Wednesday, September 20, 2006

9.20.6 - California


back next week!
-Tom

OPERATION
(Tony Hoagland)

In autumn, Operation Enduring Freedom commenced,
which some party-poopers wanted to nickname
Operation Infinite Self-Indulgence.
We tied flags to the antennae of our cars
that snapped like fire when we drove.

In winter there was Operation Gentle Sledgehammer,
which seemed linguistically a little underdigested,
but we lined up squads of second-graders
to stand at attention while we beat a drum.

Let me make it clear that I was
as doubtful as anyone about Operation Racial Provocation
but I loved Operation Religious Suspicion,

which led to Operation Eye For An Eye,
which was succeeded by Operation Helping Hand;
—Let me tell you that was a scary-looking hand!
But that was also a very successful Operation.

Someday you will be required to perform a terrible deed
in order to save yourself,
but save yourself for what?

That would be a question for Operation Self-Examination to answer,
which is a very painful operation
performed without anesthesia
in a naked room full of shadows and light.

Perhaps I might suggest, instead,
Operation Self-Medication, or Operation Endless Mindless Distraction?
In the meantime Operation Collateral Amnesia
is proceeding very smoothly

When it is over we want call it Operation One Big Happy Family—
Is that okay with you?

Wednesday, September 06, 2006

9.5.6 - Longview to Astoria



Well...if ya think Mayor Peterson has problems, consider the plight of Astoria mayor, Willis Van Dusen who was arrested on a drunken driving charge after his motorcyle collided with a pickup on Monday. (Labor Day)

Van Dusen, 53, Astoria's mayor for 16 years, has filed to run for a fifth four-year term in November. This is the third time he has been charged with drunken driving.

Police said Van Dusen was driving a Harley Davidson motorcycle Monday night when he struck the passenger side of a pickup that pulled into an intersection.

Van Dusen was taken to Columbia Memorial Hospital, where he was treated for a head injury and released.

Witnesses at the scene and Trooper Gary Martin, who interviewed Van Dusen at the hospital, said Van Dusen was visibly intoxicated, state police Sgt. Andrew Merila said.

Van Dusen refused to give a blood sample and was cited and released at the hospital for driving under the influence of intoxicants. Wilson was cited for failing to obey a traffic device, driving uninsured and not having a driver's license. Both vehicles were towed from the scene and impounded.

The mayor did not immediately return a phone call by The Associated Press.

Van Dusen was charged with drunken driving in 1989, when his car was seen swerving on its way into Pendleton on Interstate 84, The Daily Astorian reported. The case was dismissed and he was sent to a diversion program on May 23, 1990. He completed diversion from that arrest in 1991.

On May 19, 1994, Astoria police arrested Van Dusen for DUII after spotting his car swerving from side to side. He pleaded guilty June 8, 1994, and was sentenced to a mandatory one-year license suspension, a fine and 80 hours of community service in lieu of a two-day jail sentence.

Clatsop County District Attorney Josh Marquis said he has yet to review Van Dusen's case, and he will probably send it to another county for prosecution.

Maybe Van Dusen needs to learn a thing or two from Mayor Peterson (and Monty Python) on "how not to be seen".

he-he,
-Tom

Wednesday, August 30, 2006

8.27.6 - Longview to Astoria


Oregon Senator Ron Wyden showed up to a couple of town hall meetings last Thursday; the first at the Columbia River Maritime Museum in Astoria.

The audience had a lot to say about liquefied natural gas projects proposed for the lower Columbia River. Senator Wyden listened as citizens talked about everything from health care to fisheries management. But things really heated up, both for and against, when the discussion turned to LNG.

"If you look at the potential...not even just terrorist risk...we become this huge bullseye when this happens...We need projects like this. Sixty families, 65 families will have family wage jobs with benefits."

Wyden said he'd do all he could to address people's concerns about LNG, but didn't want to mislead anyone. He said a Senate vote had already given the federal government ultimate jurisdiction over the siting process. Wyden voted against the measure, in favor of local control. But he was blunt about the outcome.

Ron Wyden: "And that's really what the vote in the Senate meant -- is that FERC is basically given, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, the power to just sort of walk all over local communities. It was a big mistake and I think Congress is going to regret it."

Wyden pledged to help citizens get more information on the proposals currently in the works. He said he'd partner with Betsy Johnson to seek common ground and evaluate the proposed terminals to see which one might be the most viable.

So far a total of four energy companies have proposed LNG ship terminals on the lower 35 miles of the Columbia River.

In the end, Wyden wouldn't go on the record for or against LNG, which isn't all that surprising these days.

A few hours later in St Helens, Wyden showed up for another Town Hall meeting. Lots of topics: Funding for Senior Centers, NW Power rates, the Cost of the Iraq War, and even Illegal immigration. But again, no one got any definitive answers, (at least they were given the opportunity to state their concerns to the Senator.)

Mayor Peterson was seen (!!!) at this meeting with Senator Ron Wyden, along with the mayor of Columbia City, several people from the Port Commission, Columbia River PUD, a County State Rep and Senator, as well as Two Columbia County Commissioners.

Curious to read y'all's take on Wyden's St Helens visit in Thursday's latest Update edition.

-Tom

Friday, August 11, 2006

8.10.6 - Longview to St Helens


photo Phil Gilston

The Scuttlebutt:
Nice to stroll through St Helens the other day...talk to some of y'all.
Lemme tell ya...Y'all seemed pissed.
Couple items:
  • City Attorney Richard Appichello is on administrative leave. People were wondering why. Publically, no one downtown seems to want to go on record about it.
  • Greg Jenks from the Port of St. Helens is also on Administrative leave. Hmmm...does one have anything to do with the other? One fella thought it didn't.
  • Everyone on the Fireworks Committee resigned (including Jimmie & Diane Dillard and Donna Smith). One person theorized that they were not being allowed to make any meaningful decisions. The rumor is that they are in search of a new 501c-3 non-profit umbrella to get out from under the city boys.
What's goin' on here?
Ok, in terms of fireworks--a good metaphor, I think--here are some folks donating time in a committee (some of them, donating more than 20 years of their own time organizing the St. Helens 4th of July) working throughout the year collecting money and donations, organizing the event, and suddenly being told that they don't have any authority. All because they are using the Columbia Foundation's 501c-3?
So...what does the city have to do with The Columbia Foundation?
And why, all-of-a-sudden, have things changed?

