Monday, January 12, 2015

Speak Out Against Flushing Tens of Millions Down The Drain

There is no doubt about the need to bring police out of the death trap basement tomb they're in now. What there is plenty of dispute about is that replicating the facility a few feet over makes any sense.

Given Salem's horrendous sprawl and vulnerability to the Big Quake due at any point, the wiser option is to split the force into HQ (which can be anywhere, really) and then into at least two operating precincts, north and south ... Say, Portland Road and Mission St. There is abundant underused space and empty commercial structures available for conversion into public facilities, with plenty of cheap land for surface parking for police vehicles, and quicker access to all parts of the city.

Best of all, the we could think creatively and build (or repurpose existing buildings) for community centers with police, branch libraries, and community meeting rooms and public services spaces to boot -- multipurpose spaces that would foster community policing and engagement instead of isolation and the fortress mentality. 

The powers that be seem bullishly determined to build another police fortress at the civic center, but they only get to propose, since it will require a bond. So, THURSDAY NIGHT, come to Broadway Commons and tell the task force that -- like the Third Bridge -- "We're Not Buying It" and that they're going to have to start over with a clean piece of paper if they want any public support when it comes time for funding.

There is NO NEED for a single behemoth police facility in these days of 24/7 connectivity.

(Isn't it odd how these meetings to discuss spendy projects always seem to conveniently avoid being scheduled in locations where CCTV could broadcast them as they happen?)

The next meeting of the Police Facility task force is THIS THURSDAY, JAN. 15, 6-8 pm, at Broadway Commons, 1300 Broadway NE (1 block north of Salem Cinema) in the Keizer room on the Second floor. There is plenty of parking behind the building.  

The chair will release the "task forces" recommendations at that time.  We expect it to say things which would clearly put the police facility back on the civic center grounds (in the middle of Mirror Pond).  

Please come and bring lots of friends.  It is really , really important that the public be there to see and hear what happens.  Visitors can also ask for time to speak. This will likely be the first and last time the public will be able to express any opinion on where the police facility should be.  

The people to write to are the 

City Manager  Linda Norris <lnorris@cityofsalem.net>

Task Force members:  
Jason Brandt:  Jason@salemchamber.org
Sheronne Blasi <sheronneblasi@gmail.com>
Monty King:  ovda@ordealers.com
Geoffrey James <geoffreyjames@comcast.net>
Claudia Burton <cburton@willamette.edu>
Warren Bednarz <wbednarz@cityofsalem.net>
 Steven McCoid: SMcCoid@OregonRLA.org

"Let's live on the planet as if we intend to stay."

Saturday, January 10, 2015

Join me in helping Oregon save money while increasing justice

Please join me in my first Circle of Eight
In an attempt to create a sustaining base for the funding of repeal work in Oregon, OADP has launched a new campaign for 2015. Titled Circles of Eight, the plan is designed to establish an affordable way for many people to participate in a meaningful way.
The design is simple…… caring deeply about repeal of the death penalty, I have taken the role of a “Circle Leader” and am looking for seven friends who will complete my first “Circle”.  You are among the people who I believe to be like-minded and want better alternatives for dealing with crime, violence and murder in our communities. I will continue to create circles as long as there are people willing to support this great cause in this easy and simple manner.
Each member of my circle can establish a level of financial support that is affordable for you. I have started my first circle with a pledge of $20 per month. You can match that, or sign up for $5 or $10 per month, or do something more. Your sustaining donation is totally up to you. Once my first Circle of Eight is complete, I hope to start another one.
My $20 is equivalent to two movie ticket per month, or two glasses of nice wine at a Salem restaurant per month, or a weekly latte at Starbucks. Do what you can afford to do in support of Oregonians for Alternatives to the Death Penalty (OADP)
Please join me by going to the www.oadp.org web site, hitting the DONATE button. Indicate your donation to be monthly, fill in the form and help us repeal the death penalty as soon as possible.
Thank you for considering this request. I look forward to having you in my Circle. You do not need to tell me the amount, but do tell me you have joined my Circle. When we have eight, I will start another one.  If you like this concept and know others who would join in, donate only have of your affordable amount to my circle and start one of your own.

Friday, January 9, 2015

Drone flies over pig farm

Drone flies over pig farm

Drone flies over pig farm

Filmmaker Mark Devries has been secretly videotaping pig "farms" for the past few years, using a drone. The results are horrifying.

