Republicans still kookie, even if Kos pollster is crooked

Often people say, "You can't trust the polls." Well, usually they're pretty accurate. But not if a pollster conducts fraudulent work, which is the allegation a leading progressive web site, Daily Kos, had made against Research 2000.It's sort of difficult for me to follow the statistical evidence trail that strongly suggests Research 2000 made up results for the polls the firm conducted for Daily Kos the past few years.However, the bottom line is clear. Daily Kos founder Markos Moulitsas says, "I hereby renounce any post we've written based exclusively on Research 2000 polling."That includes a well-publicized Research 2000 survey of…

Men are wimps when sick, so I’m manly

Last week I got a flu/cold sickness from my three year old granddaughter, Evelyn, who probably caught the virus on her plane trip up from California. Evelyn had been coughing for a few days before my own symptoms appeared.With no hesitation I started to let the world know about my pitiful condition. Cough. Cough. "Ohhhhhh, I'm sick!"Blow nose. "Ohhhhhh, I don't feel good!"Cough and blow nose. "Ohhhhhh, where's the cold medicine?!"It didn't take long for my wife, Laurel, to make an observation: "You're better at whining than a three year old." My utterly predictable reply: "Ohhhhhh, I'm sick! You have…

Images of 2010 Salem World Beat Festival

Yesterday was warm and sunny here in Oregon. But I was still kind of sick from a mildly feverish flu/cold my granddaughter had gifted me during a recent visit. Still, I couldn't resist firing up my scooter and heading to the Salem World Beat Festival. This is my second-favorite local summer event, getting bested out only by the Salem Art Fair. It was healing to catch my first glimpse of the main stage Amphitheater in the Riverfront Park. Seeing people having a good time listening to the Incendio (world guitar fusion) band made me feel better. As did watching an…

Colbert’s hilarious take on Rand Paul not being board-certified

There's a good reason why, almost every night, my wife and I watch The Colbert Report before heading off to bed: Stephen Colbert is able to make us laugh about the state of the world, which, when we watch the regular news, usually is disturbingly depressing.A few days ago Colbert revealed that Rand Paul, a libertarian ophthalmologist who is the Republican candidate for U.S. Senator in Kentucky (and son of Ron Paul) isn't board-certified in his medical specialty -- though Paul claims that he is.Yes, it's true. The national panel that approves doctors as board certified said U.S. Senate candidate Rand…

Tea Party irrationality reflected in Statesman Journal commentary

The Salem (Oregon) Statesman Journal editorial board positions have gotten increasingly nonsensical and right-wing -- a redundancy of adjectives, I realize. My suspected causes are the arrival of a publisher who used to be an editor at the Orange County Register, and the newspaper's increasing need to suck up to the Chamber of Commerce in order to maintain its advertising revenues.Last Sunday, a commentary by executive editor Bill Church reached new levels of editorializing meaninglessness. Though titled "Obama, please give us reasons to stay hopeful," it didn't contain any reasoned arguments for being unhopeful. Download Bill Church Obama commentaryInstead, Church…

My tips for watching World Cup soccer

I've enjoyed the two World Cup soccer matches that I've watched on TV. Naturally they've both featured the United States team -- when they played England and Slovenia -- because I'm only interested in soccer on the rare occasions when the game means something to my national interest.By "enjoyed," I mean that I followed the tips I shared in How to enjoyably watch hockey and soccer on TV.(1) Record the event.(2) Press "Play." (3) Then -- this is really important, because life is short and you don't want to waste it on meaningless stuff -- immediately press the fast forward…

Sign lies: Trader Joe’s not coming to Keizer

Yesterday there was a lot of excited buzzing in normally sleepy Salem after the Statesman Journal ran a front page story about a sign going up at Keizer Station listing Trader Joe's as a retailer. Download SJ Trader Joe's storySure, the story quoted a Keizer Station representative who said that the sign company screwed up, and there wasn't any deal with Trader Joe's. But I, like lots of other people, figured that this was an attempt to cover up the premature divulging of Trader Joe's imminent arrival in the Salem area.Unfortunately, it looks like the Salem curse -- which keeps…

iPhone 4 ordering screw-ups — bad AT&T omen

Eight days ago I was really excited about ordering an iPhone 4 -- Apple's newest must have techno-gadget.Today, not nearly so much. I can personally confirm Gizmodo's reporting: "Apple's iPhone 4 pre-ordering is a total disaster."I found it impossible to get any response from either the Apple or AT&T web sites when I tried to upgrade my 3G iPhone. No, that isn't true. I got some curt error messages -- not exactly the sort of thing I've come to expect from the usually smoothly functioning world of Apple. Apparently it is more AT&T's fault than Apple's, according to Gizmodo.The reason…

