
News Briefs: Faces of the Homeless | EWEB
Stuck With Retiree Health Bill | City Council Votes
Anti-WOPR | Driver's License Bill in Salem
| Novick Gets Local Nods, Beer Time | LCC
Plans Big Confab on Peace | Forum on Basketball
Arena Friday | Legislative Update | Polar
Bears or Oil? | Lane Area Herbicide Spray Schedule
|
Slant: Short opinion pieces
and rumor-chasing notes
News:
Class
War
4J
bumps poorer and browner kids for richer and whiter kids
News:
Slippery
Slopes
Developers
want to build homes on a landslide
News:
Super
Special People
Analysis:
superdelegates
FACES
OF THE HOMELESS
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| PHOTOS
BY KURT JENSEN |
More than 1,200 homeless or near homeless people
sought services at the Project Homeless Connect event Thursday,
Feb. 7, at the Lane County Fairgrounds. Rachel St. Julian (right)
said she previously got help to buy a small piece of land and start
building a house. She ran out of money after building four walls
and is looking for assistance to build the roof. Amelia and her
son Joshua, 2, (top) were getting dental and eye exams, a haircut
and information about all the available services for the homeless.
EWEB
STUCK WITH RETIREE
HEALTH BILL
Eugene Water and Electric Board (EWEB) ratepayers
may have to pay millions more in retiree health benefits and legal
fees after the public utility lost a legal appeal Jan. 30.
EWEB officials have said previously that losing
the case could result in a rate increase up to 4 percent to fund
a roughly $40 million future liability. EWEB could appeal the ruling
to the Oregon Supreme Court.
The Oregon Court of Appeals rejected EWEB's appeal
of an earlier circuit court ruling that EWEB violated an unwritten
contract with employees when it decided to reduce retirees' health
benefits and charge more for them.
Before 1990 EWEB offered its retirees a lifetime
of free health care. Retiree dependents could sign on to the health
care plan for $7.80 per month, $3 per month if they were over 65.
In 1990 EWEB reconfigured the plan. Older retirees were grandfathered
in to varying degrees with many paying somewhat higher premiums.
Employees retiring after 1994 would pay between 25 and 100 percent
of their health care premiums, depending on years served. After
age 65, employees would be eligible for Medicare, and the EWEB insurance
would end. In 2003 and 2004, EWEB again adjusted the retiree health
care benefits and premiums to save money. Employees sued, arguing
breach of contract affecting about 400 retirees.
EWEB argued that there was never a signed contract,
that managers didn't have the authority to promise no changes to
the retiree health care package and that EWEB reserved the right
to change the benefits.
In an opinion written by Judge David Schuman, the
appeals court dismissed EWEB's arguments. EWEB's promise of the
benefits was an unwritten contract to employees, the court found.
The EWEB Board passed a resolution stating that it reserved the
right to amend or terminate the retiree health benefits, according
to the judgment. But information sent to employees about the benefits
"did not mention the board resolution," the judgment states.
EWEB, however, did win when the court also dismissed
a cross appeal by employees arguing that some retirees should continue
to get the pre-1990 free health care deal. The court said that by
continuing to work at EWEB while knowing the benefits had been reduced,
they had accepted the change. — Alan Pittman
CITY
COUNCIL VOTES ANTI-WOPR
The Eugene City Council took an anti-WOPR stance
Feb. 11 when council members voted on a resolution opposing the
BLM's Western Oregon Plan Revisions. The WOPR proposes to increase
logging 700 percent on Oregon's public lands.
The resolution, which urges Congress to pass legislation
that protects mature and old-growth forests, provides stable county
payments based on ecosystem services and advances restoration-driven
forestry projects, passed 5-2.
Councilors Jennifer Solomon and George Poling voted
against the resolution, while Alan Zelenka, Betty Taylor, Andrea
Ortiz, Bonny Bettman and Chris Pryor voted for it. Councilor Mike
Clark was not present. Mayor Kitty Piercy also voted for the resolution
though her vote wasn't necessary as there was no tie to break.
After listening to Solomon's support of the WOPR,
Councilor Taylor commented, "It's hard for me to believe anyone
supports the WOPR." She made mention of retired UO professor Glenn
Love, who commented against the WOPR, saying, "Look at Glenn Love,
whose son is in space right now, and he's here trying to help us
on Earth." — Camilla Mortensen
DRIVER'S
LICENSE BILL IN SALEM
A bill to require proof of legal U.S. residence
to get a driver's license in Oregon is making its way swiftly through
the Oregon Legislature, raising protests from immigrants' rights
advocates.
