Showing posts with label growth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label growth. Show all posts

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Old Paradigm--New Paradigm: Occupy Wall Street or Occupy the Land?

After a holiday of satiation, frenzied shoppers, and hopefully thanks, readers might be interested in the following article I ran across this morning while pursuing a link on the "America 2 Point 0" mailing list at Yahoo. For myself at least, it has always been too tempting and too easy to slip back under the spell of the cornucopian eternal consumption and growth delusions created and marketed by the dominant global business class. This despite having realized for at least two or three decades that a growing population size of a country or world coupled with consumer growth culture, is on an unsustainable resource ravaging road that leads to social and ecological collapse. When looking at social phenomena, like Occupy Wall Street, I've tended to pop right back into the old endless growth paradigm instead of viewing them through the lens of sustainability. This article by Jan Lundberg of Culture Change helps to bring the Occupy movement into proper perspective and focus when viewed through a sustainability lens.
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How The Occupy Movement May Be Off-Base, and How It Can Evolve ("Occupy the Land")

. . . .
What folks in "poor" countries have always understood is that their power and survival lie in possessing their own land. Land reform in many parts of our increasingly crowded world is a burning issue. Many people live and die for the struggle for their right to live on their ancestral lands. A movement in the U.S. for the masses to take back the land from the few is inevitable.

Better late than never; many decades have passed during which the importance for consumers of being close to the land was greatly diminished. Real wealth, the land, was given up for wages and cheap petroleum's technology explosion. Population growth has happened so fast that a new generation didn't know it was inheriting a world less and less free and no longer abundant in life-giving resources ("ecological services").

But as the sun sets on the system of vast, false monetary wealth and on the oppression it has wielded, nature may first wake us up rudely, before people in the U.S. can go about land reform. If so, after societal and possibly ecological collapse, there may be quite a bit of land available and to share after the population has diminished sufficiently in size. This was the case in Europe after the 14th century plagues took their toll. However, in no way should such drastic "solutions" be pursued.

"Occupying" the heart of cities today does mean something in today's world of artificial environments, material culture, and middle class values. But instead of occupying the cities, the movement should be about running away from cities. Instead of occupying Wall Street, run away from it: abandon it, abandon the system, abandon consuming, and embrace simple living on the land. This ought to be the prime goal, rather than a stampede today or tomorrow. . . . .


Read entire article HERE.

See also Update from DC: Occupy, pepperspray, peak oil, sail power, Congress, and Culture Change for more articles.

Monday, December 21, 2009

Is Peace President Obama America's Newest War Criminal?

[Edited 12/22/09 & link to Greenwald's award winning post on civil liberties added.]

Some may have cheered at the news that Peace President Obama may have ordered the air strike on alleged Al Qaeda camps in Yemen last Friday, December 18th. At least two reports have indicated that Peace President Obama ordered the cruise missile attacks. Others indicate that Yemen is taking responsibility. Given history, I tend to believe the former.

In any event, below are a few articles concerning the episode that involved the killing of something in the range of 49 to 120 people. primarily civilians, which may have included 17 women and twenty-three children.

Back in September of 2008, I wrote a progressive friend who supported then candidate Obama a note of caution:

He said: "Did you see Melissa Etheridge perform at the Democratic Convention? I liked it. She's playing a 12 string Ovation. I was moved by the medley she put together." [Dylan's "the Times They Are A Changing,'" "Give Peace A Chance," ad nauseem]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tNgxdQkDcu8

I responded:

"I remember thinking after the "Reagan Revolution" and etc., that Dylan's song, "The Times They Are A Changin," a favorite of mine, was thinking something different from where we actually began heading. It was nice that she brought it up, but frankly, I don't think Obama is a change agent, what with his fealty to the Israel lobby, support for the war in Afghanistan, usual suspects advisors, etc. I realize it made everybody feel good, but.... And the Born In the USA part, devoid of any of Springsteen's original context, left me cold. More nationalistic nonsense. Great convention rhetoric though.

Sorry--that's where I'm at.
"

On November 9.2008, I also told him:

"We can hope that he doesn't "reach accross the aisle" too much to allow those neanderthals too much influence and that he will reverse all the negative Bush actions on the environment. . . . .

Sorry if I seem too cynical, but right now I'm afraid he is on track to become another war criminal, a la Bill Clinton
."

Oh well . . . .

I think Obama ok'd it, as is stated by ABC:

Obama Ordered U.S. Military Strike on Yemen Terrorists
Cruise Missiles Launched Thursday Hit Two Suspected al Qaeda Sites; Major Escalation of US Efforts Against Terrorists

http://abcnews.go.com/print?id=9375236
__

We reap what we sow, and Glenn Greenwald reinforces that view:

Cruise missile attacks in Yemen

The widely recognized causes of the 9/11 attacks seem stronger and more alive than ever


Glenn Greenwald

http://www.salon.com/opinion/greenwald/2009/12/21/terrorism/print.html
Also reproduced at: http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article24232.htm
And: http://www.commondreams.org/headline/2009/12/21-3

Dec. 21, 2009 |

(updated below)

Given what a prominent role "Terrorism" plays in our political discourse, it's striking how little attention is paid to American actions which have the most significant impact on that problem. In addition to our occupation of Iraq, war escalation in Afghanistan, and secret bombings in Pakistan, President Obama late last week ordered cruise missile attacks on two locations in Yemen, which "U.S. officials" say were "suspected Al Qaeda hideouts." The main target of the attacks, Al Qaeda member Qasim al Rim, was not among those killed, but: "a local Yemeni official said on Sunday that 49 civilians, among them 23 children and 17 women, were killed in air strikes against Al-Qaeda, which he said were carried out 'indiscriminately'." Media reports across the Muslim world -- though, not of course, within the U.S. -- are highlighting the dead civilians from the U.S. strike (one account from an official Iranian outlet began: "U.S. Nobel Peace Prize laureate President Barack Obama has signed the order for a recent military strike on Yemen in which scores of civilians, including children, have been killed, a report says").