Police don’t deserve special thanks

I enjoy reading letters to the editor that make me say to myself, Wow, why didn't I think of that -- it makes so much sense. Today's Portland Oregonian features a letter from Jim Sumser (of Vancouver) that garnered that Wow response. He points out that police officers and fire fighters are just doing a job, as are so many other people.Letter writer Darryl Willis ("Respect for police," June 13) doubts that employees of the Red & Black Cafe would have had the courage to arrest a burglar in his home. It was hard for me to make sense of…

Metolius trash spill makes me empathize with Gulf Coast

Wrong. Wrong. Wrong. Sometimes the morality of a situation is stunningly simple. Only one word kept echoing in my head after I spotted some out-of-place debris as I was walking along the Metolius River in central Oregon, past the Riverside campground near the headwaters. There's very little litter along the Metolius. People visiting the Camp Sherman area respect this marvelously beautiful spring-fed river, which I believe has an official Wild and Scenic designation.So this trash was out of place. Unusual. Unexpected. And wrong. We usually come to the Metolius once a month from April through October, being 1/4 owners of a…

Lars Larson’s lies about global warming

Even though I got satellite radio to avoid the right-wing talk shows that dominate the Portland, Oregon airwaves, occasionally I tune into Lars Larson (KXL) or Victoria Taft (KPAM) to check on the strength of my cranium -- since almost always what I hear makes me feel like my brain is going to explode.I survived ten minutes or so of Larson a few days ago, but just barely. The combined scientific ignorance of Lars and a global warming-denying sidekick he had on, Chuck Wiese, was astounding.And intensely disturbing.Three years ago I criticized Larson for joking about how global warming is…

Apple, please get into the printer business (again)

I'm a fervent devotee of all things Apple'ish. I believe that if I buy enough gadgets from Apple, I will achieve perfect (roughly speaking) happiness. I have an iPod touch, an iPhone, and a MacBook Pro, plus two Airport Extremes that smoothly and easily connect me wirelessly to the Internet and a printer. Which -- the printer -- I just replaced, again, after my Samsung decided that it would be fun to print half of a page, then stop dead, leaving the paper jammed.I researched the issue via Google and learned that this is a common complaint of the Samsung…

iPhone 4 — the way to perfect happiness

Once again, this morning I found myself transfixed before my MacBook Pro, glued to Engadget's live blog of a Steve Jobs presentation of Apple's newest must-have techno-wonder.The iPhone 4. And this time it truly is a must-have for me. I was strongly attracted to the iPad when Jobs revealed its appealing features, but after the show was over I was left with a nagging feeling of "cool toy, yet what would I do with it that I can't already?"Different reaction to the iPhone 4, for sure.Currently I have an iPhone 3G which can't even capture video (unlike the 3Gs, a…

Bend newspaper favors city sprawl, not sustainability

Bend is a great city in central Oregon. My wife and I have envisioned ourselves living there someday.

But the Bend newspaper, the Bulletin, should recognize that editorializing in favor of LA-like sprawl rather than sustainability isn't going to encourage environmentally-minded people to move to the area.

There's plenty of places in the country where subdivisions checkerboard the countryside and big box stores dominate the shopping landscape. In fact, Bend already has done a good (actually, bad) job of uglifying itself along its major highways.

Yet today the not-so-wise editorial board of the Bulletin whipped itself into a frenzy, castigating Greg Macpherson — a member of the Land Conservation and Development Commission (LCDC) — for daring to suggest that Bend's desire to increase the size of its Urban Growth Boundary by 40% needs some rethinking.