WTF? people seem to be askin' me. WTF? indeed. Nice to be back. I'm keepin' my eyes open.
-Tom

Wednesday, August 02, 2006

8.2.6 - Home


New Canon HD Camcorder unveiled in Tokyo this week

It sure is nice to be back in the NW. I have a few more days off at home with Lorraine which is just as good as vacation for me. And, I see the front office boys in Longview already have some runs scheduled for me this week through St Helens, so I'll be seein' y'all soon.
In the meantime, I've been perusing the internets and found this new Hi-Def DVD Camcorder.
Oh please, PLEASE Santa! Bring me one for Christmas! ;)
-Tom

TOKYO (Reuters) - Canon Inc. unveiled a digital video camera for home users on Wednesday that can record high-definition movies.


Canon, the world's largest maker of digital cameras, said the HV10, its first high-definition video model for home use, will be available globally from September. It will be priced at around 150,000 yen ($1,310) in Japan.

"The market for high-definition camcorders isn't saturated yet, so the two companies can have a healthy competition," said John Yang, an analyst from Standard & Poors.

"They still have the challenge to spur demand for such high-end products in the mass market."

Canon said it expects to win a 20 percent share of the Japanese market for home-use digital video cameras this autumn, helped by sales of new models. It estimates the market for high-definition models will jump to 250,000 units in 2006 from 70,000 last year.

The Canon video camera launched on Wednesday is the first to be fitted with its CMOS imaging sensor, a technology adopted from its best-selling digital single-lens reflex cameras.

Tuesday, July 11, 2006

7.11.6 - Boston to Vermont (vacation)


Lorraine and I are off in Boston having a great time. Wish you were here.
Ran across this item in the Boston Globe. Link here.
"Sanity prevails in Vermont," said attorney David Williams.
Amen.
I hope sanity is prevailing in that nice li'l town of yours.

See ya next week,
-Tom

Vermont Judge Rejects U.S. Supreme Court Search Ruling
AP - July 11, 2006

GUILDHALL, Vt. --A Vermont District Court judge has rejected a recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling on the power of police to search a private home, concluding that the state offers greater protections in such cases.

Judge Robert Bent said that under the state Constitution police must knock and announce themselves before conducting a search, even if they have a warrant, or face the prospect that any evidence they find could be thrown out.

The Supreme Court said June 15 that evidence obtained without first knocking could be used at trial, but Bent said that would not apply in Vermont.

"Evidence obtained in violation of the Vermont Constitution, or as the result of a violation, cannot be admitted at trial as a matter of state law," Bent wrote, citing an earlier state case as precedent. "Introduction of such evidence at trial eviscerates our most sacred rights, impinges on individual privacy, perverts our judicial process, distorts any notion of fairness and encourages official misconduct."

A defense lawyer in the Vermont case said Bent's ruling was an important statement. "Sanity prevails in Vermont," said attorney David Williams.
Bent agreed with the dissenting opinion in the federal case, which said allowing otherwise illegally obtained evidence to be used could lead law enforcement officers to ignore the law.

"The exclusionary remedy should remain in full force and effect," Bent wrote, "at least in our small corner of the nation."

Unless the attorney general's office appeals Bent's ruling to the Vermont Supreme Court, it applies only to the drug case he was hearing and would not be binding on other judges, legal experts said. But other judges are likely to take it into consideration if they have similar issues, said Cheryl Hannah, a Vermont Law School professor.

It was unclear whether the state would appeal to the high court. The prosecutor on the case was on vacation and unavailable for comment.

Williams challenged evidence the Vermont State Police Drug Task Force obtained against Ellen Sheltra last fall during a raid on her Island Pond home. She was charged with marijuana possession.

The officers were gathering in front of the home Oct. 12 when the door suddenly opened, an officer testified. The agents shouted "state police with a search warrant" and stormed inside, Bent wrote in his ruling.

The judge concluded the officer's testimony wasn't credible, noting that the three adults and two children in the house said they did not open the door.

Police seized 88 grams of marijuana and four guns.
------
Information from: The Burlington Free Press, http://www.burlingtonfreepress.com
© Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, July 04, 2006

7.4.6 - Home


Photo - Joao Silva for The New York Times


I write this on Tuesday, July 4th 2006.
Happy "we are throwing out the old corrupt, irrelevant government and starting a new one" Day. One can only hope that we Americans today, can be as bold and intelligent as some of our forefathers were.

Today in Iraq, General George Casey said in an "Independence Day" speech to the troops that there were similarities between the colonists' struggle in 1776 and Iraq's struggles this year.

``It took the commitment of our Founding Fathers and the Continental Army to secure America's position in the free world, much as the Iraqi leaders and Iraqi Army are working to secure a free Iraq," Casey said. ``It also took five years of hard fighting to do it. There is no doubt in my mind that you, the current generation of Americans, have the courage and perseverance to lead our nation to victory in its most complex struggle yet, the war on terror," Casey went on. ``I am confident that we and our Iraqi colleagues will be successful in bringing security and stability here to Iraq."

Huh? Yeah, except back then, WE were the insurgents and the English were the invading, occupying army. Get it?

As I see it, when things don’t add up in Iraq, (like everything and everywhere else these days) I figure it is safe to assume that politics are involved.

Even as the insurgency worsens every day, Gen. Casey, the commander of U.S. forces in Iraq, astonishingly claims that security in Iraq has improved and that substantial U.S. troop withdrawals are possible by as early as September. (Casey's plan presented to Bush last week entailed bringing home about 7,000 US troops by September and another 20,000 or more by the end of 2007.)

So what's the story here? Ya think it just MIGHT be the congressional elections in 2006? This, by my standards, is unconscionable.

Although Bush administration officials have implied that demands by Democrats for a U.S. troop withdrawal timetable are “unpatriotic” and “aid the enemy,” when their own electoral politics is involved, the administration is all too willing to predict troop reductions during a specified time period. They certainly understand how the Democrats are making significant political gains from the growing unpopularity here at home of the continued occupation of Iraq. By showing some incremental and token progress toward getting out of the quagmire, the administration hopes to contain the damage Democrats could do from now until November. With popular support for the Iraqi occupation in the United States fading, the administration is running out of time.

