Whittam Community Garden, located at 5205 Ridge Dr. NE in Keizer, has 8 garden plots available.
Plots are free if you donate produce to Keizer Food Bank, and only $5 for the rest of the year for personal use. Plots are 6’ x 12’ raised beds.
If interested, please contact Kathy Whittam - kwhittam@comcast.net
Ian Dixon-McDonald
Community Gardens Program Director
Marion-Polk Food Share
T: 503-581-3855 x329 C: 503-798-0339 F: 503-581-3862
E: imcdonald@marionpolkfoodshare.org
1660 Salem Industrial Drive NE, Salem OR 97301-0374
www.marionpolkfoodshare.org/ www.marionpolkgardens.ning.com
Saturday, July 30, 2011
Near/in Keizer? Still plenty of time to grow a great summer/fall garden!
Attention recent and soon-to-be HS grads!
Speaking of which, here's a non-traditional opportunity that could be perfect for a self-educating young person:
The Marion-Polk Food Share Community Gardens Program is currently accepting applications for a service opportunity through Oregon Red Cross AmeriCorps.
The service member will focus on developing and running youth garden programs in Marion and Polk counties. Three main projects include developing curriculum, facilitating partnerships, and assisting with the summer garden youth crews.
For full job description (pdf)
Service member will receiveThis opportunity requires a full-time, 40 hours a week commitment for the duration of 11 months. Begins Tuesday Sept. 6. To apply, send a resume and cover letter to: imcdonald@marionpolkfoodshare.org
- a $5,550 education award upon completion for future tuition or payment on qualified student loans (taxed),
- a living allowance of $12,100 for 11 months (before taxes),
- loan forbearance on qualified student loans,
- basic healthcare coverage and childcare assistance (if household income qualifies).
The selected applicant will have to complete an AmeriCorps application online. For more information on AmeriCorps, see www.oregonredcross.org/ossc.Applications must be received by August 5th.
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Friday, July 29, 2011
Sad, but well done
Many never figure it out and they struggle on, consuming resources and generating debts, until finally they flicker out, leaving unpaid debts, exhausted volunteers, and (often) unpaid staffers behind.
It's sad, in a way, that the Salem Community Concert Association has folded. On the other hand, good for their leadership for being able to read the handwriting on the wall and knowing enough not to plow on despite the warnings until the iceberg was hit (I don't know how many walls there are up in the frigid polar waters where the icebergs are, but mixing metaphors is at most a misdemeanor offense on the information highway, right?).
The Salem Community Concert Association, the oldest concert series in the area, is ending after 74 years.Good for them for having the courage to face the facts, for exiting with grace, and leaving the field to other, more vital groups, rather than dividing the shrinking pie up into ever smaller slices. The arts scene in Salem is better off for this decision, regrettable though it is. If you know any of the leadership of the SCCA, thank them for all that they offered through the years, and also for not trying to live on past what the community was willing to support.The organization has canceled the five concerts planned for 2011-12 because lagging season-ticket sales would not cover expenses, board president Esther Ediger announced Tuesday.
"We had lots of projects, we had lots of hopes, and we had some promises, but not enough money in the bank," said Ediger. "We used up all our reserves."
The organization had sold just 140 season tickets for the coming season, far short of what it needed to make its budget of about $27,000.
Rather than go into debt, the board decided unanimously last week to dissolve. Volunteers planned to mail refunds to season-ticket buyers and donors on Tuesday.
In the series' heyday, concert-goers snapped up all 1,000 season tickets, guaranteeing financial success.
As a result, the concert association could attract world-famous musicians including classical guitarist Christopher Parkening, opera singer Roberta Peters and pianist Misha Dichter.
But in recent years, the concert association's loyal core has aged, said Ediger, and more events have competed for music lovers' money. Season-ticket sales slipped from 240 three years ago.
"We've seen changes in the way people do things, the way they buy tickets and the growth of Salem art associations," she said. "We wish everyone well, but there is so much to choose from." . . .
Wednesday, July 27, 2011
Don't be a sucker. Stay away from Payday loans.
You should never be in a position where you have to pay money to cash your paycheck, or to accept a huge interest rate because you need a couple hundred bucks to get to next payday.
If you are financially strapped and don't know how to get on your feet or get ahead, then you need to do one thing first, ahead of anything else:
JOIN A CREDIT UNION.
Salem has a number of them, no matter who you are you can join one or more of them.
Monday, July 25, 2011
The problem, my friends, is blowing in the wind
Sunday, July 24, 2011
Scam Alert -- Wildly overpriced "water supply line" insurance targets seniors in NE Salem
Oh, what a tangled web we weave
That was the imbroglio manufactured by a credulous press that finds actual science all much too confusing and prefers something much simpler and more familiar: stealing emails and excerpting little bits in a carefully chosen order so as to make them appear to say something nefarious.
"Climategate" could safely be forgotten if it hadn't been carefully created just when needed to prevent global action on climate, and if it had not become an article of faith among the know-nothings in the GOP and their house organ, Faux News (another of Sauron's legions).
Still no slippery slope from Death with Dignity
Consider Oregon's Death with Dignity law. It's worth noting, again and again, that every single claim about the horrific outcomes has been wrong, year after year after year. People are not flocking to Oregon to kill themselves. The handicapped and disabled haven't been encouraged to off themselves. People who are "sad" don't get lethal prescriptions. Docs aren't encouraging patients to off themselves as soon as the insurance money stops.
The uber-claim of the anti-dignity folks was that letting people die without excruciating pain would somehow "devalue life." Well, to the extent that "life" has been devalued in Oregon, it has been because the people who opposed Death with Dignity also relentlessly oppose and create obstacles to letting people control their own lives in those critical areas around whether or not to give birth, marry, or depart this mortal coil.
The basic principle of the people who fought to try to force the rest of us to face death on their terms alone is that you do not have the right to decide the most intimate matters of your own life -- whether you give birth, or whether you can marry the person you love, or whether you should be able to avoid a hellish end of unbearable pain.
It's important to remember and to bring this up because the people who fought against letting us decide to hasten our own deaths are absolutely fanatical in their virulent hatred of freedom and their determination to roll back progress. They want to force rape victims to bear their rapists' child; they want to make it impossible for same sex couples to marry; they want to deny the poor access to birth control; and they want to return to the time when only the rich could get help from a doctor to ease their suffering from a terminal illness.
If you value your freedom, if you think that you and you alone should decide the most intimate matters of life, then you need to be alert to who these people are. Because the media never holds them to account and points out that none of the horrible things they said would happen ever do.
As we enjoy the bliss of a gorgeous Oregon summer, take a moment to remember that there are people who hate that you might decide what is best for you for yourself, without giving them a say or letting them decide for you. And join or send something to the groups that fight for your rights all year long.
Saturday, July 23, 2011
Pile on!! Let's all laugh at the idiots running Oak Park, Michigan
I've lost count of how many places have blogged about the ticket heard (with charges eventually withdrawn) 'round the world.
And, let's face it, the best you can say about the guy is that he's totally clueless, and is likely to be forever famous for trying to impose his own personal suburban vision on the people paying his salary. What a maroon.
But, because pride goeth before a fall, it's best not to be too smug.
What about here in oh-so-sustainable Salem in trendy Green Oregon? We wouldn't have any laws that reflect nothing more than class bias and an attempt to enforce that same sort of suburban conformity, would we?
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