problem, and the money could
go to a good cause.
If we raise the prices, we can give the money to
the children's health care. We could be saving lives of children
if we pass Measure 50.
Some people who smoke can't pay for the raised prices,
but children's health care is more important than cheap cigarettes.
If we want to improve the health in our country or even the state,
we should raise the prices of cigarettes.
Jacey Eberlein, Kennedy Middle
School
UNBELIEVABLE
CLAIMS
Proponents of Measure 20-134 are upping the ante
on their fallacies. Not only are they telling us that increasing
the urban renewal $40 million won't take money from schools and
public services, but now they are expecting us to buy the claim
that the West Broadway redevelopment project will stop urban sprawl
and save our wetlands and watersheds. Are the developers buying
up the hillsides of Eugene for development and the big box stores
they want to build on our West Eugene Wetlands just going to walk
away if 20-134 passes? What about the Homebuilders Association?
Will the passage of 20-134 make this group cease and desist from
lobbying to bump out the UGB? I think not.
The KWG concept only offers about 200 housing units
and 95 hotel rooms. Oh, that ought to put a dent in urban sprawl.
To actually impact sprawl, downtown needs thousands of new residents.
And please don't be fooled by the claim that the
language of the West Broadway Advisory Committee recommendations
has been strengthened to tell the developers what they "shall do."
Customizing a developer's formula plan will cost
us. If 20-134 passes and the developers come back and say, "Yeah,
sure, we will do what the advisory committee recommends, but it
will cost an additional $20, $30 or $40 million," would you support
that?
If voters fall for all of the deception coming the
proponents of 20-134, then I have a bridge for sale.
Lisa Warnes, Eugene
NO
SET PRICE TAG
To buy "a pig in a poke" is to pay for something
you can't see. That about sums up what we're being asked to do with
Measure 20-134. Except that even the price tag is under wraps.
Thanks for Betty Taylor's column and Alan Pittman's
excellent summary and explanation (10/18). I had been wondering
what I was missing, having listened to the two radio debates and
read a lot of material and still feeling in the dark. Now Pittman
explains the project "has no set price tag and no set description
and relies on [a] ... financing scheme so complex only a few tax
experts really understand it."
But it's clear $40,000,000 is just the proposed
increase in expenditures. The full cost is at least
$69 million (Voters Pamphlet, p. 32) — with $10 million for
administration. A "rebuttal" from backers (Pamphlet, p. 33) doesn't
even try to rebut the point that revenue to 4J, Lane ESD, LCC, the
city and the county would be reduced by $86,940,000 over the next
23 years.
We've never been asked what we want for downtown
without preconditions. Instead, a complex and hugely expensive plan
is the starting point. Further "recommendations" are now being used
to sell the plan, but they are not binding. Some people are desperate
to "do something" about downtown. But spending $69 million on 5.2
of the 70 acres downtown to get a few hundred housing units when
we need 6,000 to form a critical mass won't provide the density
essential to real improvement. And much cheaper and more promising
alternatives are available (e.g., Betty Taylor, "Risky Business:
the case for smaller-scale redevelopment," EW, 10/18.)
The setup is to make us vote without knowing what
will really be done with all that money — however much it
turns out to be. Let's wait till the smokescreen clears. Vote No
on 20-134.
Robert Roth, Eugene
HARSH
& CRUEL
I was saddened by Chuck Adams' unkind review (10/18)
of the Springfield Mayor's Art Show. It isn't that I necessarily
disagree so much, but I am curious why he put so much energy into
being so very harsh and cruel. I can't help but think that it has
much more to do with what is going on in his life than the Springfield
Mayor's Art Show.
To borrow some of Chuck's works, it doesn't take
much in the way of psychological depth, life or vitality to write
a view that aims so low.
Tom Gettys, Eugene
ENDING
CORRUPTION
Alisa McLaughlin almost got it right in her Oct.
4 letter to the editor. She wrote, "Our votes are too valuable to
give away, so I suggest, like the people we elected, you sell your
vote to the highest bidder."