You're looking at a lake of toxic feces and urine the size of four football fields. That's because thousands upon thousands of pigs are inside these buildings. Their waste falls through slats in a concrete floor ad sloshed directly into this giant open air cess pool.
Pretty terrifying. But terrifying can get worse—somehow. The video goes into how these farms get rid of this waste. They get rid of it by "spraying." Pumping it into a fine mist, into the sky. This can travel into neighboring areas. It's horrendous. But don't worry, those areas are poor and frequently inhabited by people of color so there's nothing to see here.


"Let's live on the planet as if we intend to stay."

Undernews: The problem with today's streetcars

Undernews: The problem with today's streetcars

The problem with today's streetcars

This is the first article taking on the real streetcar problem that we've seen in the major media. Forty years ago we were enthusiastic about streetcars (which had once thrived in our DC and then were destroyed) as a more pragmatic, less costly, and more citizen friendly form of mass transit. But as time went on, we became much more favorable to designated bus lanes as cheaper and more practical than either a subway or streetcars. One of the things that moved us in this direction was the enormous increase in the cost of streetcars. As Washington's Metro showed the cost and transit disadvantages of new subway systems, attention turned to light rail. And as attention turned its way, its costs soared. For example, a 2.2 mile light rail system planned for St. Louis was to cost a quarter as much a similar length DC subway expansion did a few years back.So the light rail advantage has dropped from ten to one to four to one. 

Kevin Robillard, Politico - The Obama administration has sent more than a half-billion dollars to cities and counties in hopes of reviving the venerable American streetcar. But the renaissance is threatening to run off the tracks — imperiled by cost overruns, lower-than-expected ridership in some places and pockets of local resistance.

From D.C. to Atlanta, from San Antonio to Salt Lake City, streetcar projects have run into delays, cutbacks and other snags, and some have been scrapped altogether. The most dramatic recent example was November's demise of a $550 million, state-aided streetcar project in the liberal, traditionally pro-transit D.C. suburb of Arlington County, Va., which had turned politically toxic as its price tag more than doubled...

Supporters view streetcars as not just a method of transportation but as a means to fostering urban redevelopment and "livable," pedestrian-friendly communities, and local officials in cities like Tucson, Ariz., and Dallas credit the projects with revitalizing urban life.

Besides costs, critics point to other shortcomings in the projects. For example, they question whether streetcar lines that lack dedicated lanes — like the one on the way for Washington, D.C.'s H Street Northeast — are any better than buses that also must jockey with stop-and-go traffic.

[In DC, there have already been nine accidents involving the newly launched streetcar line - TPR]

In D.C., the H Street line is three years late in opening, marred by missteps like a test run in which the streetcar had to stand still for 15 minutes while an ambulance blocked its path. This fall, the District cut the size of its planned streetcar network from 20 miles to eight miles.

In Atlanta, a streetcar had two crashes in five days during its testing period, though passenger service was finally scheduled to start serving passengers Tuesday. Even in Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx's hometown of Charlotte, N.C., the mayor pro tem has openly predicted he expects the streetcar to "struggle." ...

An audit of the Portland streetcar system in December found the city had overestimated ridership by 19 percent and falsely claimed a perfect on-time record. In reality, the streetcar was on time only 82 percent of the time.

Sam Smith, DC Gazette 1975 -  Subways are the most expensive form of local mass transit.  For example, it costs over fifteen times as much per mile to  build a subway as it does to construct streetcar lines. .. Further, Robert Keith  of Alan Voorhees & Associates, who was one of the original  subway planners, says now that Metro's "rail costs would be  the highest [for a transit system] in the US on a cost-per-car-mile basis."   Besides serving as a luxury system for the downtown white  collar worker at the expense of mass transit for others, the  subway has other bad social effects. Since it requires high  density, it inevitably becomes a tail wagging the dog. Once committed to building a subway in a less than dense area like  Washington, people must be crowded around subway stops in a  'frantic effort to make the subway system pay for itself.' The  current mania for overdeveloping subway stops would have been  unnecessary had there been justification for the subway in the  first place. Instead, the neighborhoods Metro was supposed to  serve are being destroyed in order to serve Metro. 

Rather than competing with the auto, the subway is virtually unique among mass transit systems in that it offers no physical opposition to the car. Buses, jitneys and streetcars all  deprive the auto of street space and thereby help to encourage  transit ridership  What- the subway does compete with, and effectively, is other forms of mass transit. The .subway is designed to serve the same routes as the most profitable bus  lines. It drains off bus patronage thereby creating additional  bus deficits on top of its own losses.

