Scientists agree: global climate change is real

It's been an unusually warm and dry November here in Oregon -- and the Pacific Northwest. Naturally this doesn't prove global warming is happening, but it's one more experiential piece of evidence. Yet just as there still are people around who deny the Holocaust, global climate change skeptics continue to spout their anti-reality rhetoric. Periodically I get comments from them on one of my climate change posts, such as "Global warming doubters deserve to be scorned." Now, I appreciate the time and effort put in by the most recent commenter. And I dutifully took a look at the links he…

Dagwood’s Blondie is a hottie

I don't know what this says about me, but I've just spent quite a bit of time burrowing through the Blondie comic strip archive looking for the hottest images of her. For quite a while I've had a thing for Blondie. She's the most curvaceous chick on the mainstream comic pages. She may have had breast implants, given her otherwise svelte shape, but who cares? And I'd prefer that she wear high heels around the house, but her tight skirts help make up for that fantasy lack. I figured that if I Googled "Blondie comic hottie" I'd find lots of…

Happiness is a warm MacBook laptop

Well, correct that title: a room temperature MacBook. Because so far as I can tell, my beloved new laptop never gets hot on me, as the bottom of my old IBM ThinkPad did. She keeps her cool, and I don't know how. No fan noise. No ventilation slots. Just elegant, sweet, no-fuss, fun computing all day long. Yes, I'm in love, as I explained here and here, and even agonized a bit about here. Today, obsessive possessive romantic fool that I am, I fired up my MacBook's camera with the marvelous iMovie software and defended her honor. I'd been called…

Ballroom Tango taking the lead from Argentine Tango

Only for Laurel and me, I have to say right off -- before the title of this post sends Argentine Tango aficionados into a frenzy. Many of those who dance the Argentine version of Tango are really into it, which is great. What the world needs now, as always, is more dancing fools. When the economic times are bad, troubles are easily forgotten when the music starts up and two bodies begin to move in harmony (or, in our case, semi-harmony). We've just taken another turn on our dancing path. After some West Coast Swing classes we jumped into Argentine…

Legislature should ignore Big Look Task Force

It’s apparent that Oregon’s Big Look Task Force shouldn’t have much attention paid to its recommendations in the 2009 legislative session.

This group was supposed to step back and take, well, a big look at Oregon’s land use system.

The notion was that Oregonians in Action and 1000 Friends of Oregon, the yin and yang of land use advocacy groups, would find common ground in reasonable changes that balanced individual property rights and communal environmental protection.

Didn’t happen. Today’s Salem Statesman Journal had a front page story on the Big Look recommendations, "Plan boosts local input on land use." 1000 Friends of Oregon doesn’t like that notion. Neither do I.

You can read 1000 Friends’ reasons here. They make good sense.

First and most important, where’s the problem local control is supposed to solve? The Task Force has come up with a solution in search of a problem.

As the Oregon League of Conservation Voters says:

A widely-spread misconception repeated in today’s Oregonian is that somehow our statewide land use system, which has state standards that guide local plans, is "one size fits all."

Our laws have different requirements for different types of farmland and forestland, different requirements for lands in the Willamette Valley and outside of it, different requirements for different size cities, and so forth. Five our 19 land use goals only apply to certain areas of the state.

The Oregonian article says that 1000 Friends of Oregon called the local control proposal "a very bad idea." So much for bringing opposing groups together. The Big Look Task Force has been casting its gaze mainly in one direction: more development on irreplaceable farm and forest lands.

Which its very own survey found is opposed by a clear majority of Oregonians. When asked, "Would you support using public money to permanently protect farm and forest lands from urban development?" almost twice as many (48%) said Yes rather than No (27%).

Those who attended Big Look Task Force meetings or filled out an online survey were even more enthusiastic about protecting resource lands: 60% to 29%.

Yet somehow the Task Force concluded that what Oregon needs now is more paving over of farm and forest land. Crazy.