Back to Gen. Casey for a second: the reason that U.S. forces have not been able to defeat the insurgent rebels is the continuing and astounding ignorance of counterinsurgency warfare tactics by the U.S. Army—an organization that, even after the debacle in Vietnam, has concentrated on fighting conventional wars against smaller nation/states. This ignorance was on display when Gen. Casey opined a few months back, “insurgencies need progress to survive, and this insurgency is not progressing.”

In fact, as George Washington, the North Vietnamese, and the anti-Soviet Mujahedin fighters in Afghanistan demonstrated, insurgents need only to keep an army in the field and “not lose” until the big power gets exhausted and goes home.

And given all the talk about withdrawal from both the Bush administration and Democrats, if the insurgents watch any kind of international news, they know that they are winning. By hinting at withdrawing troops, the administration is also trying to buy more time with the American public in order to negotiate with the Iraqi rebels. The insurgents are better off without the U.S. military in Iraq, however, so they have no incentive to throw down their arms and join the political process.

The Bush administration needs to give up on the fantasy of a permanent military presence—even if reduced—in Iraq and completely and rapidly withdraw its forces from that country. Actually, Republican electoral fortunes will be better off in the short-term AND long-term if the administration realizes that this war cannot be won—either by U.S. forces or the Iraqi security services—and cuts its losses.

George Washington warned us in his farewell address:

...avoid the necessity of those overgrown military establishments, which, under any form of government, are inauspicious to liberty, and which are to be regarded as particularly hostile to Republican Liberty.”

Happy "we’re throwing out the old corrupt, irrelevant government and starting a new one" Day everyone.

-Tom

Wednesday, June 28, 2006

6.27.6 - Longview to St Helens



Happy Summer everyone. With the first string of a coupla hot days in our rear-view mirror, Lorraine reminded me that it was time for us to cast our eyes forward again to all things fun and summery. I love my wife for remindin' me about stuff like that. Actually, we already started: We spent a nice Saturday evening at Wayne's Hot Dog's new joint next to the Kayak store down on the river off Old Portland Rd. What a great venue Randy has put together, good food, news and sports on the TVs, some fantastic live music at night and nice people havin a great time together. Which got me to thinkin'...

I was struck last week by the letter to the Update written by "two cents", who in turn made some sensible points about the St Helens Cafe closing - mostly that change will always happen, largely driven by business based shifts of economic growth for the betterment of community, and though it can change the familiarity of our surroundings, it shouldn't be feared. It's hard to argue with this really, though I would submit this one point: What do we, as individuals, value in community as a community? Do we really want better, more "hip" places to buy stuff? A trendy, bustling Olde Towne? More Walmarts? More profit oriented business opportunities for each of us? More isolation? Do the people of St Helens really prefer consumerism to community?

Actually, this is something that is discussed and written about a lot on this website: predatory check cashing businesses moving in, a City Council that doesn't appear to be in dialogue with its own citizens to run the city, a city planner that works at making it hard for new businesses to come into town, a sign ordinance that allows for Mayor billboards, but won't let small, longtime businesses fly innocuous flags.


The sad thing about the Cafe closing isn't losing the "product" sold, it's not like we'll be missing the greatest meal ever--I mean, the food is ok and all--in fact, it's the loss of yet another longtime community gathering spot. And in this particular case, one with a lot of history. A place where neighbors and friends have sat down over food, coffee & pie to discuss everything from the weather to the social pressures on their families and neighborhod for years and years. The argument is that by always justifying community growth around the almighty dollar, we steadily head into more and more isolation as individuals and as a community.


I stumbled across this piece from The Washington Post that goes on a bit more around this very subject and have pasted it below for your perusal.


Here's hoping we cross paths this summer and we can chat about this kinda stuff!

Take care of things in this town y'all got here.
-Tom

Social Isolation Growing in U.S., Study Says

The Number of People Who Say They Have No One to Confide In Has Risen

By Shankar Vedantam
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, June 23, 2006

Americans are far more socially isolated today than they were two decades ago, and a sharply growing number of people say they have no one in whom they can confide, according to a comprehensive new evaluation of the decline of social ties in the United States.

A quarter of Americans say they have no one with whom they can discuss personal troubles, more than double the number who were similarly isolated in 1985. Overall, the number of people Americans have in their closest circle of confidants has dropped from around three to about two.

The comprehensive new study paints a sobering picture of an increasingly fragmented America, where intimate social ties -- once seen as an integral part of daily life and associated with a host of psychological and civic benefits -- are shrinking or nonexistent. In bad times, far more people appear to suffer alone.

"That image of people on roofs after Katrina resonates with me, because those people did not know someone with a car," said Lynn Smith-Lovin, a Duke University sociologist who helped conduct the study. "There really is less of a safety net of close friends and confidants."

If close social relationships support people in the same way that beams hold up buildings, more and more Americans appear to be dependent on a single beam.

Compared with 1985, nearly 50 percent more people in 2004 reported that their spouse is the only person they can confide in. But if people face trouble in that relationship, or if a spouse falls sick, that means these people have no one to turn to for help, Smith-Lovin said.

"We know these close ties are what people depend on in bad times," she said. "We're not saying people are completely isolated. They may have 600 friends on Facebook.com [a popular networking Web site] and e-mail 25 people a day, but they are not discussing matters that are personally important."

The new research is based on a high-quality random survey of nearly 1,500 Americans. Telephone surveys miss people who are not home, but the General Social Survey, funded by the National Science Foundation, has a high response rate and conducts detailed face-to-face interviews, in which respondents are pressed to confirm they mean what they say.

Whereas nearly three-quarters of people in 1985 reported they had a friend in whom they could confide, only half in 2004 said they could count on such support. The number of people who said they counted a neighbor as a confidant dropped by more than half, from about 19 percent to about 8 percent.

The results, being published today in the American Sociological Review, took researchers by surprise because they had not expected to see such a steep decline in close social ties.

Smith-Lovin said increased professional responsibilities, including working two or more jobs to make ends meet, and long commutes leave many people too exhausted to seek social -- as well as family -- connections: "Maybe sitting around watching 'Desperate Housewives' . . . is what counts for family interaction."

Robert D. Putnam, a professor of public policy at Harvard and the author of "Bowling Alone," a book about increasing social isolation in the United States, said the new study supports what he has been saying for years to skeptical audiences in the academy.

"For most of the 20th century, Americans were becoming more connected with family and friends, and there was more giving of blood and money, and all of those trend lines turn sharply in the middle '60s and have gone in the other direction ever since," he said.

