
News Briefs: Choosing to Close
Schools for the Poor | From School to Strip
Mall | OLCV Rates Councilors, Commissioners
| Slumlord Code to Expand | Eco-Arson
Trial in Tacoma | Ready for Roundup Ready
Sugar? | Loving Your Lunchbox | Health
Care Reform on the Agenda | Gathering on Culture
Change | Kerwood Gets Volvo Grant | War
Dead | Lane Area Herbicide Spray Schedule
|
Slant: Short opinion pieces
and rumor-chasing notes
News:
Cops v. Auditor
Dismissal of criminal complaint leaves unanswered questions about
EPD
News:
Peace Conference Growing
Hundreds expected at LCC gathering
Happening People: Happening
People at the Hult
CHOOSING
TO CLOSE SCHOOLS FOR THE POOR
The 4J School Board gave little indication last
week, Feb. 13, that they would alter the recommendation of Superintendent
George Russell to force the poor, largely Latino children out of
a neighborhood elementary school in South Eugene to give the building
to whiter and wealthier alternative school children.
 |
| Wyatt
Burns |
Russell recommended last week to close Harris, a
neighborhood elementary, and give its building to the Eastside and
Charlemagne alternative schools. Harris is 67 percent free and reduced
lunch while Eastside is 5 percent and the Charlemagne French Immersion
school is 10 percent. Harris is 25 percent Latino while Eastside
and Charlemagne are both 1 percent Latino.
Kristen Larson, a parent of three Harris children,
told the board that the decision to close Harris for the alternative
schools was "basic discrimination against the lower income families."
Larsen said, "If you support these recommendations, shame on you."
But not a single board member gave clear indication
that they did not support the recommendation.
School Board Member Charles Martinez did question
how it was decided that the alternative schools would have an "immunization
from closure" during the district's "Schools of the Future" process,
intended to consolidate schools due to declining enrollment and
supposedly to reduce inequities. "I don't think that's consistent
with board direction."
Russell admitted that school board minutes clearly
show that closing an alternative school should be "open for consideration."
So why didn't Russell recommend closing alternative
schools to boost enrollment at neighborhood schools?
Russell said if the board directed him to close
the alternative schools, "I'm happy to do that." But he said it
was his impression that the board had eliminated that option. "I
felt that was not really on the table in light of the decisions
that had been made previously."
Russell said that he was also recommending that
unlike every other school, Charlemagne French Immersion students
would be immune from his recommendation to limit transfers to Roosevelt
Middle School and South Eugene High School. The French immersion
students would be given automatic places at the two popular schools
even if they did not reside in the appropriate school boundary.
Charlemagne students would take French immersion slots at the school,
bumping out other students who may want to attend the schools for
the other popular programs they offer.
An Eastside parent testified to the board reading
a statement from her school's parent group thanking the superintendent
for giving the Harris building to them. "Our community appreciates
and supports George Russell's recommendation."
James Riggs, a single father of three children at
Harris, told the board his son Wyatt has attention deficit disorder
and depends on the helpful relationships he's established with staff
at Harris. "If he gets moved to a new school, he will be lost. There
will be no future for him." — Alan Pittman
FROM
SCHOOL TO STRIP MALL
The former Santa Clara Elementary School site may
be converted into about 85,000 sq. ft. of shops, banks and restaurants
and 250 parking spaces under a proposal before the Eugene City Council.
Santa Clara is the first of several sites School
District 4J has proposed closing and rezoning to maximize a selling
price. Other sites include Fox Hollow Elementary, Coburg Elementary,
Willard Elementary and Civic Stadium.
The proposal by Oregon West Management includes
a 15,000 sq. ft. pharmacy, a bank, coffee shop and small plaza and
small area for an open air market. The proposal near Hunsaker and
River Road also includes 43 adjacent residential units.
Neighborhood leaders expressed concern over the
prospect of a large commercial project in testimony before the Eugene
Planning Commission last October. Kate Perle said River Road should
not be turned into another West 11th Avenue and that the project
failed to actually mix sufficient residential units in with the
commercial development.
Catherine Lesiak wrote to the commission that it
should not allow "huge strip mall" congestion at the important site
of the school that served as the center of the neighborhood. "The
proposed development is business as usual corporate commercial,"
she wrote.
The Planning Commission voted 4-2 on Nov. 19 to
approve the proposal. The City Council is scheduled March 10 to
make the final decision on the zoning and plan amendments needed
for the development. — Alan Pittman
OLCV
RATES COUNCILORS, COMMISSIONERS
An analysis of selected environmental votes released
this week by the Oregon League of Conservation Voters (OLCV) points
to a distinctly polarized Eugene City Council. However, Mayor Kitty
Piercy's role as a tie-breaker swung the council to an overall 61
percent approval rating for the past two years, about the same as
2004-2005, and much improved over 2002-2003 when Jim Torrey was
mayor.