As the 1000 Friends critique points out, remapping these resource lands is the wrong thing to do:

This proposal destabilizes Oregon’s outstanding agriculture economy at exactly the wrong time.  Agriculture is an ever-increasing economic engine, topping almost $5 billion in gross farm income in 2007.  Agriculture is responsible for over 10% of Oregon’s jobs and is the second largest traded-sector part of the economy.  And it has been amazingly stable and strong – growing almost every year for the past three decades, and in a variety of crops located in every part of the state:  wheat, nurseries products, livestock production, fruits & vegetables, orchard fruits and nuts, and more.

Oregon agriculture, unlike other sectors of the economy, is strong and will not abandon the state by moving operations overseas.  We should be thanking Oregon’s farmers, not putting their family businesses at risk by sweeping the deck clean of past experience with the planning tools the Task Force earlier determined work well.  Remapping is expensive, controversial, and will create years of unneeded turmoil and uncertainty in our rural communities.  We urge you to drop this concept.

Oregon agriculture has been changing with the times. Our neighborhood is fighting a proposed 217 acre Measure 37 subdivision that wants to "plant" 43 homes on high-value farmland.

Grass seed and Christmas trees used to be grown on properties like this one in the south Salem hills. Now vineyards dot the countryside along Liberty Road between our house and the Salem city limits. This shows that farmland needs to be protected, not remapped, because new and better uses for Oregon’s agricultural lands keep being found.

The Big Look Task Force is bent on loosening Oregon’s pioneering, and hugely successful, land use policies. My wife found that out when she tried to testify at a Big Look meeting and was disrespected.

If the Task Force truly was interested in reflecting the views of Oregonians, it would listen to them. Instead, it has produced proposed legislation that makes me wonder, "Who the heck ordered that up?"

The 2009 Legislature will have lots of serious problems to deal with. Land use isn’t one of them. The Institute of Natural Resources at Oregon State University prepared a report for the Big Look Task Force that concluded, "Oregon’s land use system is sound."

Every governmental task force likes to say, "Our report won’t sit on a shelf and gather dust." Well, in this case that’s just what should happen.

I’ll end with a piece by Mitch Rohse, an experienced and respected land use planner. He explains more cogently than I have why the Big Look Task Force is on the wrong track.

Financial fear reflected in kitchen cupboard

Here's another unsettling leading indicator for the stock market: a large 50.8 oz. bottle of organic, extra virgin, first cold pressed olive oil that I managed to cram into our cupboard with about 1/8 inch to spare. I usually buy another brand. In a smaller bottle. But yesterday, on my weekly natural food store shopping expedition, I noticed that Napa Valley Naturals was on sale. I figured I could save almost ten dollars by buying super-sized olive oil. This isn't like me. Not to that extent. Laurel is picky about the taste of olive oil. We'd settled on Spectrum as…

Gum graft goes fine (relax, if you need one)

Here's another in what I hope won't be a lengthy series of "don't worry" blog posts about scary sounding health procedures. (See "Root Canal is nothing to fear.") I had a gum graft this morning. The worst thing about it was facing the fact that I'm old enough to need one, though I realize that people of all ages get gum grafts. My dentist referred me to a Salem periodontist because he was worried that the beautiful bridge work he'd just redone, which had cost me more than a VW bug went for new back in the '60s, could be…

Surprise! Republicans make sense…on auto bailout

The first coming of Obama is near. Praise the One! For he is bringing miracles to pass: I watched "Meet the Press" this morning and agreed much more with Sen. Richard Shelby, a dyed-in-the-right Alabama Republican, than with Sen. Carl Levin, Michigan Democrat. Maybe this is a sign that the country is getting past red state vs. blue state stuff. When the policy rubber hits the road, what matters much more is whether something makes sense. And Shelby had the edge here. Why should taxpayers fork out $25 billion or more to give to the clueless Detroit auto industry?First of…

Federal judge complicates Oregon land use policies

Just when it seemed that with the passage of Measure 49 last year, some clarity had emerged about Oregon land use policies, now a federal district judge has ruled that Measure 37 waivers are still alive in Jackson County. Measure 49 markedly rolled back the excesses of Measure 37. In November 2007 sixty-two percent of Oregonians voted to preserve irreplaceable farm, forest, and groundwater limited land from excessive development. Measure 37, passed in 2004, allowed property owners to get waivers from land use regulations passed after they acquired their property. This created a privileged class based on when someone came…