For many people, the mere assertion by anonymous U.S. Government officials that these attacks targeted "suspected al-Qaeda sites" will be sufficient to deem them justified. All credible reports confirm that there is indeed a not insignificant Al Qaeda presence in Southern Yemen, so that claim, at least, seems at least grounded in reality. Yet arguments about justification to the side for the moment, here we have yet another violent attack by the U.S. which -- even under the best-case scenario -- has killed more Muslim civilians than it did "Al Qaeda fighters," and failed to kill the main target of the attack. When it comes to undermining Al Qaeda -- both in Yemen and generally -- isn't it painfully obvious that the images of dead Muslim women and children which we constantly create -- and which we again just created in Yemen -- will fuel that movement better than anything else we can do?

Consider what else is happening around the Muslim world that is quite consistent with all of that yet receiving virtually no attention in the West (though receiving plenty of attention there). Pakistani lawyers -- many of the same ones who protested the tyrannical practices of General Musharraf -- held a large protest in Islamabad this weekend objecting to the presence of "notorious" Blackwater agents in their country. Palestinians are consumed with a recent incident in which West Bank settlers torched one of their mosques, burning holy books and leaving threatening messages; that was preceded by the Israeli Justice Minister proclaiming that "step by step, Torah law will become the binding law in the State of Israel." And perhaps most significantly of all, while reports have focused on alleged tension between the Obama administration and Israel over the latter's uncooperative conduct, this is what is actually happening:

Behind the scenes, strategic security relations between the two countries are flourishing. Israeli officials have been singing the praises of President Obama for his willingness to address their defense concerns and for actions taken by his administration to bolster Israel’s qualitative military edge -- an edge eroded, according to Israel, during the final year of the George W. Bush presidency.

Among the new initiatives taken by the administration, the Forward has learned, are adjustments in a massive arms deal the Bush administration made with Arab Gulf states in response to Israeli concerns. There have also been upgrades in U.S.-Israeli military cooperation on missile defense. And a deal is expected next year that will see one of the United States’ most advanced fighter jets go to Israel with some of America’s most sensitive new technology.

Amid the cacophony of U.S.-Israel clashes on the diplomatic front, public attention given to this intensified strategic cooperation has been scant. But in a rare public comment in October, Israeli Ambassador Michael Oren praised the Obama administration’s response to complaints about lost ground during the close of the Bush years as "warm and immediate."

"We came to the Obama administration and said, ‘Listen, we have a problem here,'" Oren, told a gathering of the National Jewish Democratic Council. "The administration’s reaction was immediate: we are going to address this issue, we are going to make sure that we maintain your QME [qualitative military edge]."

All of this is being done pursuant to this:

America’s commitment to maintaining Israel’s qualitative military edge was codified directly into U.S. law via 2008 legislation backed by AIPAC. This legislation requires the president to report to Congress periodically on actions taken by the administration to ensure Israel’s advantage.

I have to confess that I didn't realize that a law was enacted last year making it a legal requirement for America to maintain "Israel’s qualitative military edge," and -- even more amazingly -- that the President of the U.S. is required to report regularly to the U.S. Congress on the steps he's taking to ensure Israel's superiority. That's a rather extraordinary law, and the administration seems to be fulfilling its requirements faithfully.

Whatever else is true, and even if one believes it's justified to lob cruise missiles into more countries where we claim "suspected Al Qaeda sites" are located, one thing seems clear: all of the causes widely recognized as having led to 9/11 -- excessive American interference in the Muslim world, our alliance with their most oppressive leaders, our responsibility for Israel's military conflicts with its Muslim neighbors, and our own military attacks on Muslims -- seem stronger than ever. As we take more actions of this sort, we will create more Terrorists, which will in turn cause us to take more actions of this sort in a never-ending, self-perpetuating cycle. The U.S. military, and the intelligence community, and its partners in the private contractor world will certainly remain busy, empowered, and well-funded in the extreme.

* * * * *

The excellent academic and political website, 3quarksdaily, gave out prizes this weekend for the best articles of the year in politics, philosophy, science and other categories. The prizes for politics were judged by historian and scholar Tariq Ali. This post of mine (http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2009/11/24/civil_liberties/index.html) on Obama's civil liberties record and the multi-tiered system of justice being created for "War on Terror" detainees was chosen as the top prize winner, which includes a $1,000 award. Thank you to 3quarksdaily and Ali for this selection.

UPDATE: For those struggling to understand the basic point here, there are two primary issues I'm examining with regard to the strike in Yemen: (1) what happened and (2) how it's being depicted in various parts of the Muslim world. The citation to the "official Iranian outlet" pertains to number (2), not to number (1) -- as I made explicitly clear.

____________________

Report: Obama Ordered US Military Strike on Yemen
http://www.democracynow.org/2009/12/21/headlines

ABC News is reporting the US military bombed two sites in the Middle Eastern nation of Yemen on Thursday on direct orders from President Obama. The strikes are seen as a major escalation of the Obama administration’s campaign against al-Qaeda. US officials told ABC the target of the strikes was a pair of suspected al-Qaeda training camps. A human rights activist in Yemen said twenty-three children and seventeen women were among the sixty-four people killed. Earlier this month, President Obama hinted that Yemen could soon be attacked. [See article]
_____________________

US Attacking Yemen After All
Posted By Jason Ditz On December 18, 2009 @ 4:08 pm
http://news.antiwar.com/2009/12/18/us-attacking-yemen-after-all/print/

Just one day after a very public denial that American forces were in the process of attacking sites in Northern Yemen, President Barack Obama ordered multiple cruise missile attacks on sites across the tiny, coastal nation.
[See article
_____________________

Looking for Tourism, Growth & Development to Save Us?

The Last Resort
Don Henley
"The Eagles", from "Hell Freezes Over" album, 1994
Go to this link to View:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qlszpoz6O-Y

Sunday, May 4, 2008

Valuing Migratory Birds and Backyard Barn Owls

IN THIS ISSUE:

- Spring Things- International Migratory Bird Day
- Call Someplace Paradise and You Can Kiss It Goodbye

SPRING THINGS

This past week, a sure sign of spring migration turned up at my bird feeder. The Lazuli Bunting is one of our most beautiful western birds, with its bright blue head and back, white wing bars, cinnamon breast, and white belly. It is a summer resident of Baker County. The three males were too alert to get a good picture of, flying off at the slightest hint of the human form, but I was able to photograph at least one in the feeder. Brightens up the gloomiest rainy day. It was probably on its way to one of our local brushy riparian areas at slightly higher elevation in the foothills.