Americans go on 60 percent fewer picnics today and families eat dinner together 40 percent less often compared with 1965, he said. They are less likely to meet at clubs or go bowling in groups. Putnam has estimated that every 10-minute increase in commutes makes it 10 percent less likely that people will establish and maintain close social ties.

Television is a big part of the problem, he contends. Whereas 5 percent of U.S. households in 1950 owned television sets, 95 percent did a decade later.

But University of Toronto sociologist Barry Wellman questioned whether the study's focus on intimate ties means that social ties in general are fraying. He said people's overall ties are actually growing, compared with previous decades, thanks in part to the Internet. Wellman has calculated that the average person today has about 250 ties with friends and relatives.

Wellman praised the quality of the new study and said its results are surprising, but he said it does not address how core ties change in the context of other relationships.

"I don't see this as the end of the world but part of a larger puzzle," he said. "My guess is people only have so much energy, and right now they are switching around a number of networks. . . . We are getting a division of labor in relationships. Some people give emotional aid, some people give financial aid."

Putnam and Smith-Lovin said Americans may be well advised to consciously build more relationships. But they also said social institutions and social-policy makers need to pay more attention.

"The current structure of workplace regulations assumes everyone works from 9 to 5, five days a week," Putnam said. "If we gave people much more flexibility in their work life, they would use that time to spend more time with their aging mom or best friend."

Tuesday, June 13, 2006

6.13.6 - Longview to Seattle


There he was--a big shit-eatin' grin on his face--I hadn't seen hide-nor-hair of the Longview loadin' foreman for nearly 5 months. He looked ornerier than ever.
"Well goddammit, if it aint T********n," (he still calls me by my last name) "if you ain't a sight for sore eyes...hey, how'd them Minnesota winter roads treat ya?"
Quickly he laughed and turned around for a sign of approval from the latest flunky hangin' around, whom I hadn't had the "pleasure" of meetin' yet.
"Eh, not too bad actually," I responded sheepishly, sippin' my coffee. "And how's things been here?", I asked somewhat insincerely, instantly on guard for the impending crap headed my way.
"Ohhhh...things are interesting around here," he responded knowingly, again laughing and turning to his cohort.
Turned out, this guy was no flunky.
"T********n, want ya to meet Pete S********y, he's been workin' with The Feds down in Medford with the Mike's Gulch timber auction in the Rogue River/Siskiyou National Forest."
"Tom," I introduced myself, shaking his hand politely. I absolutely realized that I was knee-deep in impending crap.

I only knew this much: that despite protests by the governor of Oregon and environmentalists, the U.S. Forest Service has auctioned off the first timber from a roadless area of a national forest since the Bush administration eased rules on logging. I also knew that only a few hours after this auction, Gov. Kulongoski said he would seek a court order blocking the sale, (based on lawsuits that Oregon, Washington, California and Mexico have all filed) which challenge the legality of the Bush administration's overhaul of the long-time protection of 58.5 million acres of undeveloped areas in national forests known as "roadless areas."

Two interesting things about all of this corporate environmental posturing and bullshit:
  • it's based on new laws/rules that give leeway to individual States to help the US Forest Service decide whether to log such undeveloped areas...and from this recent development, even if said State(s) want nothing to do with it.
  • You have to build roads, in order to harvest in roadless areas and of course, this means more trees to cut and harvest.
"So, lemme ask ya Pete," I dared. "By opening this particular 'roadless area' to salvage logging now — while the State of Oregon is in the process of preparing a petition to the federal government on the proper management of those areas — doesn't this contradict the very assurances the Bush Administration have made that the governors' opinions on such issues will be respected...not that I think much of ANY of the bullshit assurances coming from this pack of lying criminals you work for."
The loading-dock foreman glared sternly at me. It felt like the good ol' days. The Fed-guy was "Bush-slick" though, and didn't seem to miss a beat; as most of these corporate Fed guys these days.
"No, actually we're really excited Tom," he began. "We're ready for our first major harvest in a roadless area anywhere in the country. Besides, it's going to help out your economy, it'll be great for you guys doing this type of work... the work you yourself are doing now."
Then he slyly added, "I'm not sure I understand what you're opposed to?"
"Aw c'mon Pete," I paused to spit. "You and I both know that this auction is the opening shot in the Bush administration's war on logging undeveloped areas of national forests. What pisses me off is that you guys don't understand that this land is far more valuable for clean water, and for fish and wildlife habitat..."
The foreman felt a need to cut me off, "We don't give a damn about clean water or fish or wilderness or roadless areas or any of that shit."
"Imagine my shock!" I said back to him sarcastically. Pete inately reacted as a polished political arbitrator.
"Look fellas, this sale is a long-overdue restoration of an area burned in the massive wildfire back in 2002. And by the way, this plan came after a federal judge in Wyoming overturned an old rule protecting roadless areas, and before Bush's new roadless rule was adopted."
"That's right T*********n!" the foreman quickly added.
"Whatever, you guys," I said and headed back to my truck to drive a new load up to Seattle.
"I don't know why you can't see this Tom," the Fed yelled towards my back. I barely made out the loading-dock foreman demeaning me with fourth-grade swear words as I fired up and drove away.

Pete was very slick. These Fed-guys will exploit, profit from and ruin anything. He's also another liar, (again, imagine my shock). The area was in fact burned by the 2002 Biscuit fire, (it was the nation's biggest that year at 500,000 acres). What he neglected to point out was that to date, some 60 million board feet have already been harvested from the fire area. Mike's Gulch and the Blackberry timber sale to be offered later this year, are the last remnants.

Here's the deal friends: Roadless areas are tracts generally larger than 5,000 acres that have long been considered too remote and too rugged to be logged economically. There has been a lot of corporate interest for many years to exploit the old-growth timber found in them. According to some news I read, one of the bidders, (John West, president of Silver Creek Timber Co. of Merlin) competing against other bidders, went more than $64,000 over the minimum bid, offering $300,052 for the right to log 9.4 million board feet of the South Kalmiopsis Roadless Area. The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has refused to block the sale to West, saying that environmentalists have not shown that this sale would cause irreparable harm. However, another challenge has been filed in U.S. District Court, and the Forest Service has agreed not to formally award the sale to West until after a judge hears arguments Wednesday on a motion for a temporary restraining order. This lawsuit contends that new scientific information should be considered showing the forest is regenerating on its own without logging and replanting. West said he will likely begin logging this summer, employing some 60 people. He said he had not found a buyer for the logs yet, but expected they would go to mills producing plywood veneer. Supposedly, no new roads are to be built for the harvest, and helicopters will be used to take the logs out.