McLaughlin should advocate democracy instead. Under
a democracy, special interests would have no influence because their
bribes would be spread too thin to make a difference.
We need a statewide initiative that allows voters
to vote directly on a bill or lend their votes to a fulltime representative
in Salem. This initiative will give power to voters who refuse to
vote for corrupt politicians.
T. Poulsen, Eugene
TIME
FOR TEARS
I know it's election time and I should be writing
on why I support Measures 49 and 50, but I must tell you why I'm
shedding tears thinking of our friend Lucy Lahr, who was hit by
a truck and dragged and killed. She was a friend to our community,
where she worked for human justice and a fairer treatment of those
going through difficult times. There was always a smile on her face
and sparkling eyes as she greeted you, making you feel welcome.
Winter rains are here, and too many are driving
too fast, not putting on their headlights soon enough and not watching
for pedestrians. I see bikes at night with no lights or only with
only dim spots and no reflectors. Maybe we all need to find white
umbrellas and at least wear a little white at night. The rain makes
it very difficult for me to see at night. Let us all remember the
great loss of Lucy Lahr, so young and with so much to offer our
community, and be more considerate when we drive our streets. We
can't afford to lose another Lucy Lahr.
Ruth Duemler, Eugene
OUR
BEST TOOL?
I listened to the "Sunday at Noon" (KLCC 10/14)
call-in program hosting Sara Gelser (co-author of Measure 50) with
great frustration. I didn't realize that this measure funds private
insurance companies! As many of us know, most insurance companies
are able to provide tiered health insurance. Depending on your choice
of premiums, you are able to purchase your access, or reduced
access, to heath care — emphasis on "purchase" to draw attention
to the fact that health care in this country is a business. There
is no mention of restrictions on these insurance companies to provide
health care premiums at a reasonable cost.
The analyst on the program mentions that within
two years premiums will most likely cost the purchaser $160 per
month. I don't know any impoverished families that are capable of
paying premiums of this amount. One of the comments Gelser made
is that "This is the best tool we have to get kids health care."
I disagree. We already have a health care system in place (Oregon
Health Plan) that has miserably failed to provide health care to
these children. Why isn't the money being spent on this measure
being funneled into this system to improve access and coverage?
Gelser mentions that we have significant problems with enrolling
children into this program. Why is that? Bureaucracy does not improve
by funding another program and certainly not one that changes the
constitution.
What about improving access to the Oregon Health
Plan, less restrictions, less red tape, broader coverage?
Listen for yourself: Log onto KLCC's website, go
to the archives and type in Measure 50.
Kimberley Anne R.N. , Eugene
LADY
IN RED
I would like to respond to Sue Kupka's letter (10/11)
regarding the Jethro Tull show. It sounded like she enjoyed the
show without even hearing the music. She speaks of the lady in a
short red dress who happens to be an extension of rock 'n' roll
music, especially in Jethro Tull's case. As Ian Anderson sung her
beloved song "Aqualung," there was a woman voluntarily performing
the song's lyrics in theatrical form ("watching as the pretty panties
run") — a song that Kupka claims she loves so much.
I'm sorry Kupka was so distracted. Maybe Kupka should
investigate her sexual attraction for women since she was so utterly
infatuated with the woman in the red dress. I moved to Eugene because
I heard about its freedom, people who express themselves and people
who are sexually and socially liberated. What I have discovered
is that Eugeneans claim these ideals, but in reality are prudes,
unaccepting of personal expression and any form of sexuality that
is not their own.
Everyone should have a good time when they spend
their hard-earned money, and that includes the woman in the short
red dress.
Jared Bryant, Eugene
DOWNTOWN
IS A-OK
To hear the boosters of Measure 20-134 tell it,
our downtown is almost apocalyptic — chock full of gangs fighting
with guns and knives amidst blighted, crumbling slums and wailing
sirens, a place terrified citizens rarely enter.