Lazuli Bunting
[Photo © Christopher Christie]

This next weekend (May 10 & 11) is the annual spring migration bird count for International Migratory Bird Day. You can learn about International Migratory Bird Day at http://www.birdday.org/ . We Baker birders split up the county and count the different bird species along our routes. The migration has been going on for well over a month, and most summer residents have returned to Baker County and NE Oregon, although some have yet to arrive due to the lingering cold weather. Others have passed through on their way north to breeding grounds in Canada and Alaska, some flying as far as the Arctic Circle. If you would like to participate in the bird count, please contact Joanne Britton at 523-5666 or by e-mail at jobr@oregontrail.net .

Below are some photos of a few birds who have already passed through or have arrived for the summer breeding season.

In March and early April, we had Tundra Swans, Snow geese and Greater White-fronted geese passing through on their way to their Arctic breeding grounds.




Tundra Swan

[Photo © Christopher Christie]


Snow Geese over Baker County
[Photo © Christopher Christie]

We've also had many other water fowl passing through or settling in, including Common Loons and over 16 species of ducks, including Mallard, Pintails, Gadwall, Widgeons, Shovelers, Teal, Scaup, Ring-Necked, Redheads, Canvasbacks, two different Goldeneyes, and the common Merganser.


Cinnamon Teal
[Photo © Christopher Christie]


Northern Shoveler
[Photo © Christopher Christie]


Redhead
[Photo © Christopher Christie]

Union and Baker Counties are near the northern extreme of the range for the Great Egret, which is related to the slightly larger, and more common, Great Blue Heron. They were once threatened by over-hunting because of the value of their beautiful “plume” feathers. The photo below was taken last week at Ladd Marsh, in Union County.


Great Egret
[Photo © Christopher Christie]


Another large wading bird in the same genus as the Great Egret is the Great Blue Heron. They are quite common throughout North East Oregon in the spring and summer, with a few remaining year round. A heron rookery (group nesting site) can be seen in the Salmon Creek area near Pocahontas Road.


Great Blue Heron
[Photo © Christopher Christie]

Another Baker County migrant of cat-tail marsh areas is the Virginia Rail. Due to their solitary and secretive lifestyle, this rail is not often seen, even though present nearby. This photo was taken at Ladd Marsh on May 1st.


Virginia Rail
[Photo © Christopher Christie]

Right now, our three blackbirds are back at their stations, in the valley and at feeders. The yellow-headed is hanging on to the remaining small patches and threads of wetlands with cat-tail communities which are used as breeding habitat. The males are here now collecting in colonies and the females will arrive any day, if they haven’t already. To continue to have them in Baker Valley, emergent deeper water cat-tail wetlands should be preserved and expanded on public land or on conservation easements.




Yellow-headed Blackbird
[Photo © Christopher Christie]


Red-winged Blackbird
[Photo © Christopher Christie]


Brewers Blackbird
[Photo © Christopher Christie]

Long-billed Curlews have made their appearance too in low grasslands and alfalfa fields. This is the largest sandpiper and one of the most imperiled shorebirds in the world. Its population has declined dramatically since the middle of the 1800s due to historic hunting and loss of both wintering and breeding habitat. It is listed as "vulnerable" in Oregon. The one below was in a short grass field near Schetky Road.


Long-billed Curlew
[Photo © Christopher Christie]

The Lincoln's Sparrow is not often seen in Baker County, but is said to be fairly common in weeds and brush during migration. It migrates from the south to southern Alaska and much of Canada, and breeds largely in the boreal forests, generally near water. It is also resident in the Cascades and possibly the Blue Mountains, as it has been heard at Anthony Lake. It looks like a delicate version of the common Song Sparrow. As with many other migrants and neo-tropical songbirds, cattle grazing along streams and rivers interferes with breeding success and destroys breeding habitat.

The bird in the photo below was seen a week or so ago along Lindley Road.


Lincoln's Sparrow
[Photo © Christopher Christie]

Another Sparrow that has returned in the last week or two is the White-crowned Sparrow. It is often seen scratching out a living on the ground, chicken-like, looking for seeds and small insects. This handsome and sporty sparrow is still quite common in most of its range but may be declining in some areas of the west. It breeds in boreal forest, tundra and alpine meadows in most of its breeding range, which includes western and northern Canada, Alaska, and the northern Rockies. It is a year around resident in portions of California, north eastern Oregon, and the intermountain states.


White-crowned Sparrow
[Photo © Christopher Christie]

Out in the sage brush, both Brewer's Sparrows and Sage Sparrows have returned, as have the Sage Thrashers.

The Brewer's is a drab sparrow with a marvelous song. The Sage Sparrow is another somewhat inconspicuous, and often unnoticed, gray-headed sparrow of the taller sagebrush, often found on the ground seeking out seeds and insects. It is a candidate species in Washington State due to the fragmentation and destruction of its sagebrush habitat by farmers, cattle ranchers and OHV recreationists. It faces similar threats in Baker County, especially from private development of sagebrush communities and the creation of the OHV area near Virtue Flat.

The Sage Thrashers are dependent on sagebrush communities and have habitat requirements similar to the Sage Sparrow, but require more dense habitat with greater cover. It too is a candidate species in Washington, and faces the same threats in Baker County as those of the Sage Sparrow. It can sometimes be seen in the morning along the fence line on the north side of Highway 86 between the Oregon Trail Memorial and the Oregon Trail Visitors Center. According to BLM documents, the sagebrush community on the north side of the road has been protected from grazing for a number of years. It can sometimes be found elsewhere, as along the east side of Schetky Road, with Brewer's Sparrow, and the latter can be found in the sagebrush around Bowen Valley, south of Baker City.


Sage Thrasher
[Photo © Christopher Christie]

A common migratory bird of open fields and hot dry sagebrush country is the Western Kingbird. It is often seen perched on a wire or fencepost, from which it flies out to catch an insect in midair.