Forest Supervisor Scott Conroy said he expects logging crews to be confronted by protesters, as they were last summer when West and others harvested timber burned by Biscuit in old-growth reserves. He added that the Forest Service has no plans to offer any green timber for sale within roadless areas on the Rogue River-Siskiyou. Any such sale would have to be approved by the chief of the Forest Service.

Wednesday, May 24, 2006

5.23.6 - Spokane to Seattle


I gotta tell y'all about this meeting I was at the other night, where a lot of us found out about the latest threat to our nation's old-growth. It wasn't the "evil-timber-corporations" greedily raping our forests for profit as a lot of you might suspect...uh-uh. It's actually meth addicts looking for fast cash to fund their habits. (sigh)

Apparently, in the Olympic National Forest, forestry authorities believe more than 44 trees--including a 400-year-old western red cedar 7 feet across--were destroyed by methamphetamine users, according to the Seattle Times.
Six men from Grays Harbor County, Washington, were charged with first-degree theft from forests. The men are accused of having stolen wood from numerous sites and cutting down at least 19 old-growth trees to pay for their drug habits, the Times reported.

Crimes and other incidents have doubled on national forests and grasslands in the past five years, but the number of Forest Service personnel and investigators available to deal with them has remained the same.

Lack of Federal funds.

Losses on public lands in Washington alone total more than $1 million each month, says Dennis Heryford, chief investigator for Washington's Department of Natural Resources.

So it is clear to me, (and a lot of others as well) that the 21st century meth-user is a different breed of drug addict. Aside from their psychotic, sociopathic behavior, there is still the on-going scourge of mobile meth labs damaging our rivers and streams with toxic byproducts from their meth-manufacturing waste.

Talk about terrorism.

Which begs me to wonder here: just where is the right-wing/Neo-Con outrage, and subsequent "war" on this actual terrorism that is happening right here on our own homefront every day?
It seems all our worry around the "manufactured" war over "people's freedoms" in the Middle-East, (yeah...right) has led to a complete cease-fire on the war on drugs here. This nonsense has in turn produced a real, tangible form of terrorism that is wreaking havoc on us everyday, and which now looks to be taking a significant toll on our forests and land.

And this says a lot, if you ask me. Because afterall, I see meth-addicts everyday - in every state I pass through. And I still haven't run across any Al Qaeda "terrorists" yet. Not a one.

-Tom

Wednesday, May 17, 2006

5.18.6 - Denver to Seattle

Wish I were there to watch this!! -Tom

On Sunday at 7am, the ol' eyesore cooling-tower at the Trojan "noo-cue-ler" (as Dubya says) power plant along the Columbia River is being brought down.

Demolition crews are busy getting ready for the big day having nearly completed the task of mining the tower with explosives. More than 3,300 holes have been drilled into the concrete, holes that have been, or will be, filled with a nitroglycerin-based dynamite.

Doug Loizeaux with Controlled Demolition, Inc., is the man in charge of the project.
"Cooling towers have been taken down all over the world," he says. "But this is the largest one that's ever been taken down and it's the only one that has a double reinforcing mat."

The walls were built extra thick so they could withstand an earthquake and it will take 2,500 pounds of explosives to bring them down. The dynamite is being placed in two horizontal layers, one at 100 feet up and the other at 250 feet up. They are connected by several vertical lines of explosives and when they go off, the tower will be knocked off balance by a few degrees.

The tower will come almost straight down, 150 feet off center, and far away from the radioactive spent fuel rods that are still stored at the site.
The entire demolition is expected to take just 14 seconds.
Interstate 5 and Highway 30 will be shut down immediately before and after the demolition.

If you want to see the demolition, the best way to do that is from your own livingroom because there will be no public viewing spot.
Most local-news stations will be airing this live Sunday starting at 6 a.m. The demolition is scheduled to take place at 7 a.m.

Tuesday, May 09, 2006

5.9.6 - Worthington, MN



More and more drivin' in the upper-midwest. Ugh! Don't want to even spend any time writin' about it, though I'll tell y'all: I miss the NW terribly.
Lorraine tells me that last Friday marked the reopening of the Johnston Ridge Observatory and if ya take a drive up there, you'll get a spectacular view (depending on the weather, I suppose) of a huge slab ("fin") of rock that's been growin' out of the Mount St. Helens' crater since last November, steadily pushin' rock and other debris out of its way.
"The fin-shaped mass is about 300 feet tall and growing 4 feet to 5 feet a day," said Dan Dzurisin, a geologist at the U.S. Geological Survey. The current growth of the new lava dome has been accompanied by low seismicity rates, low emissions of steam and volcanic gases and minor production of ash, the USGS adds.
"Given the way things are going now, there's no hint of any sort of catastrophic eruptions," USGS geologist Tom Pierson said. "At any time, however, things can change."
Scientists flew a helicopter into the crater late last week to adjust equipment and take photographs that will likely be used to determine just how much the new lava dome has grown the last several months.
You can sorta make out this new slab formation if you visit the volcanocam-link on sthelensupdate, where they also have some fascinating additional info:

Finding The Fin Before It Finally Falls With A Flourish
Since November 2005, a fin (or spire) of volcanic material has been growing out of the new dome. The current size is in excess of 300 feet. This is often a regular occurrence in volcanic dome-building. The fin will only grow so far before the inherent weakness in its structure, along with gravity, causes it to collapse. Since the current volcanic activity began in October, 2004, there have been several fins and spires that have grown and collapsed. However, this is the first one visible from the VolcanoCam.
This image was taken on May 5, 2006, at 10:45 am PDT. You may click on the image to view it full-size.


So again, you'll just have to take a nice spring drive up to the newly opened observatory. The Johnston Ridge Observatory, which closes down every winter, is the closest observatory to the 8,364-foot peak. It is named after David A. Johnston, a volcanologist killed in the 1980 eruption. It sits about five miles north of the mountain and offers the closest views of the volcano's horseshoe-shaped crater.
Enjoy the spring! Hope I see y'all soon when I get some runs into that pretty lil town y'all got.
-Tom

Wednesday, April 19, 2006

4.16.6 - Des Moines, Iowa


There is something strange going on in this story: (from WTAE Channel 4 Pittsburgh, PA)
-Tom (See ya next week!)