Correcting this shameful problem, the boosters say,
requires the diversion of tens of millions of our tax dollars from
their intended recipients (schools, fire, police, library, etc.)
to a boutique hotel and a lifestyle mall. Then, they say, we will
finally have a downtown we can be proud of, and we'll feel a lot
better about ourselves.
Pop! Meanwhile, back on Earth in real time, thousands
of Eugeneans are enjoying their downtown every day and night. Why?
Because it contains the highest concentration of fine restaurants
and late-night music and dance venues in the whole city. Vacancies
are filling in: there are two new restaurants on Broadway, the old
Bookmark building is being remodeled by its new owner with no subsidies
and Conner-Woolley are remodeling the old Bon building for two new
tenants.
The city has the financial ability right now to
infill both pits, redo Centre Court and create Library Park without
any more Viking raid on our commonly-held infrastructure. Once this
is done, the few remaining vacancies will quickly disappear. Let's
all take a few deep breaths, calm down and try to solve real problems
in the real world.
Jessica Hampton, Eugene
EYE
BEAM RESPONDS
As a representative of Eye Beam Event Services,
I would like to respond to Zachary Payne's letter (10/18) expressing
his dissatisfaction with the "Gods of Hip Hop and Comedy" concert
at Mac Court. I would like to assure him that the show did not meet
our expectations either and that we share his disappointment.
Eye Beam Event Services was hired by 94.9 Jamz to
provide necessary equipment for the event. Eye Beam was responsible
for transforming Mac Court from a sports arena into a performance
venue appropriate for an artist the caliber of Lil' Wayne. To facilitate
this, we arrived well before sunrise to begin erecting the stage,
truss structure and drapery. We hung, programmed and focused each
individual lighting instrument. We set up and tuned the video projectors
and screens. I am proud of the astonishing amount of work we completed
before the doors were opened to concertgoers. I am extremely proud
of the performance space that emerged as a result of our labor.
94.9 Jamz projected our name up on the screens as
a way of thanking us and publicly recognizing our hard work in building
the stage.
The fact of the matter is that Eye Beam was simply
hired by the promoters to provide equipment for this show. Eye Beam
was neither in contact with nor responsible for the performers in
any way. We were not in a position to know any more regarding Lil'
Wayne's incarceration than any member of the audience. We were as
surprised and upset as everyone else was when the house lights came
up and the show suddenly declared over.
I understand that the promoter is currently in negotiations
to bring Lil' Wayne back to Eugene to perform a make-up concert.
I sincerely hope that this next show goes off without a hitch and
that everyone has a great time. I know that, given the opportunity,
the small and extremely hardworking staff here at Eye Beam will
eagerly do everything within our power to ensure that the performers
have a safe, well lit and good-looking platform from which to perform
their art.
Wade Jelinek, Eye Beam Event Services,
Eugene

BLAME
FOR THE BLIGHT
The downtown "blight" over which so many of our
elected officials are wringing their hands is due directly to the
prolonged dis-use of properties owned by Tom Connor and Don Woolley.
Their hulking and run-down buildings, with the loiterers they have
spawned, cast a pall over the many locally owned, sustainable and
thriving businesses that exist on West Broadway. This is Eugene's
"entertainment district," and the supporters of Measure 20-134 want
to tear it all down.
Essentially, Measure 20-134 hands millions of dollars
of public money to these negligent owners, rewarding their neglect
while at the same time threatening already established businesses
with unfairly subsidized competitors, displacement and/or destruction.
C&W have proven for years, beyond all doubt, that they couldn't
care less about the quality of life in the West Broadway area. They
and their cheerleaders on the City Council would like nothing more
than for the citizens of Eugene to cough up $40 million (minimum)
so they can wash their hands of the "blight" downtown — a
"blight" of their own creation. This ballot measure is nothing more
than a huge bailout for these do-nothing landlords.