Western Kingbird
[Photo © Christopher Christie]

Lastly, for now, the Swainson's and Ferruginous Hawks, as well as the Osprey's (Fish Eagles) have returned to the area. Swainson's is somewhat common from portions of the city to the valley, and the Ferruginous is uncommonly found where fields meet sagebrush communities and beyond. It is more common in the southern portions of the county. The Osprey can be viewed fishing at Anthony Lakes and at the several man-made nest platforms in the valley and up around Phillips Reservoir. There are also natural nest sites in the forest, as the one close to the dam at Phillips Reservoir. A picture of the Swainson's can be seen in my 12/22/07 blog in the wolves and "death to the rodents" article. A photo of Mom & Pop Osprey is below, with little chick to left in nest. The mother is the larger bird on the right, which is always the case with Ospreys. It just goes to show you, that in nature, things don't always fit the anthropocentric or unimaginative model. Nature selects what works for survival in particular environmental conditions and periods of time.


Osprey
[Photo © Christopher Christie]

I hope you enjoyed these photos as much as I did getting out to take them. I gave the swan and the Yellow-headed Black bird photos to the Baker City Herald for free when they requested a few photos for the Baker County Travel Guide birding section, but they chose not to use them. Perhaps my politics got in the way. Compare, and then you can be the judge.


CALL SOMEPLACE PARADISE AND YOU CAN KISS IT GOODBYE

Note—I wrote the following on April 29, 2008, prior to Jayson Jacoby’s (Editor of the Baker City Herald) May 2 editorial, but haven't had time to post it. I am pleased that in some ways, i.e., enjoying the access to the natural world that is provided by a small rural town, that we have something in common.)


In Baker City or County, you may have Barn Owls visit your yard, and you can find them in some local buildings.

Barn Owl
[Photo © Christopher Christie]

"You call someplace paradise, kiss it goodbye."

When I was a youngster in Southern California, I could walk to the wildland interface in the washes and chaparral communities on the north end of the city in about an hour. A certain degree of wild nature was within reach and greatly appreciated by my friends and I. We especially enjoyed watching the tadpoles turn into hundreds of happily hopping toads in late spring. By the time I got out of the Army and was attending college, those valued wild places had been bulldozed over and replaced with "ticky-tacky" housing tracts, and most of the citrus groves and grape vineyards I also had known were experiencing the same fate. Smog was enveloping the once clear and beautiful valley as well as the surrounding mountains, which could only be seen clearly during "Santa Ana" winds and after winter storms. After college, I permanently left that place and sought shelter first at the ocean in San Diego, and then along a quiet country road in the peaceful foothills not far from the Mexican Border. Red-shouldered hawks inhabited the open spaces across the road from my house. Twenty plus years later my childhood home town had become almost unrecognizable and my haven in the hills had been ruined by the development of single family hotels and gated communities. Traffic congestion and smog had come to the hills and water wells were going dry. The Red-shouldered hawks were seen less frequently, and the new residents had turned the quiet country road into a raceway that I entered and exited at my own risk. By then, Joni Mitchell had written "Big Yellow Taxi" ("They paved paradise And put up a parking lot") and the Eagles had graced us with "The Last Resort:"

She came from Providence,
the one in Rhode Island
Where the old world shadows hang heavy in the air
She packed her hopes and dreams like a refugee
Just as her father came across the sea
She heard about a place people were smilin'
They spoke about the red man's way, and how they loved the land
And they came from everywhere to the Great Divide
Seeking a place to stand or a place to hide

Down in the crowded bars, out for a good time,
Can't wait to tell you all, what it's like up there
And they called it paradise
I don't know why
Somebody laid the mountains low while the town got high

Then the chilly winds blew down
Across the desert
through the canyons of the coast, to the Malibu
Where the pretty people play, hungry for power
to light their neon way and give them things to do

"Some rich men came and raped the land,
Nobody caught 'em
Put up a bunch of ugly boxes, and Jesus, people bought 'em
And they called it paradise
The place to be
They watched the hazy sun, sinking in the sea

You can leave it all behind and sail to Lahaina
just like the missionaries did, so many years ago
They even brought a neon sign: "Jesus is coming"
Brought the white man's burden down
Brought the white man's reign

Who will provide the grand design?
What is yours and what is mine?
'Cause there is no more new frontier
We have got to make it here

We satisfy our endless needs and
justify our bloody deeds,
in the name of destiny and the name of God

And you can see them there,
On Sunday morning
They stand up and sing about what it's like up there
They call it paradise
I don't know why
You call someplace paradise, kiss it goodbye "

I loved that melancholy song because it told much of the sad and bitter truth that I and so many others had experienced in California. The only thing they left out was the millions of immigrants, legal and illegal, that had arrived from other states and foreign lands, mostly from Mexico and points south. The first waves during my lifetime were Americans who had come from the eastern US, from places like Chicago and Buffalo, but from about 1970 onward, the waves, more like an enduring tsunami, came primarily from south of the border.

When I was born, almost 60 years ago, there were fewer than 147 million people in the US and around 10 million in California. Now there are around 38 million people in California (almost quadrupled) and an estimated 304 million and climbing in the US (a doubling). The earth's population went from around 2.5 billion to an estimated 6.7 billion during the same period.

Is it really any wonder we are beginning to see resource scarcity all around? Paul Ehrlich's much maligned "Population Bomb" was written in 1968. I listened to him speak about the population explosion that year at my community college. The Club of Rome warnings were sounded in 1972. US population had stabilized in the mid 70's just after our oil production peaked. Immigration law changes in 1965, along with media and business promotion of the philosophies of the Cornucopians, along with fears about having sufficient numbers of folks to support the economic pyramid scheme, set the stage for massive immigration and population increases at the same time our energy supplies and other resources were declining. Instead of US population stabilizing at 250 million, followed by a slow decline, it shot up at tragically unsustainable rates.

Today, it seems like Baker County and eastern Oregon is our "paradise," and that could be a bad sign. I was driven from California to Oregon due to population pressures and associated effects, just as many of those who came to California were. Others have done the same in settling here, but we have had negligible effect on population growth because many of us were retired and we moved into existing, unoccupied housing. Here, even with the ecological transformation and habitat destruction produced by agricultural development, there is easy access to the wild and semi-wild, clean air, and clean water, just as in the Southern California of my youth. But without foresight, good fortune, and good planning, we stand to lose it all.

