
News Briefs: Ecotage
Informant Appears in Court | Building Market
Plummets | Oregonians Join in Seattle Protest
| Weber Event Draws Action | Energy
Round-Up | Leter Blasts Downtown Landlords
| Eugene Wekly's 2007 Halloween Pumpkin Carving
Contest Winner |
Slant: Short opinion pieces
and rumor-chasing notes
Breaking News (11-07-07):
Urban
Renewal Defeated
Local vote upsets scheme to divert taxes to developer subsidies
News:
Taking the Lead
States collaborate on climate issues
News:
Buying Votes
Tobacco, timber, speculators spend big, TV profits
Ducks:
Path to Autzen
Gameday walk to the big game
Happening People: Tim
Helferty
ECOTAGE
INFORMANT APPEARS IN COURT
Arsonist turned informant Jacob Ferguson filed a
guilty plea in court Friday, Oct. 26, to one count of attempted
arson and one count of arson. His sentencing is scheduled for 2
pm Jan. 10.
Information and covert recordings by Ferguson were
key to the government's "Operation Backfire" case, leading to the
prosecution of almost 20 participants in ecologically motivated
arsons across the Northwest.
According to court documents, Ferguson participated,
sometimes lighting the incendiary devices, in arsons at: the Detroit
and Oakridge Ranger stations, Cavel West, Burns BLM Wild Horse horse
corrals, Forest Land Management Center (USDA), Redwood Coast Trucking
Company, Wayne Bare Trucking, BLM Wild Horse Corrals Rock Springs
(attempted), Vail Ski Resort arson, U. S. Forest Industries, Childers
Meat Co., Boise Cascade and the Superior Lumber Company. He also
participated in the destruction of a BPA transmission tower.
Speaking quietly and wearing a black wig covering
the tattoos on his head, Ferguson pled guilty only to attempted
arson of the Detroit Ranger Station, and the arson of a 1992 Ford
pickup at the station. He has taken a plea deal that will likely
allow him to be released on probation, unlike others in the case
who face from three to 13 years in federal prisons.
Judge Ann Aiken asked Ferguson standard questions
about his competence to understand the charges against him and the
consequences of his plea deal. In response to the question of whether
he had taken any drugs or alcohol, Ferguson stated he was currently
on methadone and had been for the past three and half years. Methadone
is a common treatment drug for heroin addiction.
Federal prosecutor Kirk Engdall said the government
will give Ferguson downward departures in sentencing to "the extent
necessary" to bring his sentence to Zone A of the federal sentencing
guidelines, and requested the "low end" of the sentencing scale.
The low end of Zone A is zero months served.
In answer to Judge Aiken's statement, "I assume
there will be restitution," Engdall stated that according to the
plea deal, Ferguson will not have to pay toward the estimated $20
million in damages the arsons caused. He will have to pay $200 in
fees.
The conditions of the plea deal involve Ferguson's
past and future cooperation with local, state and federal investigators
in the arson and sabotage cases. This includes meeting with investigators
at "any reasonable time and place," providing them with all documents
and submitting to polygraph testing.
Ferguson also sometimes wore a "body wire" to record
conversations with other defendants. The plea deal was dated and
signed Sept. 17, 2004. — Camilla
Mortensen
BUILDING
MARKET PLUMMETS
While developers and Springfield politicians are
fervently arguing that a lack of land means that Eugene should allow
more urban sprawl, the local home building market has collapsed,
according to permit statistics.
Developers applied for 62 percent fewer building
permits so far this year compared to the same period in 2005, according
to city of Eugene data. In 2005, developers had applied for 617
residential building permits by Oct. 29. In the same period this
year, permit applications had declined almost three-fold to 235,
the lowest level in a decade.
Realtors have also reported a sharp drop in home
sales. The September supply of unsold homes in Lane County more
than tripled from 2.3 months in 2005 to eight months in 2007, the
Regional Multiple Listing Service reported.
Home building and home sales have declined sharply
across the nation in response to the national home mortgage collapse.
But even as local developers cancel projects and
try to unload land, pro-sprawl advocates continue to argue that
a supposed land shortage requires the city to open up the urban
growth boundary (UGB).