$500K Seized; Strange Situation Reported At Nuclear Plant

Two workers looking for tools set off a security situation at a Beaver County nuclear power plant that drew a response from police and federal investigators, WTAE Channel 4's Paul Van Osdol reported.State police said the men drove up to the Beaver Valley Power Station in a tractor-trailer on Tuesday night to pick up two large containers of tools for a contractor for whom they worked. Security guards stopped the men for a routine inspection, but they drove away, police said.The guards became suspicious and called police, who pulled the truck over about a mile from the plant.

A state trooper got a warrant to search the vehicle and found a duffel bag, which he said contained $504,230 in mostly small bills.The driver denied knowing anything about the money or who gave it to him, so the trooper seized it, police said. A spokesman for the FBI confirmed that the Joint Terrorism Task Force responded to the situation in conjunction with state police, but he said they don't think terrorism is involved. He would not give any other details.The men, who are from Houston, said they picked up the bag in Chicago and had no knowledge of its contents, according to police. Investigators think the cash may have a drug connection. A police dog picked up the scent of drugs in the sleeper cab of the truck where the bag was found, police said. Both men were detained and later released. No charges have been filed.


Tuesday, March 14, 2006

3.15.6 - Longview to Portland



Well, I heard that The Port of St. Helens approved a 99-year lease agreement on land needed for the Liquified Natural Gas terminal near Clatskanie.

Lorraine and I won't be moving there anytime soon.

The Longview paper reported that the lease is for 145 acres along the Columbia River at Port Westward owned by the Thompson family of Clackamas County. Port business development manager Greg Jenks said last week that he expects the family to approve the agreement soon. Delays in obtaining the lease had caused one major LNG investor to withdraw from the Port Westward LNG project in February.

So, this is pretty much the big green-light for the long-discussed LNG project, which still needs permits and financing, though Jenks said there have been "serious inquiries" from financial backers since the port approved the lease agreement Monday. This from the Longview paper:
"We now have control of the waterfront for LNG projects," Jenks said. "This is a good development."
The lease gives the Port six months to sub-lease the land to the LNG developer or the Thompsons take the property back.


For the first four years, the Thompson family will make $200,000 off the lease and $550,000 annually afterward, according to Jenks. Port Westward LNG already holds purchase options on more than 1,000 acres just west of the Port Westward property, which is owned by the Port of St. Helens. However, it also needed the Thompson property to accommodate the terminal.

I tell y’all who won't be making money: Columbia County schools or anything else for that matter, will not be getting anything out of this for years to come. The plant is in both an Enterprise Zone and an Urban Renewal District. Within an enterprise zone, taxes are deferred and then phased in over a 7 to 10 year period. Within Urban Renewal Distincts, all taxes collected will remain in the district for 20 years. This means that if taxes are collected, they can only be spent in the Urban renewal District for improvements within the district. So, your Schools do not get a penny out of this, nor does the county. This is worth considering when you understand that the Port of St. Helens stepped in to broker this lease deal after direct negotiations between the property owners and Port Westward CEO Spiro Vassilopoulos broke down.

The Port Westward LNG project could create hundreds of construction jobs and 55 permanent jobs once completed. The LNG terminal is one of three major industrial projects the Port is pushing at its land in the Port Westward, which already is home of Portland General Electric's Beaver power generating plant. PGE is building a $300 million natural gas power plant there that should be online by May 2007. The port also is hoping Cascade Grain builds a $126 million ethanol plant in the area.

Keep your eyes and ears out; there's a bunch of wheelin’ and dealin’ goin’ down here.
-Tom

Thursday, March 02, 2006

3.2.6 - Spokane to Libby, MT


Can't pretend I know much of what's happening in your sweet little town down by the river. Actually, it's hard to find out much of anything happening anywhere when you spend most of your days and nights in Montana. I had heard from a trucker or two about the sudden disappearance of the Wayne's Hot Dog truck along Hwy 30, which turned a few of us a bit nervous for a day or two. After some detective work, it turns out ol' Wayne's cashin' in the truck for a real nice big indoor-place next to the Kayak shop out Old Portland Road way. Yessir, now I'm lookin' forward to spending a few Spring afternoons out there on the bay. Hell, these days I'm just lookin' forward to a few spring afternoons ANYwhere!
I also heard about the ruckus some of the City Hall boys threw last night.
Apparently, our own Update correspondent Tammy tried to speak up at the "Public Meeting." She called for a "Point of Order" and Planning Admin-guy Skip Baker proceded as if she weren't there. She then informed the Baker fella that she was asking for a point of order according to Roberts Rules. Baker then told her if she didn't shut up, he would call the cops. Wow!
Then my girl Tammy said something else and Baker called the cops. Wow!
Seven local policemen arrived, but none of 'em had the (non)sense to arrest her. Atta girl!
Be sure an keep an eye on things goin' on in this town. Like sthelensupdate reporter Tammy does!

Tuesday, February 28, 2006

Tuesday, January 31, 2006

1.31.6 - Medora, North Dakota


I have to begin by apologizing for my lengthy absence. This new route-schedule of mine has me out on constant hauls between Washington and Minnesota, (17 of the past 21 days.) It has left me tired, cold, and missing Lorraine and the comforts of home terribly. The other day I was thinkin’ that I’d give damn-near anything just to be trading insults every day with the loading foreman in Longview.
The icy and snowy roads are slow-going and usually hazardous, and not only up north. Headin’ back to Seattle the other day, (I was damn near home) I got stranded aside I-90 for hours and hours because of an avalanche. I could have killed someone, I was so mad. Some days it seems I’m subsisting on nothing but crappy fast-food, caffeine and Ibuprofen. Last Monday, when I was at home for one day before headin’ right back out again, a neighbor was complaining to me about all the rain we’ve had here in the NW. I couldn’t help but think how nice that sounded: to spend days and days of rainy weeks at home, and only drivin’ from Longview to St Helens and back. The rain ain’t that bad y'all.
So it was just another day last Friday – I was stuck for a couple of hours at a North Dakota truck stop because of a Winter Storm Warning that had let us all know of impassible weather up the road ahead. I found myself sittin’ with a bunch of other truckers around a typical greasy diner-table, drinking bad coffee and complainin’.
It was a nonstop litany of all things wrong with life: the war in Iraq, not supportin’ our troops, diesel prices, the loss of "morals" here in this country, Illegal Mexicans taking our jobs, (I’m sad to write that; however it was discussed at length between this real hateful guy from Nebraska and a young kid outta Cleveland - I just clenched my teeth and kept silent) methamphetamine, child molesters, crazy people roaming the streets, our shrinking paychecks, Democrats, Republicans…I’m sure you get the picture. It wasn’t pretty. I was slowly gettin’ a massive headache.