Sam Smith, Progressive Review, 1993 - The city of Curitiba, Brazil, is using exclusive bus lanes  to speed mass transit. This idea, which we  unsuccessfully proposed for DC back in the 70s, allows  Curitiba's buses to travel at an average speed of 20 mph,  carrying 3.2 times as many passengers per hour as standard  buses. The system took six months to install. Says Mayor Jaime Lerner, "That means you don't have to waste a  generation building a subway." Curitiba's bus system  carries 1.3 million passengers annually, reports the  Brazilian Monthly, four times the number as Rio's subway.  The system uses boarding tubes and advance payment  of fares and has resulted in 28% of the city's car drivers  switching to mass transit.

Sam Smith, Great American Political Repair Manual, 1997 - Exclusive bus lanes can be easily and cheaply created on major arteries, especially if they run counter to the flow of automobile traffic. Buses can be made more efficient by giving them priority (through use of school bus-type flashing stop lights) when pulling in and out of bus stops.  Buses can have exterior bike racks to encourage mixed-mode use as they do in Portland, Seattle, and a number of California cities. Buses can be equipped with zappers to control signal lights. Through such efforts, urban bus transportation might become as least as good as the shuttle service at the average airport or theme park.

"Let's live on the planet as if we intend to stay."

Rally Against Planet Destroying Coal 1/15 at OR Trans. Comm. meeting

Dear Friends,
A coal export victory you helped secure for the Columbia River Gorge is at risk. Big Coal and their allies have pressured the Oregon Transportation Commission to re-vote on a grant to use public money to build a coal export dock on the Columbia River, despite the permit for the facility being denied.
Tell the Commission to stand strong against Big Coal and uphold their decision!

Last summer, the Oregon Transportation Commission voted 3-2 to deny funding for the Port of St. Helens’ application to re-build the Berth 2 dock at Port Westward so Ambre Energy can transfer coal to massive ocean-going vessles from barges sent down through the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area. The Commission was right to deny public money for coal export, yet Big Coal, the Port of St. Helens, and their allies are pressuring the Commission to reverse its decision.

Ambre’s coal export proposal is at a dead-end. The company was handed a permit denial by the Department of State Lands in 2014, and the Army Corps of Engineers put their review process on hold indefinitely. Without Ambre Energy the dock improvements at Port Westward are unnecessary. Scarce public funding for transportation should go to other cleaner, shovel-ready projects seeking funds.

We need to show our support by attending the next Oregon Transportation Commission meeting:

What: Oregon Transportation Commission’s public hearing to re-vote on transportation funding for coal export dock at Port Westward.

When: Thursday, January 15, 2015.  Sign-ins to testify are tentatively scheduled to begin at 12:00 noon, with the hearing tentatively scheduled to begin at 12:45. (Note: the final agenda will be posted on Friday at http://www.oregon.gov/ODOT/COMM/pages/otc_main.aspx.)

Where: Salem Red Lion Hotel.  3301 Market St. NE.  Salem, Oregon.
Remember to wear RED! 
Carpool from Portland: meet up at the Columbia Riverkeeper office at 10 AM.  1125 SE Madison Street 97214.

Email Ryan@GorgeFriends.org to let me know you're planning on coming to the carpool!

Getting Big Coal out of Oregon for good isn't easy. They have deep pockets and aggressively pressure people and agencies that stand up against them. The Oregon Transportation Commission needs to hear that they did the right thing by denying funding for Ambre's coal dock in August, and that we stand with them.

Tell the Oregon Transportation Commission to fund shovel-ready transportation projects, not dead-end coal export proposals. Tell the Commission to stand firm and not be pressured into approving the Berth 2 project at Port Westward.

Send your comments to the Transportation Commission by clicking on the "Take Action" button below - sample comments are provided that you may edit.

Thank you,

Ryan Rittenhouse
Conservation Organizer
Ryan@GorgeFriends.org
(971) 634-2034

Thursday, January 8, 2015

"It's something we don't want to think about."

Undernews: Notes from a lousy time

In a recent interview with Wired, Whitman College sociologist Kari Marie Norgaard, discussed the problem as it relates to climate change:

"Climate change is disturbing. It's something we don't want to think about. So what we do in our everyday lives is create a world where it's not there, and keep it distant. For relatively privileged people like myself, we don't have to see the impact in everyday life. I can read about different flood regimes in Bangladesh, or people in the Maldives losing their islands to sea level rise, or highways in Alaska that are altered as permafrost changes. But that's not my life. We have a vast capacity for this. . .

"In order to have a positive sense of self-identity and get through the day, we're constantly being selective of what we think about and pay attention to. To create a sense of a good, safe world for ourselves, we screen out all kinds of information, from where food comes from to how our clothes our made. When we talk with our friends, we talk about something pleasant. . .