More reasons why I love my Mac more than my PC

My first YouTube video and blog post on this subject -- why Macs rule and PCs drool -- received some deserved criticism. So I'll man-up and admit that comparing the start-up time of a brand new MacBook to a several year old IBM ThinkPad isn't entirely fair. The PC runs slower and has a bunch more start-up programs installed that, no big surprise, need to start-up before my ThinkPad is ready to go. Fortunately, I had an almost hot-off-the-Chinese-shelf Lenovo IdeaPad Y510 sitting around. I got this Windows Vista computer in January of this year, but haven't used it much.…

Can I love my MacBook too much?

I hope my wife understands. Why, of course, she will. She's a retired psychotherapist. Laurel knows what happens when a man falls head over heels in love -- all the crazy things he'll do, how his life revolves around her. My new Macintosh laptop is a girl. That's obvious. She's thin, sleek, responsive, and oh-so-sexy. Plus, she almost always does just what I want her to. No back talk, like the B.S. I had to put up with from a string of Windows PCs that I've had mercurial relationships with. After a couple of weeks with my electronic sweetie I've…

Why I love my MacBook more than my PC

A few weeks ago I dived back into the Macintosh world, after a long dry spell wandering in the Windows wilderness. I started with Apple back in the way old II+ days, but got tired of not being in the computer mainstream. My new MacBook makes me wonder, "Why did I stick with PCs for so long?" I just made a You Tube video that implies an answer: "Because I didn't know what I was missing, fool that I was." Below the video I'll expand upon my reasons for loving MacBook more than ThinkPad, and clarify some remarks I made…

Be patriots, right-wingers: support Obama

Wow! The times really are a'changing. Obama has been president-elect for just two days, and already I've heard sentiments that I agree with on conservative talk radio.Namely, that Obama-haters need to act like patriotic Americans and get behind their new president. (Not so they can push him off a cliff -- to support him.)Way to go, Glenn Beck. Driving home this evening I heard your show on a Portland radio station. When I channel surf in your direction usually I tune you out quickly, because I can't stand your right-wing political views.But today you gave it good to a guy,…

Merkley vs. Smith: follow who’s winning

In Oregon the biggest remaining election question mark is the U.S. Senator race between Jeff Merkley and Gordon Smith. Votes are still being counted. Here's how to track them, in order of my political junkie preference: (1) Over at Blue Oregon, Kari Chisholm is doing a great job analyzing which counties haven't fully reported yet, and what this means. He's updating this post regularly. Currently Smith is up by almost 8000 votes, but Kari is projecting a 32,000 vote Merkley win after Multnomah and other Merkley-leaning counties completely come in. (2) The Daily Kos Electoral Scorecard features a map that's…

Election jitters: my fate, and $84, hangs in balance

2:51 pm, West Left Coast timeOoh! First polls close in less than ten minutes. I'll be watching CNN to see if they call it for Obama by 3:05. Sure hope so. I'd rather pay $84 than have a foreshortened life. Yesterday I talked with a Macintosh consultant about coming over to get a wireless laser printer working with my MacBook. He said he could come at 4 today. I told him that I'd be obsessing over election results at that time. We made an appointment for Thursday morning. "That way," I said, "I can save myself your $84 hourly fee…

Fall walk takes mind off of political talk

What's real? What's not? Philosophers, mystics, and theologians have argued this question for millennia. I don't know the answer. But a fall walk late this afternoon helped put the upcoming election into perspective. Both are real -- nature and politics. Yet only one calms the spirit. Which I needed right now. (click a photo to enlarge) Here's a vine maple that Laurel planted on our property. This is its reddish year. Another one, even more dramatic than its neighbor. Find the dog in the photo. Tough to do. Her Shepherd coloring blends with Oregon's early November hue. Having turned 60…