We finally got around to the topic of the rich getting’ richer while the rest of us slowly kill ourselves just tryin’ to keep up.
“We really have only one political party in America today,” the kid from Ohio said, “the property-party, and the highest bidders are the ones who get their way all-a-the time.”
“You’re right kid,” I said, finally going on-record at our table. “And it’s not really surprising because our government likes to demand from us what it can’t provide itself.”
“And just what the hell are they demanding and what can’t they provide?” the Nebraskan asked me sarcastically.
“Well basically: meaning, motivation, and hope,” I replied. “And because they can’t provide this, ya got big-business, greed and the almighty dollar taking over everything.”
“Meaning...Hope?”, he shouted back. “Oh Gawd…You’re fulla crap man.”
I was ready to fire back some words that would have been only meant to humiliate and prey upon the asshole’s 8th grade education but fortunately, Sam from Minnetonka took the moment to break his silence too.
“Look fellas,” he began, “I happen to agree with some of this stuff and not agree with some. I could give a crap about most of it. My own biggest problem is that I’m worried about what I’m gonna tell my grandkids in a few years when they get older.”
“What the hell are you talkin’ about?” The Nebraskan’s redneck pivoted towards Sam and was going two-shades darker right before our eyes.
“I don’t know about you guys but when I was a kid, my granddad told me and my sister that we’d go to college, he told me I’d be much smarter than he was, that I’d have a bigger house, that I'd have more things – “sky’s the limit” my Grandpa told us. And I’m tellin’ you fellas, if you love your grandkids, and you’re really looking out for their future, and you’re gonna be honest with them; you can NOT tell them what my Grandpa told me – that I would have more from life than he ever did.
“Oh bullshit Sam,” another driver quickly reacted.
“I seem to remember you not being able to send your kids to college Bob,” Sam said with a glare in his eyes, “And how are they doin these days?”
While Bob looked down into his coffee cup sheepishly, Sam slowly started looking around the table at each us.
“Can any of you guys really afford to help your kids go to college? While we’re at it, will oil and petrol be around for them in twenty years? Can we keep building better houses & condos, better industrial parks and using up our natural resources,” he turned and looked straight at me,
like timber and such?”
He swerved back around to the rest of the table, “Can we keep ruining the environment with pollution and pesticides just to have more and more stuff?

“This is a bunch of typical liberal crap…”
“Shut the hell up Charlie,” one of the guys shouted back to the Nebraskan.
“And look what we’re making Charlie,” Sam said loudly. “Better planes, better guns and gases, better explosives – every improvement increasing the fear and hatred, and escalating the hysteria. Even the less-destructive applications of technology aren’t much better, and what do they result in? A never ending supply of gadgets and crap to buy?”
Charlie angrily grabbed his Cornhuskers-hat and headed outside.
“New things of stimulation that equate material possessions with our well-being and incessant stimulation with happiness?” Sam shouted out after him
so that everyone in the place could hear.
I was now convinced that this guy was a truck-driving prophet.
“No fellas,” he said suddenly softer to us at the table, “I’m gonna tell my Grandkids the truth.
God Dammit, I’m going to tell them they are going to have to do with less than I did. I’m gonna tell them they need to learn to simplify. That's the biggest problem in life today in my book.”
He stood and gulped down the last of his coffee, reached for his wallet and threw his share down onto the tabel.
“Thanks Sam,” I told him. “You’ve given me a lot to think about and something to blog about too.”
Sam chuckled, “Get rid of your computer pal. Simplify!”
I laughed for the next 50 miles.
Take care of things back home.
-Tom

Thursday, December 22, 2005

12.21.5 - St Helens City Council Meeting


Last night, the St. Helens City Council met, (in the interest of candor and better communication with the public) to openly discuss revamping the City Charter. In essence, to begin the process of changing the way the City of St. Helens will be ran...er, I mean, governed.
From our Update correspondent photo above, you can clearly deduce that hardly anyone objected.
Or communicated.

Actually, there were SOME people there; most of whom spoke in favor of changing the charter. It's funny how these few in attendance (supporting this charter change) knew of the meeting in the first place
.
I wonder what could have happened--again, in the interest of candor and better "communication"--if the Council would have scheduled the "conversation" to occur AFTER this busy time of year. Or, if they somehow could have let "the rest of us" St Helens citizens know that this meeting was taking place at ALL. Ya know, in the interest of candor and communication.
This stinks y'all. Keep your eye on things here,
-Tom

Wednesday, November 30, 2005

11.30.5 - Mossy Rock to St Helens


On Monday, the city of St. Helens confessed that there had been a “substantial” discharge of "foam", (which is generated during the treatment of wastewater from the Boise Paper Mill) from the city’s wastewater treatment facility on Sunday.
The city said it is working with Boise to reduce these releases.
“Periodically, plant and weather conditions combine and cause this to happen,” said City Manager Brian Little. “Evaluation of the foam indicates that it poses no health concerns.”

Uh-huh.

Oregonian reporter Michael Milstein reported that back in October, Oregon's environmental agency moved to let factories and plants pour dirtier water into Oregon rivers, in a change partly paid for by one of the industries that would benefit from the looser rules.
The move was deemed necessary because rules protecting water clarity are so strict that industries have a hard time meeting them and the state enforces them only sporadically, state officials said.
Revisions proposed by the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality would let the average Oregon river become more than 30 percent murkier at times. The average smaller stream could become more than twice as murky.
Wastewater draining from a St. Helens paper mill and city sewage plant into the Columbia River, for example, could be nearly four times cloudier than under present rules, according to state calculations.
DEQ leaders said Oregon rivers are so clear to begin with and the changes so minor that the effect would be scarcely noticeable in streams and would not bother salmon that require clear water. They emphasized that the new rules would still be tougher than those in most other states.

Uh-huh.


