
News Briefs: Brewhaha Examines Equal
Rights | Jet Boats on the Willamette? | Paper
or Online? Carbon Impact Compared | War Dead
| Lane Area Herbicide Spray Schedule |
Slant: Short opinion pieces
and rumor-chasing notes
News:
Obama Mania
EW Encounters Obama; Obama Encounters the Pit
News:
Meeting Obama
County Commissioner hearts presidential candidate
News:
Photos from the Pit
Todd Cooper's shots from the Obama Rally
Happening Person: Nate
Sampson
BREWHAHA
EXAMINES EQUAL RIGHTS
What's it like to "come out" to family and friends
as a gay, lesbian, bisexual or transsexual in modern times? The
bigotry and ignorance of the last century have eased somewhat, but
it's still difficult for people who are LGBT to feel like they truly
belong to a community. And people who come out sometimes find that
their sexual preferences become the dominant factor in how they
are perceived by others.
 |
| From
left are Alison Cerezo, Joe Cedar, Matt Friday and Maceo Persson.
Photo by Ted Taylor. |
"Your sexuality is all people see," says Matt Friday,
one of the panelists in a two-hour Brewhaha political gathering
at Davis' restaurant March 19. The discussion was cosponsored by
the Bus Project, Basic Rights Oregon (BRO) and Eugene Weekly.
Becky Flynn and Maceo Persson of BRO outlined the
status of domestic partnerships since the Oregon Equality Act and
Oregon Family Fairness Act survived legal challenges and went into
effect Feb. 4. In the second half of the evening, three panelists,
Matt Friday, Joe Cedar and Alison Cerezo, talked about their personal
experiences negotiating the maze of heterosexist laws and a homophobic
and transphobic society.
Domestic partnerships are now legal and binding
for Oregon residents, and about 1,300 same-sex couples in the state
have tied the knot since Feb. 4 when a legal challenge to the legislation
failed. Anti-gay activists have filed two initiatives to repeal
the laws, and petitioners have until July 3 to collect 83,000 signatures
to get on the November ballot.
Meanwhile, domestic partnership is still approximately
1,000 rights and benefits shy of marriage, says Flynn — but
the new laws are a big step in the right direction, providing couples
with legal rights in the event of emergencies and outlawing discrimination
in housing, employment and public accommodations. The details of
the laws are available at on BRO's website (www.basicrights.org).In
the panel discussion, the three panelists told their stories and
talked about not being trusted because of their sexuality; chronic
homelessness, unemployment and violence that can affect those who
are transgendered; higher suicide rates among the teen LGBT community
thanks to homophobia; difficulties trans youth face in negotiating
the local school system; the need for "transinclusive" policies
in local government and institutions; and the empowering effect
of the new equality laws.
The group also talked about terminology and its
significance. "Queer," for example, has been gaining popularity
in the community because it recognizes the complexity of sexuality
and includes more than two genders. — Ted Taylor
JET
BOATS ON THE WILLAMETTE?
Who's up for jet boat races on the Willamette this
Memorial Day weekend? Many Eugeneans were shocked to learn from
an article in Salem's Statesman Journal newspaper that the Southern
Oregon Power Boat Association is proposing to have a the last leg
of the "World Jet Boat Marathon championship" run through town on
the holiday weekend.
A portion of the proposed race route runs from Valley
River Center 61 miles downstream to Bryant Park in Albany, according
to the entry form, which is already available online. Other portions
of the race, which takes place in several stages, will happen on
the Rogue and Santiam Rivers.
The Oregon State Marine Board is accepting written
public comment on whether the proposed race should be permitted.
The OSMB didn't get back to EW before press time, but the comment
period ends Monday, March 31. No other state or federal agencies
appear to be taking official comments on the proposal.
Doug Heiken of Oregon Wild wants to know why the
public didn't know about this race a year ago. Not only "does every
other use of the river get excluded on Memorial Day weekend," says
Heiken, but the race affects species that depend on the river.
The race occurs during the migration of federally
listed and threatened Chinook salmon, during a year when salmon
fishing may be stopped altogether due to low salmon numbers.
The Willamette is also home to bald eagles and heron
rookeries that the race could disturb, says Heiken. "Wakes could
wash out goose nests and Oregon chub habitat." It could also disturb
the threatened Western pond turtle.
Heiken says Oregon Wild has been getting phone calls
and letters about the issue.
Send your comments by March 31 to June LeTarte,
Oregon State Marine Board, P.O. Box 14145, Salem, OR, 97309, or
email them to june.letarte@state.or.us or fax them to (503) 378-4597.