Councilors Poling, Solomon and Clark all got zero
marks on the OLCV's environmental scorecard and Pryor got a 27 percent
rating. Earning 100 percent ratings were Bettman, Taylor, Kelly
(while in office), Zelenka (while in office) and Ortiz. Piercy got
an 89 percent rating on the issues she voted on.
"We're lucky to have a mayor who understands the
importance of leaving a great environmental legacy for our children,"
said Jan Wilson of the OLCV.
At the County Commission, the numbers have improved,
due in large part to the replacement of zero-rated Anna Morrison
with 100 percent-rated Bill Fleenor. Commissioner Bobby Green earned
a 47 percent rating, Faye Stewart 53 percent, Bill Dwyer 93 percent
and Pete Sorenson 100 percent.
To come up with the ratings, the OLCV Lane County
chapter looked at key votes on disputed issues with environmental
impacts. At the city level, the issues dealt with stormwater pre-treatment,
wetlands protection, creating and funding the Sustainability Commission,
supporting the Endangered Species Act, limiting sprawl, supporting
regional planning, increasing park funding, protecting farmland,
protecting the Amazon Headwaters and approving pedestrian-oriented
development.
At the county level, multiple votes each concerned
protecting farmland, limiting sprawl and improving air quality.
Other issues included pesticide exposure and protecting Oregon's
coastline from development.
Visit www.olcv.org/lanefor
more detailed information.
SLUMLORD
CODE TO EXPAND
During the first two years of the city's rental
housing code program, tenants called the city 815 times. But 410
of those calls were related to bad rental issues not covered by
the code.
So now city staff are recommending that the City
Council add mold, security and smoke detector problems to the code.
The current code addresses only structural integrity, plumbing,
heating and weatherproofing.
The city has found 106 legitimate complaints of
violations of the housing code in the past two years. On five occasions,
the city fined landlords for lack of response to orders to fix problems.
The city funds enforcement by collecting an annual
$10 fee for each rental unit from the 27,000 rentals in the city.
Last year the program had a $76,000 budget surplus, but the city
expects higher enforcement costs from extending the program to the
other problem areas. — Alan Pittman
ECO-ARSON
TRIAL IN TACOMA
 |
| Briana
Waters |
The only accused arsonist in the FBI's Operation
Backfire arrests to go to trial is in court in Tacoma, Wash.
Briana Waters is accused of being a lookout in
the arson that destroyed the University of Washington Center for
Urban Horticulture. She is also accused of assisting in building
"firebombs" with timing devices. Testimony in the case started Feb.
11, and the trial is expected to last a month.
Waters, a violin teacher and mother of a 3-year-old
daughter, currently lives in Berkeley, Calif., and she maintains
her innocence. If she is convicted, she faces up to 35 years in
prison. Eugene's Civil Liberties Defense Center (www.cldc.org/waters.html)is
providing updates on the trial on its webpage. — Camilla
Mortensen
READY
FOR ROUNDUP READY SUGAR?
The Sierra Club, food safety advocates and organic
farmers sued the USDA last month over a decision to allow sugar
beet farmers to start planting Roundup Ready sugar beet seeds.
While Oregon ranks sixth in nationwide production
of sugar beets, the Willamette Valley produces almost all the seeds
for sugar beets grown in the U.S. These days the sugar you put in
your coffee has just as good a chance of being from sugar beets
as it does from sugar cane, since a little more than half of the
sugar grown in the U.S. is from the beets. In 2008 the sugar you
eat has an excellent chance of having grown from genetically modified
seeds.
In 2005, the USDA approved a Roundup Ready sugar
beet seed. Like Roundup Ready corn, alfalfa and soy the seeds are
resistant to Monsanto's herbicide Roundup. Opponents to the decision
argue that the environmental impacts of the seed, including cross-pollination,
were not adequately assessed.
Sugar beets can cross-pollinate with Swiss chard
and ordinary table beets. Roundup Ready sugar beet pollen could
conceivably make its way into another farmer's organic beet crop.
This has repercussions for Oregon's organic farmers who cannot use
genetically modified seeds. Other Roundup Ready crops such as corn
and wheat have alledgedly accidentally cross-pollinated with the
crops of farmers using non-genetically modified seeds.
Critics point out that the long-term affects of
these genetically modified seeds are unknown. Data from American
Crystal shows the company has already begun planting the biotech
seeds in trial sites and plans to plant the genetically modified
seeds to use in sugar in 2008. — Camilla Mortensen
LOVING
YOUR LUNCH BOX
Local Eugene business owner Nancy Owen Myers has
partnered up with a fellow lunch-packing moms to tackle the issue
of soggy sandwiches in a reusable, washable and durable lunch box.