In one week, the bill was adopted by the Senate
Interim Transportation Committee, advanced to the Joint Committee
on Ways & Means, calculated to have a financial impact of $4
million to implement and sent to the Senate floor.
The bill passed in the Oregon Senate Feb. 11 with
a 23-7 vote and moved to the House for consideration. Eugene's Sen.
Vicki Walker was among the six Democrats and one Independent casting
"no" votes on the bill. Eugene's Sen. Floyd Prozanski voted in favor
of the measure. Much of the Senate debate centered on whether the
bill is related to illegal immigration.
The measure places into state statutes the tighter
identification requirements included in an executive order by Gov.
Ted Kulongoski that went into effect last week.
People trying to get, renew or replace an existing
license are required to provide a Social Security number or other
proof of legal residence verifiable by the DMV. Immigrants also
must show they have a current visa to get a temporary license, valid
for the duration of the visa.
Erik Sorensen of CAUSA, the Oregon immigrants' rights
organization, says that the bill would be not only costly but will
affect the public safety of Oregonians: "It will result in a large
amount of people driving without a license and insurance." Last
week's rally against the measure drew 3,000 people, Sorensen says.
— Camilla Mortensen
NOVICK
GETS LOCAL NODS, BEER TIME
U.S. Senate candidate Steve Novick this week received
the endorsement of Lane County Commissioner and former gubernatorial
candidate Pete Sorenson as well as the Cottage Grove Blackberry
Pie Society. Novick, a Democrat, is running in the May primary,
hoping to unseat incumbent Republican Sen. Gordon Smith. His main
opponent in the primary is fellow Democrat Jeff Merkley.
If you haven't figured out who Novick is yet, you're
in the minority. His T.V. commercials, which have been airing locally,
have gotten national press, including a spot on FOX News. His "Beer
with Steve" ad, featuring Novick popping a beer open with his hook
while discoursing on politics, has 70,000 hits on YouTube. Novick
is missing his left arm and uses a hook, which has become emblematic
of his campaign.
"I'm proud to throw my support behind Steve Novick,"
says Sorenson. "We both have been willing to stand up to the political
establishment and demand real results for regular Oregonians. With
the big challenges we face on health care, the faltering economy
and the war in Iraq, we need a fighter in the Senate who can achieve
the real changes we need to turn this country around. And that person
is Steve Novick."
The Cottage Grove Blackberry Pie Society, a grassroots,
progressive political action committee, declared its endorsement
for Novick last week. "Novick gives you the feeling he will never
be outworked or out-studied and will always fight for the rights
of all us 'little guys' and the quality of life in this state we
love," the group noted in its endorsement release last week.
Novick also has the support of state Sen. Bill Morrisette,
former state Sen. Tony Corcoran and children's advocate Joy Marshall.
Novick and Merkley are scheduled to debate at City
Club of Eugene in March. If you want to meet Novick sooner, you
can have "a Beer with Steve" from 6:15 to 7:15 pm Tuesday, Feb.
19 at Steelhead Brewery. "Drink up, Eugene. The Hook is here, and
he's ready for beer," says the campaign.
LCC
PLANS BIG CONFAB ON PEACE
Medea Benjamin, cofounder of Global Exchange and
CODEPINK, and Bob Wing, cofounder of United for Peace & Justice,
are among the keynote speakers planned for the Peace and Democracy
Conference Feb. 29 and March 1 at LCC.
The annual conference is designed to bring together
educators, students, spiritual leaders, activists, community members
and political leaders "dedicated to building a peaceful society
and nation."
CODEPINK is a women-initiated grassroots peace and
social justice movement "working to end the war in Iraq, stop new
wars and redirect our resources into health care, education and
other life-affirming activities," according to the group's mission
statement. "We reject the Bush administration's fear-based politics
that justify violence and instead call for policies based on compassion,
kindness and a commitment to international law with an emphasis
on joy and humor."
United for Peace & Justice is a coalition of
organizations that coordinates protests and other actions nationwide
and locally. The group is calling for and supporting a set of activities
on and around the fifth anniversary of the Iraq occupation "that
will manifest the intensifying opposition to the war and help strengthen
our movement." Coming up is a mass nonviolent direct action March
19 in Washington, D.C., and corresponding demonstrations in cities
across the country.
Information on the upcoming LCC conference can be
found at at the Peace Center's website (www.lanecc.edu/peacecenter).
FORUM
ON BASKETBALL ARENA FRIDAY
Student activists on the UO campus frustrated with
a lack of public input into the proposed new UO basketball arena
are planning their own public forum from 5:30 to 7:30 pm Friday,
Feb. 15, at 180 PLC on campus. Notes taken at the forum will be
compiled and submitted to the UO administration and the state Legislature,
according to one of the organizers, Cimmeron Gillespie of the Student
Insurgent newspaper.