Our oh so wise and visionary local leaders, perhaps conflicted by their own business interests and commitment to the Church of Commerce, continue to offer up growth as the cure for economic stagnation (also known as sustainability) or decline, without fully explaining, or perhaps even understanding, what the full costs of that growth will be. The miracle of "prosperity" can be yours--just open up your hearts and pocketbooks to fee and tax increases, pay for expensive expansions to your infrastructure, improve the airport for the rich, make Baker look good to the wealthy people of Portland and San Jose, and "the good life" will be just around the corner. But more on that in a future post.

[Factoid: did you know that when the County chooses to always increase the property tax by 3% per annum, that they will in fact be doubling your tax in just 24 years?]

For myself, I prefer keeping Baker City like it is. We are fortunate to have our nearby wildflowers, local birds and other wildlife (well, it would be nice if the deer stayed off the fruit trees and out of the garden), along with our relatively clean air and water. I know what growth will bring, and it makes economic stagnation (sustainability) look pretty good when all is said and done.

Perhaps good fortune will save us the fate of other pieces of paradise—who knows? The cursedly cold winters may be a blessing in disguise in the face of peak oil and a prolonged decline in energy resources. If I believed in the efficacy of prayer to achieve an end, I would be praying for the winter to be our saving grace, but cold winters didn’t save Bend, Oregon from the ravages of development. "You call someplace paradise, kiss it goodbye."

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

NEWSPAPER WATCH (Democracy and Social Arrangements in Baker City part 2)

NEWSPAPER WATCH

CITIZEN PARTICIPATION
Now that Herald editor Mark Furman has left for academia, it will be interesting to see how the opinion page at the Herald evolves. Will they continue printing the grandiose quotes about the importance of our allegedly “free press,” i.e., the Herald, to a functional democracy in the face of their selective reporting and constrictive letters policy? (Mark Twain is supposed to have noted that “It’s a free press if you happen to own one” or something like that.)

On Thursday, April 12th, the Herald wrote that Jayson Jaycoby is now editing the opinion page--a promotion that will hopefully help he and Lisa raise the child they appear to be expecting. It was already clear from the writing style in Wednesday’s (4/11) editorial that Jayson is now on the editorial board. Judging from his statement in that Thursday’s column that he spent his first 18 summers on he West Side and will spend his 19th summer in Baker City this year, Jayson must be all of 36 or 37 years old. How reassuring! We can only hope that his ability to turn a phrase also means he is wise beyond his years. I, for one, will not be holding my breath. I have been treated to Jayson’s judgments of what is newsworthy, and my comments about growth during the citizen’s participation portion of City Council meetings, among others, are apparently not in that class.

OK, you might say, what is so special about your comments at City Council meetings? Not much perhaps, except that we do pretend to be a democracy. I am not alone in that category as many citizen’s remarks do not make the papers, even though they should. Newspaper reporters and editors have the power to decide whether your comments see the light of day, and those with power are prone to abuse it. Sure, Bill Harvey’s comments on development fees get in, but then he’s an esteemed “custom builder” representing a portion of a financially powerful industry. Twice at council meetings, in addition to my own opinions, I have cited as a source, one of the few books that explains the disproportionate costs paid by current residents for the growth that occurs in their cities and towns—costs that benefit and should be paid for by developers and new residents. That book is “Better, Not Bigger,” by Eben Fodor.

Better Not Bigger

Fodor is Oregon's foremost defender of "current residents" in the battle against destructive development. Why would the local papers and reporters like Jayson Jaycoby at the Herald or Brian Addison of the Record Courier want to keep Fodor’s advice and wise counsel from the citizens of Baker County? One might think that because Jayson’s father in law sells real estate, that he may be biased about growth, I don't know. On the other hand, maybe he and his paper need growth to increase circulation, revenues and paychecks. The latter may be applicable to Brian Addison as well, as Brian too has never repeated the title of the book or my comments on growth in his reporting. Oh, and did I mention that 7 out of 13 advertisers on the Herald’s web page have to do with selling real estate? Is it possible that the Herald doesn’t want to report items that might offend its advertisers? Growth is favored by many other merchants as well, because growth stands to increase their customer base and profits. The fact that you are going to pay for a disproportionate share of the cost, or that it takes two red light cycles to get across Main Street on Campbell (if you were lucky enough to squeeze in off a side street) just isn’t important to them.

Time to Think About Growth While Crossing Main Street
(another benefit of growth)

Measure 37, too, has been a contentious topic across the state for some time. Finally, 3 months after Governor Kulongoski kicked off a campaign to fix it, the Herald’s Mike Ferguson mentions it in an article yesterday. Don’t worry if you missed it though, because you won’t learn anything from Mike's article. He quotes Commission Chair Fred Warner Jr. as saying “We’ve still got 10 or 15 more. For now, this is all the staff could get done and get good reports on.” Both Mike and Brian Addison were present at the January 17th, 2007 Commissioner’s meeting where I commented on several Measure 37 demands, including one by Commissioner Fred Warner Junior himself. Not one word of the many pages of comments I gave the two reporters ended up in the paper. Measure 37 wasn’t even mentioned despite over an hour’s time being spent on it. That was the week that Kulongoski spoke on the subject, and yet, nothing about Measure 37 was worth reporting on.

We wouldn’t know from the local papers that there have been 139 Measure 37 claims, affecting thousands of acres, filed here in Baker County and that claims affecting over half a million acres have been filed in Oregon. We haven’t learned from the local papers that a poll earlier this year determined that 61% of Oregonians thought the measure should be repealed or fixed, or that 52% would vote against it if given the chance today. We haven’t been informed that most of the Baker County claimants, including Fred Warner Jr., didn’t even bother to follow the requirements of County Ordinance 2005-01, which adopted logical procedures to be followed when demanding compensation from the County. At least Commissioner Kerns made a stab at identifying the specific land use regulations he thought interfered with his right to develop property, even if James L. Kerns and Fred Warner Jr. didn’t. The ordinance, at Section 2 (7) asks for “A statement and documentation indicating the alleged reduction amount in the real property fair market value showing the difference in the real property fair market value before and then after the challenged regulation was enacted.” Few, if any applicants bothered to comply with the ordinance, and no waiver by the County was stated, so I guess we are to only selectively enforce County ordinances. When I pointed this out, I was told I could go to court, but that they were in any event going to make waivers of the requirements explicit in future reports on the claims.