Environmental groups said the budget-strapped DEQ is bowing to the very industries it is supposed to oversee.

"Their argument is, 'We don't enforce the standard, so we're going to make one that's weak so it's easier to enforce,' " said Brent Foster of Columbia Riverkeeper. "It just shows the complete lack of backbone in DEQ."
This is the first time the state environmental agency has tried to alter water standards under a provision approved by the Legislature that allows industries to pay for work that the DEQ cannot afford on its own.
The change does not weaken the rules but creates scientifically sound limits that can be applied more consistently, said DEQ Director Stephanie Hallock.
"I look at it as an attempt to make a workable standard," she said.

Uh-huh.


The latest research suggests that current rules are more rigid than necessary to protect salmon, drinking water and other uses dependent on clean water, DEQ officials said. Fish adjust to natural changes in rivers, and the new rules keep cloudiness to levels fish can handle, they said.


Uh-huh.


The rules involve only the cloudiness of water -- called turbidity --while other rules control chemicals. Cloudiness limits whether fish can see to feed and whether sunlight reaches underwater plant life. Murkier water also often means cities bear higher costs for filtering drinking water.

In part because of shrinking state funding, the DEQ depends on outside money for about two-thirds of its budget. Much of the funding comes from fees companies pay for air and water pollution permits, for instance.
But officials acknowledged that an industry group paying the state agency that regulates it to adjust pollution limits could raise public questions. Hallock said she stands behind the DEQ's technical work and thinks the revision is fair and sound.
She said outside money is an important tool to perform environmental work chronically underfunded in Oregon. "But if the perception raised is that it's not acceptable to the public, we're going to have to look at that," she said.
DEQ policies say outside money should not be used "where it would result in an apparent or actual conflict of interest."

The contract between the DEQ and the Pulp and Paper Association that spelled out the funding deal said agency staff "shall be free to exercise independent judgment, as approved by DEQ management."
But it also said the DEQ would review two reports supplied by the Pulp and Paper Association "as a starting point for this work," though they would be subject to independent evaluation. One was a 2002 report by the Pulp and Paper Association arguing that Oregon standards are based on obsolete methods and unnecessarily strict.
The other came from the National Council for Air and Stream Improvement, a research institute funded by the paper and timber industries. It suggested Oregon's tight limits would make little difference to salmon.

Uh-huh.


The 13-month agreement required DEQ to report monthly to the Pulp and Paper Association on its work and expenses and submit invoices to the industry group for payment.

Environmental groups protested at the time. They said they were not surprised at the result.
"Northwest Pulp and Paper was not going to roll the dice with their money if there was a possibility the rule was going to get tougher," Foster said.

I'm thirsty. Better head up river to Scappoose.

Take care and keep an eye out on things here.
-Tom

Wednesday, November 23, 2005

11.23.5 - Home


Every year, Lorraine begins Thanksgiving dinner by going around the table, (no matter how many people we’ve invited over) asking each person to share what they have been thankful for over the past year. This tradition usually moves along quickly, as most of us are ready to dive-in and eat.

Our neighbor Jack, who comes over to eat with us every year, is the kind of guy who is keen on pronouncing himself—to anyone who will listen—as “pro-American” and patriotic. Last year, after Lorraine shared her gratitude for God’s gift of creation, Jack gave his own short, impassioned speech of thanks: for the American flag, bald-eagles, Dubya and our noble cause of fighting for freedom over in Iraq. I silently cringed, but held my tongue in respect and tolerance. That is...until dinner was underway.

All-the-while under Lorraine’s not-so-subtle stink-eye glare, I gave my own assessment of Jack’s thanksgiving gratitude, for better or worse. You can probably imagine how it went. Jack certainly seemed as if he had heard the speech before.

“That’s not very patriotic Tom,” Jack offered me with a smile. "It's almost anti-American."

“Ya know Jack,” I told him. “Nationalism of one kind or another was the cause of most of the genocide of the 20th Century.”

Jack (and Lorraine) stared back at me in anger.

“And flags are only bits of colored cloth that governments use to shrink-wrap people’s brains,” I went on, “and then, as ceremonial shrouds to bury their dead.”

Jack was not happy. He wiped his mouth, politely excused himself, wished everyone a Happy Thanksgiving and got up to leave. Lorraine rushed after him towards the front door, seeing him out while profusely apologizing to him. She returned apologizing to everyone still at the table.

“Honestly Tom!” she said to me harshly while sitting back down and she continued glaring at me throughout the rest of our Thanksgiving meal.

And I WAS wrong. I went over the next day and apologized to Jack. He accepted my apology, though he wasn’t sure he would be attending next (this) year’s dinner. Lorraine, as usual, was right because today, I look back at this event shamefully…basically, the Thanksgiving table is neither the place, nor the time for such a discussion. For such labels.

My blog however, IS the place for such things. And I want to be clear with y’all why I was wrong.

Those of us who express our revulsion for the war in Iraq, the incompetence of the Bush Administration and so forth, always seem to run smack into the Jacks of the world who in turn, are compelled to label us as “anti-American” and unpatriotic.

Of course, this is ridiculous: The term anti-American is usually used by the American establishment to discredit and inaccurately define its critics. Thus, an anti-American is a person who is against America and, by inference, is pro some other nation. Once someone is branded anti-American, the chances are that he or she will be judged before they are heard, and any arguments are lost in a sea of bruised national pride. This is why it is an extremely effective strategy in combating the free speech of discontent.

Does this anti-American label mean I’m anti-Jazz? Anti-Thanksgiving dinner? Anti-Ralph Waldo Emerson? Anti-Freedom of speech or anti-Martin Luther King? Does it mean I’m against Redwood trees? Does it mean I hate all Americans? Of course not.

To call someone anti-American is not just racist labeling, it’s a failure of the imagination; an inability to see the world in terms other than those the establishment has set out for you. If you’re not pro-Bush, you support terrorism. If you’re not good, you’re evil. If you’re not a blue state, you’re a red state.

And this is why I was wrong last year. I labeled Jack.

This is the problem we, as Americans, face this Thanksgiving here in America. We, who differ, need to stop labeling each other as “this or that”.

Is it possible that all of us are this AND that?

Today, I’m headed over to Jack’s to be sure he’ll be joining us this year, as he has every year prior. And I will promise him that I won’t label him anymore. Happy Thanksgiving everyone.

-Tom