Gillespie says the meeting's agenda includes discussion
on the costs, location and plans for the new arena, as well as the
plans for Mac Court. "We hope to get a diverse group of people there,"
he says.
LEGISLATIVE
UPDATE
The first week of Oregon's first-ever attempt at
annual sessions "felt like the last month of a regular biennial
session," and "has been a whirlwind so far," says Rep. Phil Barnhart.
Barnhart says the Legislature this month will push
forward a bill to "crack down on property crimes and protect abused
and neglected children" and will continue work on rebuilding the
State Police. "In the 2007 session we provided funding for 100 new
state troopers after decades of cuts to our police force; this session
we'll take the final step to hiring enough troopers to patrol our
highways 24 hours a day, seven days a week."
Barnhart serves as the chair of the House Revenue
Committee and says his panel is working on bills "to shield small
family farms, woodlots and fishing operations from the estate tax
and to encourage renewable energy device manufacturing in Oregon."
He is also seeking clarification of the Business
Energy Tax Credit to "help in our continued quest to reduce and
eventually end Oregon's dependence on foreign oil. Solar, wind and
geothermal energy hold great promise." Barnhart says the tax credit
will attract businesses to Oregon and make our state a national
leader in "one of the most promising and fast growing industries
for years to come, improving the diversification of our economy
and producing family wage jobs." He expects both of these bills
to pass his committee this week and meet with broad bipartisan support
in both the House and Senate.
Barnhart says the Revenue Committee also received
the quarterly revenue forecast from the state economist. "The projections
show a very large reduction in revenue and threaten our ability
to fund key services," he says. "Thanks to very responsible, prudent
budgeting on the part of the 2007 Legislature and our creation of
Oregon's first ever Rainy Day fund, we will be able to weather this
downturn without the damage our state suffered from 2002-2005."
POLAR
BEARS OR OIL?
Will polar bears go extinct because of global warming?
The Bush administration continues to ignore the plight of the bears
as oil leases are sold off the shore of Alaska and Arctic ice melts
even faster than anticipated.
Studies showing that polar bears have become thinner
and that reproductive rates and cub survival rates are dropping
persuaded the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to propose listing
the bear as an endangered species a year ago.
The U.S. Geological Survey conducted a set of studies,
which were released in September, to aid the decision. The studies
said that two-thirds of the bears would disappear within 50 years
due to decreasing Arctic sea ice. Polar bears live and hunt for
seals on the ice.
The decision whether to list the bears was due Jan.
9. The USFWS put off the decision until after a Feb. 6 lease sale
by Alaska's Minerals Management Service that opened 30 million acres
of the Chukchi Sea to oil and gas activities. The leases were won
jointly by the Norwegian company StatoilHydro and the Italian company
Eni with bids of more than $2.6 billion. Polar bears den on islands
in the Chukchi Sea, according to the USFWS. — Camilla Mortensen
Lane
Area Herbicide Spray Schedule
• Near Deadwood: Roseburg Resources
(935-2507) will aerially spray 18 acres with herbicides above Lake
Creek starting March 22 (#50110). ODF 935-2283.
• Near Low Pass/Triangle Lake area:
Weyerhaeuser (744-4600) will aerially spray 60 acres with herbicides
starting March 1 (#50115), and 552 acres near South Fork of Alsea
River, Long Tom River, and Fish Creek starting March 1 (#50098).
Compiled by Jan Wroncy, Forestland Dwellers:
342-342-8332, www.forestlanddwellers.org
| SLANT
• Bob Cassidy has filed for the EWEB
Board primary election race representing Wards 2 &
3. Patrick Lanning currently holds the seat and is not expected
to run for reelection. Lanning has reportedly missed about
half the EWEB Board meetings since taking a job with Chemeketa
Community College in Salem. Lanning says he plans to serve
out his term, but we wouldn't be surprised to see an early
resignation and board appointment after the primary.
The deadline for filing for the May ballot
is March 6, and two other EWEB Board positions will be on
the ballot. So far, only incumbent John Simpson has filed
for Wards 1 & 8; and only Rich Cunningham has filed for
Wards 6 & 7, a seat currently held by Mel Menegat.
• Why keep an eye on the EWEB Board?
The City Council gets much more attention, but in some
ways the EWEB Board has more clout than the council on key
environmental and land use issues. Plus, every month Eugeneans
write big checks to EWEB, and those checks may get bigger.