Go to www.worldjetboatmarathon.comto
view the entry form and entire race route. — Camilla Mortensen
PAPER
OR ONLINE? CARBON IMPACT COMPARED
Would it be better for the environment to be reading
this on a dead tree or computer screen?
Considering the electricity required to power computers
on both ends of the Internet, a Swedish study says it may be about
the same.
"With a reading time of 30 minutes per day the environmental
impact of the web-based newspaper was often in the same range as
the printed newspaper environmental impact," states a 2007 report
from the Center for Sustainable Communications at the Royal Institute
of Technology in Stockholm.
The Swedish study used available data to do a life
cycle analysis comparison of reading a newspaper online versus on
paper. The researchers found that a newspaper produced about 28
kilograms per year of carbon dioxide, the leading contributor to
global warming. The paper studied is similar to the size and distribution
of the Eugene Weekly but distributed 6 times per week in
Europe.
By comparison, if the paper were read online for
a similar 30 minutes per issue, researchers estimated the global
warming impact at 35 kg/yr.
About half the carbon impact of the printed paper
comes from producing the paper. Roughly 15 percent comes from printing
the paper and roughly 7 percent from distributing it. The study
assumed an average of 2.4 readers would share the same paper.
Online, about half the carbon impact is from the
electricity consumed to run the computers on both ends of the internet.
Roughly 20 percent of the carbon impact comes from manufacturing
the computers and screens in China and shipping them to Europe.
The Swedish study also estimated that the online
newspaper had a 50 percent higher potential toxic impact. Computers
are full of toxic metals, only kept a few years and rarely recycled
fully.
In Eugene, the carbon balancing could be skewed
toward online given the region's heavy use of hydropower. Dams are
hard on fish but don't directly produce carbon. The Swedish researchers
did consider a scenario with an energy mix similar to Eugene (about
20 percent fossil fuels). In that scenario, the paper version produced
about 20 kg/year of carbon compared to 16 kg/year of carbon for
online.
The study also considered the use of energy efficient
reader devices now in development. The e-paper readers could produce
about half the carbon impact as printed newspapers.
Of course, newspapers may want their readers to
consider a different impact. Nationwide, papers are laying off workers
and struggling to find a way to make money with their online editions.
Stock in The New York Times has lost half its value in the
last three years. If papers go bankrupt, that could save a lot of
trees falling in the forest. But, then again, if no one was around
to report on it, who would hear about it? — Alan Pittman
EDITOR'S
NOTE: Appropriately enough, you could have read this short earlier
(or could do it now) on a computer screen at the Weekly's blog (blogs.eugeneweekly.com).
WAR
DEAD
Since the U.S. invasion of Iraq began on March
20, 2003(last week's numbers in parentheses):
• 4,000 U.S. troops killed*(3,990)
• 29,320 U.S. troops injured* (29,320)
• 145 U.S. military suicides*(145)
• 308 coalition troops killed** (308)
• 1,123 contractors killed(accurate
updates NA)
• 89,867 to one million Iraqi civilians
killed*** (89,710)
• $505.2 billion cost of war ($503.3
billion)
• $143.6 million cost toEugene taxpayers($143.2
million)
*
through Mar. 24, 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 Lorane Elementary School (details):
Strata Industries (726-0845) will ground spray 578 acres with 2,4-D
LV6, Hardball, Garlon 3A, Tahoe 4E and 3A, Velpar L, Sulfometuron
Methyl, Forester, Cleanslate, and Accord herbicides for Weyerhaeuser
(744-4600) near Turkey Run, Norris, Tucker, Shaw Creeks and the
Siuslaw River starting March 24th (#50211). Call Link Smith at ODF
935-2283.
• (Updated) Western Helicopter (503-538-9469)
will aerially spray 169 acres near Lorane for Linde Kester (942-9264)
with Oust and Velpar herbicides on between March 17th - April 13th
(#50172).
Compiled by Jan Wroncy, Forestland Dwellers:
342-8332, forestlanddwellers.org
| SLANT
 |
| PHOTO:
TODD COOPER |
•
Barack Obama got us excited last week in Eugene, and
we hope Hillary Clinton adds us to her campaign circuit. It's
hard to imagine Clinton getting the same rousing reception,
but we still want to hear what she has to say. Obama is running
a remarkably effective campaign, which is one indicator of
what kind of president he would be. And the American people
are ready for a completely different kind of story to tell
their children. We doubt that many young people have been
inspired by the story of George W. Bush's ascent to power.