My unreported message was that Measure 37 was not intended to provide huge windfalls for unsubstantiated claims seeking unlimited individual exemptions for vague uses. Most demands had not shown an actual reduction in value due to any specific regulation applied to any specific use, and given the cumulative impacts of the many M-37 claims, the citizens of this county deserve more than the anything goes free-for-all that is now occurring. They deserve a careful, thoughtful and fair administration and enforcement of County ordinances and state laws that apply to Measure 37. I spent many hours researching a contentious subject and participating in our alleged democracy. As far as the papers were concerned, the hearing didn’t even happen. (You can find the preface to my comments near the end of today’s longish blog)

Another event that didn’t happen was the Baker City Council Goal Setting Session on February 3rd, 2007. The papers didn’t report on the goals set by the new City Council. They apparently weren’t important. I read the minutes, such as they are (it wasn’t recorded to my knowledge), and went to the next Council meeting to comment because I was concerned that some of the Councilors were gearing up for a growth binge. (I hope I’m wrong about that, but the signs are that 4 or 5 of the Councilors favor fairly dramatic growth. I’m afraid that descriptions like “Vibrant” and “Bustling” are code words for long lines, congestion, blocked views, dirty air, high taxes and home prices, as well as sounds of “ka-ching” at our local merchants and realtors cash registers.) OK, so I wrote up two pages of comments and made another stab at “Citizen Participation.” Not only did the papers not report on my comments about growth, the Council didn’t even include them in the internet packet of the proceedings so that others could read them if they wished. I don’t know if that is because Mayor Petry is a realty broker/contractor whose firm advertises in the Herald, or not.

The most recent example of the Herald’s willingness to support good old American participatory democracy was there not finding room to print a letter I sent them this week opposing the burn barrel ban. I hadn’t written them a letter sind the 1st of February, or there abouts. You can find it at the end of this rant.

This sort of treatment is not just reserved for me. I know of others treated similarly, and the unifying thread seems to have three strands: 1. Don’t offend our advertisers. 2. Don’t speak out too strongly or effectively against growth and its consequences. 3. The Herald knows a whole lot more about what’s important than you or I do, after all, they are a solid and essential pillar of our “democracy.” What would we do without them???

ON OTHER MATTERS HERALD

PROCREATIONAL WISDOM FROM THE HERALD?
On Tuesday, April 10th, the Herald editorial board opined that “killing feral cats fails to address the underlying problem: procreation.” Huh??? Does the Herald know something we don’t? Do dead cats actually reanimate themselves to participate in the mating game? I know the sex drive is strong, but this sounds like another version of the second coming (no pun intended).

Morris Home on Clear Creek Near Bates

ON THE MALHEUR NATIONAL FOREST’S INCREDIBLY FORGIVING TREATMENT OF THE PERMIT VIOLATIONS NEAR BATES
The recent article and editorial on “Saving a bit of Bates" was so one-sided and ill-considered that I will devote a whole future blog for it and related recreational residence issues. The Forest Service has been doing the two older women a considerable favor for years and the Herald makes it look like a case of elder abuse. Anything to make it look like you’re wearing a white hat—even if you have to turn the truth on its head.

Spring Flowers on Earth Day

EARTH DAY
Last Sunday was Earth Day and hundreds of thousands of people celebrated that fact. In Los Angeles, thousands came out to celebrate and paint the children’s faces. In San Diego, it was reported that more people than live in all of Baker City visited the festivities at Balboa Park during the day, where among other things, young students sold barn owl nest boxes to earth-friendly passers by. In Baker City, the Herald didn’t even report on it. They reported on some pseudo enviro group called the Water and Stream Health committee trying to find away to steal yet more water from Mother Nature. Just a few days before, the Herald was promoting Miner’s Jubillee, while ignoring the whole destructive legacy of mining in Baker County. Why don’t we celebrate Earth Day? Surely if the only local requirement is for our merchants to make a buck, they could make as much selling souvenirs of Salmon, Sage Grouse, and other imperiled species as they do phony gold nuggets and whiskey during the Jubilee.

COMMENTS NEVER TO SEE THE LIGHT OF DAY

The following are Citizen's Participation comments not reported on or printed by either the Herald or the Record-Courier:

August 15, 2006

Mayor Chuck Hofmann
Councilors Bass, Peterson, Daugherty, Haynes, Petry & Ellingson
City of Baker City
PO Box 650
1655 First Street
Baker City, OR 97814


Dear Mayor & Councilors,

I appreciate being able to voice my concerns and opinions about the proposed golf course development and about growth in Baker City.

As you know, in 1995 the citizens of Baker City overwhelmingly voted down a $600,000 tax levy to expand the golf course, but money was borrowed from the cemetery trust fund to expand it anyway. I am under the strong impression that the vast majority of Baker City residents do not use, and many cannot afford to use, the golf course facilities. Considering that most Baker City taxpayers did not want to pay for the expansion, and benefit little, if at all, from the golf course, they have surely invested enough in the golfing pleasures of those who are fortunate enough to have the money to pay the green fees. The users of the golf course should be responsible for the remaining debt.

If the city decides to enter into a scheme to sell the remaining 15 acres to developers, and I’m not convinced they should, the money from the sale should repay the cemetery trust fund first, with the remainder going into a fund to benefit all the citizens of Baker City.

If the property is developed, the property should include low and moderate-income housing units in proportion to the percentage of low and moderate-income people in Baker City, so as to reflect our economic and social diversity. We don’t need elite enclaves in Baker City, especially if the enclave’s golfing playground is financed in part by all Baker City citizens.

The cost burden created by any necessary extension of water and sewer lines, and other infrastructure to this and other possible developments, along with potential costs associated with any needed increases in water storage and sewer capacity, are the kinds of things the City apparently hopes to discuss with current residents while creating what has been termed “Comprehensive Development Policy Reform.” As noted in the discussion paper, LID non-remonstrance reform is needed, hopefully to ensure that the sort of disastrous financial pain that was inflicted on the innocent bystander, current residents adjacent to the recent Elm Street LID, is not repeated in other areas of our community.