"Stanford University psychologist Jon Krosnick has studied this, and showed that people stop paying attention to climate change when they realize there's no easy solution. People judge as serious only those problems for which actions can be taken.

"Another factor is that we no longer have a sense of permanence. Another psychologist, Robert Lifton, wrote about what the existence of atomic bombs did to our psyche. There was a sense that the world could end at any moment.

"Global warming is the same in that it threatens the survival of our species. Psychologists tell us that it's very important to have a sense of the continuity of life. That's why we invest in big monuments and want our work to stand after we die and have our family name go on.

"That sense of continuity is being ruptured. But climate change has an added aspect that is very important. The scientists who built nuclear bombs felt guilt about what they did. Now the guilt is real for the broader public."

And there is another aspect that psychologist Bruce E. Levine noted:

"When one already feels beaten down and demoralized, the likely response to the pain of shame is not constructive action, but more attempts to shut down or divert oneself from this pain. It is not likely that the truth of one's humiliating oppression is going to energize one to constructive actions.

"U.S. citizens do not actively protest obvious injustices for the same reasons that people cannot leave their abusive spouses: They feel helpless to effect change. The more we don't act, the weaker we get. . .

"The U.S. population is increasingly broken by the social isolation created by corporate-governmental policies. A 2006 American Sociological Review reported that, in 2004, 25 percent of Americans did not have a single confidant. (In 1985, 10 percent of Americans reported not having a single confidant.) . . .

"Today, increasing numbers of people in the U.S. who do not comply with authority are being diagnosed with mental illnesses and medicated with psychiatric drugs that make them less pained about their boredom, resentments, and other negative emotions, thus rendering them more compliant and manageable.. . .

"When human beings feel too terrified and broken to actively protest, they may stage a 'passive-aggressive revolution' by simply getting depressed, staying drunk, and not doing anything -- this is one reason why the Soviet empire crumbled. However, the diseasing/medicalizing of rebellion and drug 'treatments' have weakened the power of even this passive-aggressive revolution."


"Let's live on the planet as if we intend to stay."

Wednesday, January 7, 2015

Grand Theatre, 7 p.m. 1/8/15: Do The Math

"Let's live on the planet as if we intend to stay."

From: Salem Progressive Film Series <salemprogressivefilmseries@gmail.com>

We hope to see you tomorrow,

Thursday, January 8th at 7 PM

for the screening of the documentary

"Do The Math"

 

 DO THE MATH chronicles "America's leading environmentalist" Bill McKibben in a David-vs-Goliath battle to fight the fossil fuel industry and change the math of the climate crisis.

 

Our guest speakers represent organizations who promote responsible development of renewable energy resources in the northwest.

 

See below for more information about the film and guest speakers.

 

 Upcoming Film

 January 8, 2015 * 7 PM 

 

"Do The Math"

The math is simple. To avoid climate catastrophe, we have to limit carbon dioxide emissions into the atmosphere to 350 parts per million or below. The only problem? We're presently at 400 parts per million -- and climbing. Bestselling author and environmental activist Bill McKibben and 350.org, the organization he founded, hit the road to raise awareness of this terrifying math and build a movement to challenge the fossil fuel industry.
Do the Math follows McKibben as he delivers an astonishingly clear breakdown of the facts. The film serves as a much needed correction to industry spin, and shows how an unprecedented global movement is rising up to keep CO2 emissions down.

 

To view trailer:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-zfinOCgRQ0

 

 

 

Guest Speakers:

 Panelists from:

Oregonians for Renewable Energy Progress

The Sierra Club

350.org

Renewable Northwest Project

 


 

 Become an Individual Supporter of SPFS

Help support the Salem Progressive Film Series.

Tuesday, January 6, 2015

Time to Demand Honest Labeling! Straub Hosting Genetic Engineering and Ag Talk

Director Coba has been worse than abysmal on genetic tampering and letting Oregonians have a say on protecting their food systems. Everyone who eats and wants honest information about the content of what their wasting should plan to be at this talk.

"Let's live on the planet as if we intend to stay."

 

Straub Environmental Center is hosting a presentation by ODA Director Katy Coba on genetic engineering and Oregon agriculture on January 21st....feel free to contact Straub at 503-391-4145 for more information.

 

Here's the flyer for the event:

 

Katy Coba Talk 


 


 


 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Marion-Polk Food Share | 1660 Salem Industrial Dr. NE | Salem | OR | 97301