Kids are going bananas for the roll out packs that keep their food
contained, calm and collected.
The lunchboxes come in a variety of colors and hold
four small plastic containers for food, a drink bottle and a salad
dressing container. The packs unfold and can be used to sit on when
not holding food items.
Myers and her friends got fed up with putting lunches
together for their children in bags that fell apart. "The lunches
would get squished, and the kids wouldn't eat the food. When they'd
come home, there would be food left over in the lunches I packed
for them," said Myers.
This led Myers and friends to create LunchSense,
a company that launched this year that sells lunch boxes designed
by Myers.
Word of mouth about the lunch boxes got out when
kids around Myers's kids and their friends began taking the lunch
boxes to school. "Kids are telling kids about them. They go ape
for it, and they like the look of them," said Myers.
Myers hopes to launch the lunch boxes in the Pacific
Northwest and on the web in the next year. She also hopes to have
them made out of reusable and eco-friendly materials abroad. "Most
of the materials used are made overseas. It is cheaper to have it
done over there," said Myers.
She has plans for a set of lunch boxes to be used
for picnics and a series of bicycle-friendly packs. She will exhibit
the lunch boxes at the Better Living Home Show in Portland in March.
Call 541-515-0089 to find out more about the lunch boxes. —
Mark Arellano
HEALTH
CARE REFORM ON THE AGENDA
The Democratic presidential race is stirring a debate
on who has the best health care plan, but few details are being
discussed in the media. Meanwhile, the practical points of comprehensive
health care reform are being examined in Oregon, and the public
is invited to join in.
There will be a series of public meetings sponsored
by the Eugene-Springfield chapter of the Archimedes Movement and
Health Care for All-Oregon. The next meeting will be at 7 pm Wednesday,
Feb. 27, in the EWEB Board Room, 500 E. 4th Ave. in Eugene.
On the agenda will be a presentation on the Oregon
Health Fund Board's plans for the Oregon Health Plan for low-income
Oregonians. Many low-income Oregonians, including many children,
are not covered by the existing plan, due to lack of funding, federal
restrictions on the use of federal dollars and bureaucratic obstacles.
Rhonda Busek, vice-president of Lane Independent Practice Association,
which is responsible for the performance of the Oregon Health Plan
in Lane County, will be the speaker.
More meetings are planned March 26 and April 30
at the same time and place. Those agendas will include the insurance
exchange concept, and delivery system reform.
The Oregon Health Fund Board itself will be sponsoring
a series of public presentations this spring and summer. The board
is expected to wrap up its recommendations by Oct. 1 and submit
them to the 2009 Legislature.
GATHERING
ON CULTURE CHANGE
The Whiteaker Community Council (WCC) and the Eugene
Permaculture Guild are sponsoring a free community gathering at
7 pm Wednesday, Feb. 27, at Harris Hall, 8th and Oak, to talk about
global trends in climate change, economics, resources, international
relations and the environment.
These trends are "certain to increasingly affect
the way we work and live in important and unpredictable ways," says
WCC Board member Marcella Monroe. "What can individuals, families
and neighborhoods do to adapt for a very uncertain future?"
The presentations and discussions will look at local
examples of people making eco-logical changes in their lives and
properties: turning lawns into gardens, reclaiming automobile spaces,
looking closer to home to meet their needs, and building community,
she says.
For more information, visit www.suburbanpermaculture.orgor
call 686-6761.
KERWOOD
GETS VOLVO GRANT
Lorraine Kerwood was picked this week as one of
three people nationwide to receive $100,000 for her work to improve
the environment (see EW story 12/3/07). The Volvo For Life
Award goes to Kerwood for her exemplary work through NextStep Recycling,
a Eugene non-profit that supports both the environment and a broad
spectrum of underserved communities worldwide.
NextStep Recycling has helped keep about 3,000 tons
of electronic and other equipment from going into landfills, while
distributing more than 13,500 computers to disadvantaged people,
families, communities and organizations worldwide.
She will be flown by Volvo to New York City March
19 to be honored at the Volvo for Life Awards ceremony. She intends
to donate the award to NextStep to help "open some significant new
doors, and expand our work in current and new areas."
Kerwood was a "Happening Person" in EW's
Sept. 8, 2005 issue.