Last week the Eugene City Council balked at rushing
to move towards more urban sprawl in response to a bill developers
and their Springfield political allies pushed through the Legislature
this summer. Sprawl supporters argued the measure requires the city
to inventory buildable lands for homebuilders, the first step towards
a UGB expansion. But the exact wording of the half-page House Bill
3337 that developers wrote appears vague, requiring the city to
"complete the inventory" required "to begin compliance" with the
measure "within two years."
The Eugene council voted to discuss the matter further
at a later meeting with more information. The Register-Guard,
itself a major suburban developer with an office park at I-5 and
Beltline, complained about the delay in an editorial Oct. 26, blaming
Eugene's anti-sprawl stance for the developers' bill and calling
on the city to "get on with business." — Alan Pittman
OREGONIANS
JOIN IN SEATTLE PROTEST
At estimated 300 peace activists from Eugene area
and other Oregon cities joined the protests in Seattle Saturday,
Oct. 27, according to United for Peace and Justice. UPJ organized
the regional demonstrations against the war in Iraq in 11 cities.
UPJ says 6,000 people gathered for the Seattle protest, and about
100,000 showed up nationwide.
"Today marks another important step in the development
of a truly national movement to end the war and occupation in Iraq,"
said Leslie Cagan, national coordinator of UPJ. "This movement is
strong and will only keep growing,"
Michael Carrigan of CALC went to Seattle and said,
"The marchers in Seattle were fired up and demanded decisive action
by Congress to cut off the war funding and bring our troops home
now, to block Bush administration plans for war against Iran, and
to fund human needs and not war."
More information about the Oct. 27 actions is available
online at www.oct27.org
WEBER
EVENT DRAWS ACTION
Protesters are expected when the Pacifica Forum
on the UO campus brings the controversial "revisionist historian"
Mark Weber to speak at 7 pm Friday, Nov. 2, at McKenzie Hall, Room
129 on campus.
Weber's free talk is titled, "the Israel Lobby:
How Powerful Is It?"
EW ran an ad for the lecture last week and
heard from Craig Weinerman, chairman of Jewish Community Relations
Council of Lane County, objecting to the ad and saying, "The imagery
in the ad of the Star of David, a symbol of Judaism, in the shape
of a hissing cobra is chilling. It reminds us of similar images
used throughout history to degrade Jews and denigrate the homeland
of the Jewish people — the State of Israel."
Weinerman called Weber a "Holocaust denier," and
added, "Weber is also a white supremacist who has been quoted as
saying that blacks cannot be assimilated into white society."
"If Weber was invited to lecture about race relations
or affirmative action, would the Eugene Weekly publish an
ad with the imagery of a hangman's noose?" Weinerman asked.
In an Oct. 19 letter to the editor in the R-G,
Weber said he is a "court-recognized expert on Germany's wartime
Jewish policy and the Holocaust issue," and does not deny the Holocaust.
"No reasonable or informed person disputes the catastrophe endured
by Europe's Jews during World War II."
Essays by Weber can be found on the Institute for
Historical Review website, ihr.org. In one essay, Weber writes,
"If the U.S. had not intervened in World War II, Germany and its
allies might have succeeded in vanquishing Soviet communism. A victory
of the Axis powers also would have meant no communist subjugation
of eastern Europe and China, no protracted East-West 'Cold War,'
and no 'hot wars' in Korea and Vietnam."
On a more current topic Weber writes, "While the
unprovoked U.S. invasion of Iraq may have helped Israel, just as
those who wanted and planned for the war had hoped, it has been
a calamity for America and the world. It has cost tens of thousands
of lives and many tens of billions of dollars. Around the world,
it has generated unmatched distrust and hostility toward the U.S."
A flier being handed out this week by local activists
says, "Mark Weber is not a historian, much less a scholar of historical
revisionism, nor is he a political scientist. Weber is a polemicist
out to prove his viewpoint."
A statement from Orval Etter, founder of the Pacifica
Forum, says Weber has a bachelor's degree in history from PSU and
a master's in modern European history from Indiana University. Etter
says the Pacifica Forum's purpose is to "provide information and
perspectives on the issues of war and peace, militarism and pacifism,
violence and nonviolence."