Local
lawmakers and community leaders who got to spend some face-to-face
time with Obama were impressed with the man. You can read
about how EW writer Camilla Mortensen squeaked into the press
room by describing this paper as "like FOX News, but different,"
and read County Commissioner Pete Sorenson's first-person
account on our website this week, along with photos by our
great photo guy, Todd Cooper.
 |
•
Jim Torrey is demanding control of the questions at
upcoming mayoral debates, and we're puzzled by trying to figure
out what he's afraid of. Tough and embarrassing questions
from the audience? That's the nature of debates. Being misquoted
or quoted out of context? Every person in public life has
to deal with that. What he probably fears is his Republican
past catching up to him. But that would be likely to happen
even if the only questions came from Kitty Piercy. We were
happy to hear that City Club of Eugene is not planning to
change its traditional mayoral debate forum May 2. If Torrey
chooses to not show up, it only makes him look bad —
or perhaps we should say worse.
•
Developers Hugh Prichard and Jean Tate were at City
Club last week talking about the need to ease up on building
codes downtown, particularly in the core of downtown where
nothing new can be built unless its square footage is twice
the area of its lot size. In other words, your new building
in the core needs to be at least two stories high. But is
a floor area ratio (FAR) of 2.0 really unreasonable for an
urban core? Portland condos are being built with a FAR of
20-plus, and eventually Eugene will become a real urban center
with lots of tall buildings.
"We are
sending all our development to Gateway and the suburbs," says
Prichard. We're not so sure about that, but it does seem apparent
Eugene's downtown development code could use some revisions
and updating, particularly when it comes to remodeling or
expanding existing buildings. Prichard talked about Salem's
more flexible building code that lays out prescriptive rules
on one page with a process for dealing with problems and conflicts
on a facing page. An opportunity to look at these issues will
be the Eugene Planning Commission meeting April 15, shortly
after the arrival of our new city manager.
•
Oregon's initiative process may be on the ballot in
November in an effort to deal with issues of misinformation.
The Initiative Reform and Moderization Act (IRMA) passed through
the 2007 Legislature and became law, dealing with fraud and
making it easier and cheaper to gather signatures. But the
legislation did not address the confusing and sometimes purposefully
vague or misleading language in ballot measures. Right now,
it's possible to get just about anything on the ballot assuming
enough gullible signers are found. What's likely on the ballot
in November is the Citizens Initiative Review (CIR). If it
passes, a few dozen bipartisan registered voters picked at
random will be invited as a group to take an in-depth look
at each measure or referendum on the statewide ballot and
report on their findings. A one-page report will be published
in the Voters Pamphlet, and a full report will be available
online and in libraries.
We like
this idea a lot and see it as serving the public interest.
We need to know what we're voting on, and a detailed analysis
by citizens can provide a whole new level of understanding
— and maybe even shed some light on devious and destructive
ballot measures.
•
The UO and the Graduate Teaching Fellows Federation (GTFF)
are in bargaining right now. Graduate employees would like
not to give back their often below-poverty level paychecks
in fees to the university, and the UO's responding with a
paltry $20 decrease. And the GTFF would like the UO to raise
the cap on health insurance: Grad students with kids in health
crises have received phone calls from the insurance company
saying that they're out of coverage. Oops.
One EW
staffer recently met a former GTFF president from the early
'90s, and the woman explained that her department chair told
her that her participation in the GTFF was a betrayal of trust.
Health care coverage shouldn't be at the whim of an employer,
of course, and a Research I institution that uses graduate
labor for nearly a third of its instruction and then cynically
demands wages back "in fees" might be the real betrayer. More
info from the GTFF at gtffbargaining.blogspot.com
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 |

Nate
Sampson
 |
"In my opinion, Oregon is Beervana," says Nate Sampson,
adding a small amount of pelletized hops to a steaming brew vessel
at the open door to his garage on a sunny spring Saturday afternoon.
"Portland has more breweries per capita than any place in the world."
A native of College Station, Texas, Sampson stopped in at a brew
pub in Austin while trail-biking with friends in 1992. "The proprietor
said he got started with homebrewing," he reports. "All three of
us bought brew kits that day." In 1995, Sampson moved to Eugene,
where he now works for Molecular Probes. He began brewing in earnest
around the turn of the century. "I started with basic styles, but
now I make up all the recipes myself," he says. "I have five different
beers on tap right now." Sampson joined the Cascade Brewing Society
in 2003 and became club president a couple of years later. "We have
around 75 members, phenomenal brewers," he says. "It's like a big
family." Besides monthly meetings, CBS offers pub crawls, home-brew
tours, competitions, and a free yeast bank for members. Learn more
at www.cascade-brewers.com
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