WAR DEAD
Since the U.S. invasion of Iraq began
onMarch 20, 2003(last week's numbers in parentheses):
• 3,963 U.S. troops killed*(3,960)
• 28,870 U.S. troops injured*
(28,870)
• 135 U.S. military suicides*(135)
• 307 coalition troops killed**
(307)
• 933 contractors killed(accurate
updates NA)
• 88,784 to one million Iraqi
civilians killed*** (88,479)
• $495.5 billion cost of war
($483.5 billion)
• $139.9 million cost toEugene
taxpayers($140.91 million)
*
through Jan. 21, 2008; 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
• Near Marcola Elementary School: Weyerhaeuser
(741-5211) will backpack spray 12 acres with 2,4-D LV6, atrazine
L/WSP, Velpar DF, Oust XP/SFM, Transline, Clean Slate, and Accord
herbicides starting March 1 (#55128). Call Tim Meehan, Oregon Department
of Forestry stewardship forester, at 726-3588. Express concerns
for children's health to Bonnie Covell at Weyerhaeuser.
| SLANT
•
Let's see if we have this right. A Eugene police sergeant
appears to seek to intimidate the independent police auditor
questioning his performance by using his official position
to file a criminal complaint against her. The police chief,
who never wanted an auditor to begin with, immediately refers
the frivolous complaint to the district attorney. The DA,
who works closely with police and has a clear conflict of
interest, immediately launches a full-bore criminal investigation.
City staff withhold information from the City Council on the
complaint for more than a week. Sounds like official misconduct
to us.
•
Some news in city elections. Mayor Kitty Piercy has three
challengers so far in May: Ian Goldfarb, Jim Ray and Nick
Urhausen. The City Council Ward 1 open seat currently held
by the retiring Bonny Bettman has George Brown and Shimeon
Greenwood on the ballot, and we've heard rumors of a possible
third candidate, Jason Blair, a project director at Oregon
Research Institute who campaigned for the downtown urban renewal
measure that Brown opposed. Blair, who also writes film reviews
for EW, is still undecided. "I've been considering
it," he tells us this week. "I think it's a huge opportunity
to improve relations at the council level. My only hesitation
is whether I'd have the time to do the job properly." Andrea
Ortiz (Ward 7) now has a challenger, John R. Crane, a local
businessman and former CEO of Kidsports. Betty Taylor (Ward
2) and Chris Pryor (Ward 8) are still running unopposed. March
6 is the filing deadline for the May primary.
•
What's Jim Torrey up to? The former mayor wrote a letter to
the editor of the Oregon Daily Emerald last week talking
about being politically "independent" and nonpartisan and
urging Democrats to vote for Barack Obama in May. OK, you
can lower those eyebrows now. The longtime Bush supporter
did NOT say he'd be voting for Obama in November, just supporting
him in the primary. Torrey's maintaining a high profile. He's
on the 4J School Board and was a guest at the conservative
Rubicon Society recently, and his name pops up in phone surveys
asking people how they rate local politicians. Is Torrey contemplating
a last-minute filing for the mayor's race? He might be polling
better than Pat Farr, and let's not forget the attempt to
write in Torrey when Nancy Nathanson lost the mayoral primary
to Kitty Piercy in 2004. What would Torrey's campaign slogan
be? How about "A Mayor for Sprawl of Eugene"?
•
Dave Hauser, president of the Eugene Area Chamber of
Commerce, sent a letter to the mayor and councilors this week
complaining about the lack of geographical balance on city
boards, committees and commissions. This sounds more like
a political wedge issue than a real and substantive concern.
A lot of thought, consideration and recommendations go into
the appointment process by the mayor and council. The Chamber
didn't make a peep when Mayor Torrey stacked city panels with
pro-sprawl conservatives, many of whom are still serving.
Piercy and the council are actually bringing more diversity
of thought and attitude to city government.
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 |

HAPPENING
PEOPLE AT THE HULT
 |
Twelve years ago, in February of 1996, "Happening
People" made its debut as a column in Eugene Weekly. This
photograph of artist Kari Johnson, along with her sculpture The
Revolutionary Oracle, appeared a few months later, in June of
1996. The Oracle was one of seven pieces included in that summer's
Outside Art exhibit in downtown Eugene. As of February 2008, 670
individuals and groups, each of them nominated by readers of the
Weekly, have been featured as Happening People. Beginning
this Friday, Feb. 22, and continuing through March 29, a selection
of portraits from the HP archives will be on display in the Jacobs
Gallery at the Hult Center for the Performing Arts. The exhibit,
titled Telling Stories, also includes large-format photographs
of the disappearing traces of man in the wild areas of Oregon, from
tidewaters to high desert, by Corvallis photographer Rich Bergeman.
An opening reception is scheduled for 5:30 to 8:30 pm Friday, Feb.
22. All past, present and future Happening People are cordially
invited to attend.
|