In an EW Viewpoint column this week, Eugene
blogger Mark Robinowitz has a different take on Weber's visit, saying,
"We don't need neo-Nazis to tell us that Israel violates human rights.
It is possible that some of the Holocaust deniers are provocateurs
intended to give uncritical supporters of Israel an excuse to avoid
examining human rights abuses against Palestinians, among other
contemporary crimes." — Ted Taylor
ENERGY
ROUND-UP
The Lane County Energy Round-Up (LCER) Steering
Committee is planning two follow-up meetings for all those who have
been involved in Round-Up forums held over the past 10 months.
The first meeting will be from 6 to 8:30 pm Wednesday,
Nov. 7, at the EWEB Training Room, 500 E. 4th St, in Eugene.
On the agenda will be an update on what LCER has
done and has planned to date and a discussion of the "best strategies
to help slow and prepare for climate change and peak oil in Lane
County."
The second meeting for the purpose of coalition
building is planned for 6 to 8:30 pm Wednesday, Nov. 14, also at
EWEB. "We are including groups involved with ending the war in Iraq
acknowledging the war is related to these issues and takes away
necessary funding and work for these urgent problems," says Pamela
Driscoll of the LCER. "Other groups invited are active in permaculture,
localization efforts, renewable energy, conservation, eco-building,
community building, etc."
For more information, visit OregonEnergyModel.org
LETTER
BLASTS DOWNTOWN LANDLORDS
A letter critical of Eugene commercial property
owners and developers Connor & Woolley was circulated at three
downtown bars last week by bartender and stand-up comic Ty Connor.
Copies of the letter generated a total of 228 signatures in 72 hours,
according to Connor's count.
The letter claims that Eugene's downtown blight
is "due directly to the prolonged dis-use of properties owned by
Tom Connor & Don Woolley," and 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."
The letter calls for a no vote on Measure 20-134
and says, "This ballot measure is nothing more than a huge bailout
for these do-nothing landlords. … Essentially, Measure 20-134
hands millions of dollars of public money to these negligent property
owners, rewarding their neglect while at the same time threatening
already established businesses with unfairly subsidized competitors,
displacement and/or destruction."
Don Woolley was sent a copy of the letter by EW
and said he was considering a response. No word was received by
press time.
The full text of the letter is included with other
late election letters here. — TJT
Eugene
Weekly's 2007 Halloween
Pumpkin Carving ContestWinner
When this entry walked through the door, we knew
right away it was a winner. Yellow Hallowrine, a tribute to
the fab four by Nicole Stanley, took 1st Place in this year's competition.
Congrats, Nicole; yourfabulous prizes await. Thanks for the many
entries we received.
| SLANT
Election
Endorsements
•
Not voted yet? We heard from the Lane County Elections Department
that only about 17 percent of the ballots had been turned
in by the start of the week. In previous special elections
the voting was more like 25 percent by now. Come on, people.
Let's plow through those piles of papers on our kitchen tables,
find those ballots and mail them by Nov. 1 or drop them off
at one of the white ballot boxes around town before 8 pm Tuesday,
Nov. 6. A list of drop box locations is at www.co.lane.or.us/Elections/DropOff.htmStill
undecided? See our full endorsements in our Oct. 18 issue.
Below is our short list:
Springfield
Measure 20-131: NO. This measure would slightly increase taxes
and divert at least $43 million from school, city and county
tax revenues for "urban renewal" projects in downtown Springfield.
Eugene
Measure 20-132: YES. This measure adds a 3 cents a gallon
fuel tax to the current 5 cent tax, to be used to repair streets
and roads within the city limits.
Eugene
Measure 20-134: NO. This measure amends the downtown urban
renewal plan to increase spending (public subsidies) by at
least $40 million.
State
Measure 49: YES. This measure repairs some of the damage and
confusion created by the flawed Measure 37 that allows sprawling
housing developments, strip malls, gravel pits and billboards
on valuable farm and forestlands.
State
Measure 50: YES. This measure adds 84.5 cents per pack to
the tobacco taxes currently in effect, with the proceeds going
to bolster Oregon's Healthy Kids program.