The public utility is proposing a major investment
in new facilities on Roosevelt in west Eugene, seeking approval
for $85.5 million in electric revenue bonds on top of the
$15 million or so of bonding already approved. That's a big
debt, and once the bonding is approved by the City Council,
the EWEB board will decide how its residential, commercial
and industrial customers will pay it off. Will the bond proposal
slide through quietly on the council's consent agenda Feb.
25, or will the council refer it to the voters? Citizens will
also have 60 days to petition to put the bonding on the ballot.
EWEB is moving ahead on its master plan for
its riverfront property. Will it be sold as a hospital site,
parkland or mixed-use commercial and residential development?
Big decisions with big implications for Eugene's quality of
life. Board members will also be dealing with major issues
regarding power generation and distribution that could have
a big local impact on global warming. EWEB decisions also
affect fish, riparian habitat and recreation on the McKenzie
River. Serving on the board is a huge responsibility.
• The Oregonian and the Oregon Daily
Emerald have done a fine job of telling a story the UO clearly
would rather not be told. It's all about the power of big
money in the academy and its games today. It comes out
now in the Knight agreement that their $100 million gift will
go away June 1 unless the Legislature approves $200 million
in bonding authority to completely cover the cost of what
is promoted as the country's most expensive basketball arena.
What kind of public policy is that? Because the bonds are
backed ultimately by the taxpayers, the UO has to show that
arena revenue will cover yearly bonding costs, and that backup
funds are in place if it doesn't. It comes out next, thanks
to a faculty member's request under the Oregon open records
law, that the UO administration essentially hid from the relevant
faculty committees a report showing much lower revenue projections
than subsequent reports showed. What kind of university policy
is that? Maybe it's the only way to bring in $100 million,
$200 million, many more millions. But it doesn't do much to
build yellow and green trust.
• Hey, let's kick the struggling poor
kids out of their school and give it to the "successful" rich
kids! That's the "Schools of the Future" plan that 4J has
come up with in closing Harris Elementary to make room
for alternative school kids from Eastside and Fox Hollow.
Harris is 67 percent free/reduced lunch while Eastside is
5 percent and Fox Hollow 10 percent. The future for 4J looks
unfair.
• Project Homeless Connect came
together again last week at the Fairgrounds, drawing nearly
1,200 "guests" and more than 800 community volunteers. It's
likely a thousand more homeless and near-homeless people did
not show up for a variety of reasons. Some were working and
couldn't come — yes, the homeless among us include people
with part-time or even full-time jobs. The large number of
people who did show up is disturbing, but there is encouragement
to be found in the large number of volunteers who also appeared.
The enthusiastic volunteers indicate the level of care in
our valley and also show support for further action. A publicly
funded shelter is needed in Lane County, along with more affordable
housing and more financial support for social services and
veterans' benefits.
• As we go to press this week we are
hearing that the sale of Churchill Media's KOPT AM 1600
radio has been finalized, and the commercial Air America
programming will switch to Oregon Public Broadcasting Feb.
20. Churchill Media tells us they were "hoping to find a buyer
for the KOPT brand and switching it to 1450 AM for the new
broadcaster." No takers, so far.
Rachael Carnes had her not-so-young audience
of Eugene City Club members dancing around the DAC last week
when she talked about "The Brain Dance: What Little Kids
Already Know." She's the founder and executive director
of Sparkplug Dance in Eugene and the excellent dance writer
for EW. Stressing the importance of "movement exploration"
by infants and young children, she added that we should all
move more. The best piece of play equipment, she said, is
a clean floor suitable for "tummy time." Carnes' message:
"The arts broaden our perspective on what it means to be human,"
and that includes dancing to build our brains.
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 |

JENNIFER FRENZER-KNOWLTON
 |
After graduating from the University of Michigan
in economics, Jennifer Frenzer-Knowlton spent three years on Wall
Street. "I saw the avarice of capitalism," she says. "It became
apparent I had to follow my heart." She returned to her home town
of Columbus, Ohio, for a law degree. "I felt that a woman needed
teeth in her credentials," she notes. She also got married, and
when her physician husband took a job on the Macah Reservation in
Neah Bay, Wash., she was hired by the tribe. "I worked on economic
development," she says. "We built a marina for fishermen that had
been in the works for 35 years." In 1997, shortly after the birth
of her son Benjamin, the family moved to Eugene. A stay-at-home
mom for several years, Frenzer-Knowlton worked with Betsy Steffensen
in planning the Million Mom March against gun violence in 2000.
Since 9/11, she has been active in the peace movement through the
Justice Not War Coalition and the Eugene Friends Meeting. "Most
of my activism has been faith-based," she says. "I learned from
the tribe that activism comes from cultural and spiritual roots."
|