Before we ask ourselves how we want to grow, perhaps we should ask ourselves whether we want to grow. Along with the Elm Street LID fiasco, people are beginning to notice the other negative impacts of growth, as experienced with the congestion on east Campbell Street and as will be soon be experienced by residents on “D” Street. Many of us live here because we value the quality of life provided by our small size, wide open spaces and affordable living arrangements—we don’t want to become another Bend and don’t need upscale sidewalks or curbs on every street. Most importantly, we don’t want to pay for the destruction of the very qualities of life that compel us to call Baker City our “home.” If there is such a thing as doing growth “right,” I would offer that it is growth that is well planned & controlled, recognizes population limits and local carrying capacity, pays its own way, and serves the interests of all current citizens—not just the interests of the “Growth Machine,” i.e. land speculators, developers, contractors, real estate agents, and others who directly or indirectly profit from growth. While some of you may be a part of the “Growth Machine,” you must realize that it is required for you set aside your own interests in favor of the interests of all the citizens of Baker City. Those interests include:
• improved quality of life
• better public services
• enhanced environmental quality
• protection of agricultural and resource lands
• preservation of the historic heritage, and
• economic security for current residents, including no gentrification or displacement of low income residents.
(taken in part from “Better Not Bigger;” by Eben Fodor)

If growth won’t provide these things then it should not be allowed to occur.

As always, “who benefits?” and “who pays?” are important questions. What happened to residents on “F” and Elm Streets wasn’t fair or equitable. Raising the rates for water and sewer, as has happened recently, in order squirrel away money for anticipated development driven sewer and water infrastructure upgrades, would not be a fair and equitable solution to the question of who should pay. It would be an unfair tax on current residents to benefit the “Growth Machine” and future residents. If we have reached the limits of our watershed to provide water, and the limits of our infrastructure to carry water and effluent, then perhaps we should learn to live within those limits. The burden should be on the “Growth Machine” and city officials to show why we would possibly need more development and the costly new infrastructure needed by it when the current systems serve our needs and we are content with what we have. Most of us understand that current residents invariably subsidize growth and that government too often forces us to do so when it is not in our best interests.

Perhaps the council and Baker City residents already know all there is to know about growth, but if not, there is a good, inexpensive book that the council and residents can use to understand the costs, impacts and myths associated with it. The book is “Better Not Bigger” by Eben Fodor. It can help people control growth as opposed to being controlled by it, and can help create a sustainable and very livable community. Beyond the obvious decline in quality of life often caused by growth, it explains why growth is financially costly to current residents, it explains that most jobs go to outsiders, not current residents, and it explains why growth tends to raise local taxes.

Someone once said that there are two stages of the public policy process: too early to tell, and too late to do anything about it. I hope that will not be the case in the future, and that you and the next elected city council will be open, accessible, accountable, responsive, frank, and fair with Baker City residents as you move forward with the discussion about Comprehensive Development Policy Reform.

Thank you for considering my comments.

Sincerely,

Christopher Christie
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Preface to January 17th comments to County Commissioners

Baker County Board of Commissioners
1995 Third Street
Baker City, OR 97814

Re: Measure 37 Claim M37-06-028

Dear Baker County Commissioners:

Please accept these comments on Measure 37 Demand/Claim # M37-06-028, Fred Warner Jr.

Like many residents of Baker City and County, I live here because of the open and un-crowded conditions, the clean air and water, and the natural as well as agricultural landscapes. I enjoy the open and undeveloped agricultural areas of the County while conducting 1 to 3 raptor surveys during the fall, winter and spring months, during the spring and fall migratory bird surveys, and during the two Christmas bird counts, as well as at other times. It is encouraging to see farmland being used for one of its best uses of providing people with food and fiber, rather than for homes and other non-farm development. I also enjoy the area viewing and photographing other wildlife, wild flowers, and open landscapes. I know that unchecked development can destroy all of these important values and our quality of life in a relatively short time, as it has in so many areas in the West and elsewhere. A few decades or less is all it takes, so we have been fortunate to have sensible land use ordinances protecting our County and State since the mid-70’s.

Unchecked development in the County is already impacting the quality of life for county and city residents, and is having particularly serious impacts on Baker City in the form of congestion and the need for traffic control improvements. As you know, county development tends to destroy our quality of life in many ways. Due to the passage of Measure 37, the County had received 139 demands for compensation, covering thousands of acres, as of the end of 2006. If the County waives the applicable land use regulations for all of these demands, the increasing housing and population growth with attendant urban sprawl will:
• reduce farm, range, and timberland and other open space
• negatively impact agricultural and rural lifestyles
• deplete and potentially contaminate ground water
• increase air pollution which will result in more regulation of wood stove and automobile emissions
• damage or eliminate our views of Baker County’s magnificent landscapes
• increase traffic congestion
• increase crowding and competition for local resources like fish, game, firewood and solitude.
• increase taxes to pay for expanding county services as well as infrastructure like schools and roads.
• increasingly fragment remaining wildlife habitat and winter range, thus endangering the presence and survival of the local animal species we all enjoy
• impact sensitive environmental areas
• increase local fossil fuel use

These are just some of the reasons that land use regulations have been put in place during the last three decades or so.

With the passage of Measure 37, all of these things that many value, except for an individual’s right to make a buck off land speculation, are being seriously challenged. There is some question whether the people that voted for the measure intended to put in place a measure, that if poorly implemented, could destroy their quality of life. That is why it is important for those implementing the measure to proceed cautiously and seriouslywithin the law, and to ensure they follow both Oregon state law and Baker County ordinances when doing so. [next several pages removed]
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Comments to Baker City Council
February 13th, 2007

Christopher Christie
1985 15th Street
Baker City, OR 97814
541-523-2376
refugee2000@qwest.net

Dear Baker City Councilors (Bass, Bryan, Calder, Dorrah, Duman, Petry, & Schumacher)

My Name is Christopher Christie. I live at 1985 15th Street.