The vision for downtown put forth by the well-intentioned
West Broadway Advisory Committee (WBAC) and the backers of 20-134
is bandied about as though places like the Horsehead, Jameson's
and John Henry's are part of the "problem" with downtown. Nothing
could be further from the truth. The people who work, eat, drink,
dance and perform in these bars and restaurants that are making
it happen on West Broadway in downtown Eugene urge you to vote no
on Ballot Measure 20-134.
Ty Connor, Eugene
EDITOR'S
NOTE: This letter, co-signed by 228 people, was the subject of a
News Brief in this week's paper. Don Woolley was considering a response
to the letter, but had declined by press time.
GOING
NUTS
Thank you, EW, for printing Thomas Lincoln's
letter (10/25) regarding the price tag on Library Park. I stand
dancingly corrected.
I absolutely adore good information. Here's why.
I'm figuring Mr. Lincoln is a park designer and should know how
much a truly lovely park would cost to build across from the library.
In his letter, he states $1.5 million tops. YEE-HAH!
So, let's say we go nuts and spend $2 million on
the park. Go all out and create an eighth-wonder-of-the-Northwest
tourist attraction. That leaves us, Eugene, with $38 million to
decorate the area around the park. $38 million could build a gorgeous
seven-story multi-use housing unit on Willamette, replacing the
dilapidated purple mural. There would be millions in change left
over from that project to doll the heck out of and bring up to sparkling
code many of the other older buildings downtown. And if that doesn't
use up the $40 million we do have, we could fill pot holes
with the rest till it runs out.
In my world of confused facts, that's still what
revitalization means and what revitalization does and what revitalization
looks like. It revitalizes what exists. It does not destroy what
exists and build something else in its stead.
Either way, now that we know exactly how cheap happiness
is compared to unmitigated chaos and loss, why are we still looking
at "The Pit" instead of Library Park?
More excited than ever,
Loren M. Mohler, Eugene
INFORMED
DECISION
I have been searching for detailed information regarding
Measure 20-134. I want to thank Alan Pittman (cover story, 10/18)
for providing to this community some facts not mentioned elsewhere.
In the past, I have supported opportunities to improve
our downtown, but one of the things I was concerned about was the
13 percent guaranteed profit for the developers. Another concern
I had was that the funds going to urban renewal were going to be
diverted from other entities our taxes are paid towards, but I didn't
understand how it worked. I just didn't have enough knowledge to
make an informed decision on this one until now. I am now confident
a "no" vote on this measure is in our collective best interests.
Thanks so much!
Beckie Abbott, Eugene
THIRD
CHOICE?
The desire to redevelop downtown should also reflect
our other American democratic values. A lot of people believe that
when it comes to politics that neither only one or even two political
parties are enough but that we should always have a minimum of at
least three political parties at all times. I can't see how re-development
projects should be any different than politics so I believe that
we are derelict in our democratic duties by not having a minimum
of three re-development schemes to choose from.
I propose a third scheme for downtown re-development
that I refer to as the Knader option. The Knader option has a history
of doing things to benefit the general public and would again if
these things could be allowed to be implemented. As times happen
to be, the Knader option (although as hazy and fuzzy as the other
re-development schemes) will split the vote and allow for the worst
plan (mega-stores and unneeded cinemas) to prevail. The public will
be saddled with the urban blight of yet more homogeneous repetition,
long after the guaranteed profits have been paid and more holes
have been left in the ground.
Martin E. Williams, Eugene
IT'S
A JOKE
The KWG drawing shown in the City/Region section
of the Oct. 31 Register-Guard is a gross distortion. The
view from West Broadway looking south toward the library in this
plan is a physical impossibility. The plan indicates a park/plaza
centered on the arched entrance of the library. The architect of
this plan must think the library entrance is centered on the block.
It isn't. The entrance is centered 85 feet to the east of center.
The relationships of the buildings presented in this drawing could
not occur unless 1) the library were to be physically moved 85 feet
to the west, or 2) the residential building indicated on the Olive
Street side were to be trimmed to about 25 feet in width. And as
an excuse for rejecting a 1/4 block park across from the library
entrance, Mr. Kemper says he is concerned about how the two residential
buildings would relate to each other! How about considering how
they would relate to the library?