•
Supporters of Eugene's downtown urban renewal measure argue
that it won't hurt local school revenue because the state
equalizes school funding. How can supposed school advocates
go to Salem with a straight face to lobby for more state school
funding while they're advocating raiding the state school
funding account to pay for another parking garage downtown?
If everyone had their attitude of stealing from the cookie
jar, there would be no money for the state to equalize among
schools. Unfortunately, this free money attitude is all too
common. With urban renewal and a myriad of other corporate
tax break programs, local governments have diverted billions
from state school funds. The result is the tax revolt among
common people forced to make up for the diverted school money
and the absurdly crowded classrooms we have today. It's a
similar "tragedy of the commons" with environmental issues.
"Oh, the burden of my relatively small amount of pollution
will be equalized and borne by all," goes the argument. But
when everyone ignores the common good, that eventually destroys
the environment, and schools, for everyone.
•
Good news that Democrat Jefferson Smith is starting up the
Oregon political ladder by running for the House District
47 seat. That's east Portland and mid-county, now represented
by Jeff Merkley, the Democrat who is running against Gordon
Smith for the U. S. Senate. Jefferson Smith is the young lawyer
who left a big Portland firm and started the Oregon Bus Project
five years ago. He's smart, liberal, effective, funny, hard-working
— just what we need to join what he calls "the incredible
group in the House Caucus right now — some great people
to work with and learn from — and there's a unique opportunity
over the next decade to help make Oregon the place it ought
to be." His website is jeffersonsmith.com.
•
So what do we think about Mark Weber, who's being called the
"this country's foremost Holocaust denier," and will be speaking
at UO Friday? Is he a racist, a bigot, a neo-Nazi, an academic
fake? Or is Weber just a historian with a different perspective
on world history and U.S. foreign policy? What concerns us
here more than the credibility of his writings and speeches
are the people who would deny him a podium and a microphone
on the UO campus. What better place is there than the UO to
express and discuss provocative, even idiotic ideas? And people
who figure Weber has nothing constructive to say can stay
away or walk out on his lecture. Why Weber was invited by
the Pacifica Forum is still puzzling to us. It would only
take a few minutes to come up with a list of notable speakers
who would have more credibility in advancing our understanding
of U.S. foreign policy — even regarding Israel's influence
— and would draw a bigger audience than Weber.
•
Thanks to all who partied with us Oct. 25 at Indigo District
celebrating our 25th anniversary. The free party coincided
with our big Best of Eugene issue, and it was great fun to
wiggle through a friendly crowd of our kind of peeps. Special
thanks go to our excellent food providers Cornucopia, Brails,
Tasty Thai, Papa's Soul Food Kitchen and Sweet Life; all our
advertisers, the Indigo District gang for keeping us well
lubricated, Mood Area 52, the Best of Eugene band with Eagle
Park Slim, Two Legged Lucy, Gaylee Russell, John Henry's Broadway
Revue, Eugene Weekly's Divas, the Norma Fraser Band
and Yeltsin. Let's do it again in 25 years.
•
Check out blogs.eugeneweekly.com
for coverage of Tuesday night's Brewhaha debates.
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
|

TIM
HELFERTY
 |
As a teenager growing up in the San Francisco Bay
Area, Tim Helferty got into music at 924 Gilman Street, a non-profit
club in North Berkeley, where he mixed sound for a few punk and
metal bands. "It was a similar venue to the WOW Hall," says Helferty,
who left the music behind when he moved to Portland in 1991 to work
in the plastics industry. He worked his way up to head tech engineer,
then relocated to Pak Tech in Eugene for five years. "I was working
12 hours a day, six or seven days a week," says Helferty, who reorganized
his life after heart and kidney failure in 2004. He quit his job
and began volunteering at the WOW Hall, learning from the sound
guys, picking up part-time paid work and eventually taking a salaried
position as office manager. "I'd rather be happy and make others
happy," he says. "Everyone who comes here is happy to see a show."
Helferty oversees building maintenance and ticket sales, with a
workforce of volunteers and teens doing community service. On the
side, he and his girlfriend DJ KaatSkratch hire out as a sound and
DJ team.
See myspace.com/totalknockoutsound
|