At the Baker City Council Goal Setting Session on February 3rd, there was a fair amount of talk about growth. Only one of you, Mayor Petry, a building contractor and realtor, stated that they ran for office “To make sure Baker City grows,” but every one of you, and many of the City staff, mentioned growth as an important issue or something to expect in our future. Some thought we should have quite a bit of it and others talked of planning and moderation. The vision spoke to vibrancy, solid infrastructure, scheduled air passenger service, successful commercial districts, and new schools.

The problem though is that the future and the effects of growth can be surprising when all the factors affecting them are not taken into consideration or are simply ignored. People usually sell growth with a pitch that promises jobs and prosperity for all; a steak on every grill, so to speak; a cure-all for the ills of struggling communities. Your kids will get local jobs, even if you don’t have any kids or even if they don’t live here any more. But the reality can be quite different.

For starters, there didn’t seem to be a recognition that both nationally and globally, we are entering the era of decline in per capita fossil fuel energy supplies. Peak oil is happening now. In not too many years, tourist travel will become increasingly prohibitive financially, especially air travel. Our economy and our way of life will be affected, both here and elsewhere. The dysfunctional nature of the “infinite growth is good” pyramid scheme will become apparent to all as we get in touch with the finite nature of the resources we have squandered. We need to consider energy constraints and how they are going to dramatically affect our future.

And if growth does occur over the next decade or so, what will it really bring? The promise is that growth will provide jobs for your children and others in the community. Maybe, maybe not. In one study of 50 American cities, it was found that there was no statistical correlation between the growth rate and the unemployment rate—you just become a bigger, more crowded city with a similar unemployment rate. New job opportunities are not guaranteed to locals, and as you well know, many local jobs go to newcomers who are also looking for opportunities. Studies have shown that 30 to 50% of new jobs go to immigrants (Fodor, Better Not Bigger). The basic formula over a period of time is that if you double the size of your community, you will ultimately double the number of people who are unemployed. Sure it will help many realtors, contractors and small business owners, like those of you on the City Council, but it shouldn’t be sold as a promise to make jobs for locals or reduce the unemployment rate.

And then there is the issue of who benefits and who pays. There is, of course, a cost for doubling or tripling the population in order to double or triple the number of unemployed, and these costs are often hidden. Economic development and new housing, with the resultant increase in population, increases the demand for expensive infrastructure and public services. This all costs the taxpayer money and causes other kinds of grief in the form of crowding, congestion, and environmental degradation. Public subsidies are often involved, as for example the exemption from property taxes that Baker City offers certain employers. Other subsidies involve increased taxes for growth induced increases in infrastructure such as schools, sewer system and storm drain costs, water supplies and delivery, transportation, police and fire protection, garbage disposal, library service, parks and recreation, government services, etc., etc. Obviously, stable cities don’t have a need for expanded facilities, growing cities do. Growth could increase per capita charges and property taxes by hundreds of dollars annually for Baker City citizens.

Growth can also destroy, or seriously degrade, the overall quality of life for Baker City residents. The deterioration will be experienced in increased congestion, as can be seen on Campbell Street, to reduced air quality and increased regulation of wood stove heating, to increased competition for local resources like firewood and solitude, as well as in the loss of any real sense of community.

Because growth tends to be destructive of the quality of life for current residents, and is most often subsidized by them, it should be approached cautiously. If the City Council is determined to make Baker City grow, then as some of you have indicated, it should be well planned. In addition, the costs should be allocated fairly and growth should pay its own way. A new and updated community vision needs to be developed with broad citizen participation, not just with the input of City staff and the Chamber of Commerce. Community standards need to be improved to protect Baker City and our quality of life from the undesirable impacts associated with growth.

Planning should include the development of a community impact statement created by people and planners who are not conflicted by their involvement in the growth industry. It should include scenarios for what can be expected at different population sizes, and should include a no growth scenario. The public should be fully informed of the current infrastructure capacity, including water supplies, sewer system capacity, transportation grid capacity, etc. The public needs to be informed about how much of their current water and sewer charges, if any, are being used to plan and pay for increased capacity to provide for future development. We need to know how many people can be supported by current capacity and how close we are to that capacity.

To determine a fair allocation of costs between current residents and future development, a cost- benefit analysis should be done. If new facilities are needed to make development possible, then those truly benefiting from that growth should pay for it in accordance with the amount of benefit. Reductions in taxes for current residents whose lives will be negatively impacted by growth should be considered. To protect current residents and ensure that they do not have to pay for the cost of development that benefits others, system development charges and impact fees should be created for all capital improvement categories for which local jurisdictions may collect such charges and fees, as listed in ORS 223.299 (1)a. The City Council should consider a resolution asking that ORS 223.299(1) be amended to add police, fire, library, and school facilities to the list of capital improvements for which local jurisdictions may collect impact fees and system development charges.

Lastly, it is worth repeating the “Catch 22 of Growth” from Eben Fodor’s book, Better, Not Bigger. It goes like this: “The better you make your community, the more people will want to live there, until [ultimately] it is no better [and perhaps worse] than any other community.” I know that you do not want to destroy our quality of life or make current residents pay for growth that does not benefit them. I hope you will consider these suggestions to ensure that neither of these things will happen.

Thank you for listening.

Sincerely,

Christopher Christie

Many of the ideas in this letter, and much more, can be found in Eben Fodor’s Book, Better, Not Bigger.
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April 23rd Open Letter to the City Council:

Dear Councilors,

I have read that a resident has asked that the City consider banning burn barrels, and that at the April 24 meeting, you will be expanding the discussion to open burning as well. Apparently the resident is upset that some burn some trash that is currently illegal to burn. I would request that the City not write a new law to ban a current practice, but rather enforce laws that are already in effect to remedy the problem. If people would report illegal, toxic, or otherwise offensive burning, and if the city were to send an officer out occasionally to sniff for violators, then enforcement of current law would help to curtail illegal burning. Additionally, burn barrels would appear to be safer than open burning, which is also legal and not affected by a barrel ban. I would venture a guess that all of the open and barrel burning fires in Baker City combined during a typical year would not amount to as much smoke and CO2 as is created by a single controlled burn in the forest. Allowing people to burn could also increase the longevity of the local landfill.

Composting is best, but lets not ban another current practice ala "Dogs in the park." We just need to enforce laws already on the books. Enforcement will likely jog people's memories as to what is, and what is not, legal to burn.

Sincerely,

Christopher Christie