Further, the developer's attempt to include a park/plaza
in the center of a wide street running north to south between West
Broadway and 10th Avenue is, at best, a poor compromise. It would
be no more than about 30 feet wide and would be essentially an isolated
island surrounded by automobile traffic and exhaust fumes; not exactly
the most relaxing place on the block or a place to take a stroll
with the kids. This proposal is a joke.
Thomas Lincoln, Lincoln Design,
Springfield
EUGENE'S
LOVE CANAL
Now that property tax statements are in the mail,
those of us living on top of the Union Pacific Railroad's toxic
plume have until Dec. 31 to appeal our property value assessment.
The Department of Revenue's website has the pertinent information:
egov.oregon.gov/DOR/PTD/IC_303_668.shtml
It should be easy to make a case for a reduction
in value. Since our situation has been plastered across the R-G's
front page more than once, everybody knows that we sit in the middle
of Superfund site. People remember Love Canal. Would you buy a house
sitting on a carcinogenic plume?
Those of us in the Trainsong neighborhood are used
to being ignored. It is just a working-class neighborhood with a
majority of renters. If the toxic plume was underneath the south
hills or Ferry Street Bridge areas, officials would be falling all
over themselves trying to get things cleaned up. They rarely come
our way, perhaps because they are worried about wrecking their cars
in our gaping potholes. Or having the tweakers clout their cars.
Instead, they are content to let Union Pacific deal
with the problem. Since UP is much more concerned about their bottom
line than our health, they are focusing on public relations campaigns,
tame scientists or passing the buck. Fortunately, they also have
the Oregon DEQ watching their back. We have just received a letter
from DEQ absolving UP and blaming the homeowners for any solvent
fumes in their homes. Has DEQ become a wholly owned subsidiary of
FEMA?
Lane County should send UP the cumulative property
tax bill for the entire affected area. That might get their attention.
Doug Hintz, Eugene
TIP
OF THE ICEBERG
If you think Measure 49 will have no effect on your
life, you need to understand that David Steves' article on the Haffner
subdivision in West Eugene (R-G 10/5) is just the tip of
the iceberg. Our Pleasant Hill neighbor received a Measure 37 claim
waiver several months ago and has recently submitted a subdivision
development plan to put up to 28 homes on his property. This development,
called Deer Run Ranch, would be surrounded by rural farms in an
area with a shortage of ground water and inadequate access roads
for both traffic and fire control. And we have learned that it is
only one of dozens of such planned subdivisions in Lane County.
We recommend that you go to the Lane County website
(www.lanecounty.org)and
follow the Measure 37 information links to the map of Measure 37
claims in our area. We were amazed at the number and size of development
claims in the rural areas surrounding Eugene-Springfield. No matter
where you live in Oregon, your quality of life will be changed if
Measure 49 does not pass next month.
The opposition to Measure 49 is funded by wealthy
landowners who seek a windfall from destroying our state's land
use planning laws. Stimson Lumber Company, who holds the largest
Measure 37 claim in Oregon, recently donated $200,000 to defeat
Measure 49 (Oregonian 10/2). If you love Oregon, you owe
it to yourself to become educated on this issue and to support the
Yes on 49 campaign.
Paul Kaplan, Jane Kaplan Squires,
Pleasant Hill
NULL
AND VOID
If Vince Loving's Oct. 4 letter is correct and the
Supreme Court broke the Constitution by deciding to make Bush president,
then the lawful solution is to impeach the Supreme Court, which
would invalidate all Supreme Court decisions made from that point
on. Every decision made by the Bushies since then would be invalidated
and all U.S. law touched by the Supreme Court from 2000 to now would
revert to 2000 status and all decisions made by the Bush White House
would be null and void. The entire body of Bush activity would be
null and void and clearly criminal in many aspects.
America has been conned and blinded by really bad
lies and laws made by really bad men and a few bad women. In any
event, America needs to see truth and justice and peace once again.
Bob Saxton, Eugene
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