Here's some of what Macpherson said in a Bulletin opinion piece last Wednesday, which was republished today. (Annoyingly the Bulletin doesn't make its content freely available online. I had to fork out 50 cents to access the Macpherson piece and the editorial, which I've appended at the end of this post.)

Urban Growth
Boundaries are a great Oregon innovation — one of the ways the state
earned its reputation for environmental leadership. UGBs separate town
from country, farm from shopping mall, and forest from subdivision. They
also help ensure that cities carefully consider how to grow, to keep
costs down while providing land for needed jobs and housing.

…The requirements of Oregon's statewide
planning program can help Bend become an even better place to live.
Infill of vacant space inside the existing UGB will cost residents less
for new roads, sewers and water lines. More compact development will
improve access to public transportation. Large undeveloped spaces will
be preserved for the educational and industrial uses that enhance
economic opportunity. Lower-cost public services will make housing more
affordable. A reduction in the average vehicle miles traveled per
resident will reduce dependence on fossil fuels. Oregon's statewide
planning goals promote all these aims and more.

In any planning
process, it's important to embrace the opportunity for positive change.
In 30 years, Bend should not look like a larger version of just what it
is now. It should adapt to a changing economy and evolving lifestyles.
The decision on the size and location of its UGB is an important part of
this process.

Not exactly a wildly radical statement.

The Department of Land Conservation and Development (DLCD), which is overseen by the LCDC, sent back Bend's Urban Growth Boundary expansion proposal for more work. The voluminous record of the review can be read here. A press release summarized why the proposal got an "incomplete" grade.
Download Bend UGB press release

When I scanned the 169 page DLCD order remanding Bend's proposal, a lot of good arguments for doing this caught my eye. Seemingly the city doesn't need anywhere near the amount of land that it wants to urbanize, choosing sprawl over sustainability for no good reasons.

Bend should realize that it is part of Oregon, not an independent principality run by the Bulletin, the Chamber of Commerce, and real estate developers. The editorial board got all huffy about — gasp! — applying state land use laws to Bend.

The DLCD has reviewed Bend’s proposal to expand its
urban growth boundary and found it wanting. In a nutshell, the DLCD
wants Bend to develop much more densely than the city’s residents and
elected officials do, the ideal apparently being a miniature version of
Portland bounded by mile after mile of forest and desert.

…Macpherson
now lectures the benighted citizens of Bend about the benefits of
land-use restrictions that will make their housing more affordable,
their carbon footprints more dainty, their infrastructure cheaper and
public transportation more workable.

Problem is, this would
require Bend to develop in a way that most people who live here oppose,
which is why their elected representatives on city council approved the
UGB expansion they did. Macpherson glibly dismisses the desires of Bend
residents by spouting pablum: “In any planning process it’s important to
embrace the opportunity for positive change.”

Hmmmm.

So the Bend Bulletin editorial board apparently is in favor of unaffordable housing, more global warming, expensive infrastructure, and unworkable public transportation.

Wow, if I really believed, as the editorial claims, that this represents the desire of the city's residents, I'd immediately scratch Bend off of my list of possible places to move to one day.

What's also crazy about the pave it over attitude of the editorial board is this: the Bend housing market sucks. In 2008 it was the second most over-valued market in the country. Not surprisingly, in 2009 Bend crashed back to reality, hard. 

With one of the nation’s slowest housing markets, Bend has led the state
of Oregon to the fifth-worst housing market in the country for default
notices, auction sale notices and bank repossessions.

…Deschutes County — where Bend is located — experienced one
foreclosure per 168 homes, 14 percent worse than Wayne, County,
Michigan, home to Detroit and the troubled auto industry.

Jim Homolka, president of Re/Max Equity
Group Inc., called Bend a classic example of a market that soared
too high. “The market got overheated and overpriced and it just stopped,” he
said. Last fall, Re/Max Equity Group elected to close its Bend office after
concluding it will take too long for the market to recover.

Yet somehow the Bend Bulletin (which I'll bet is echoing it's lord and master, the Chamber of Commerce, given how advertising revenue drives newspaper decisions nowadays) concludes that the solution to overbuilding and urban sprawl is…(drumroll, please) more overbuilding and urban sprawl.

Well, hopefully the sensible citizens of Bend will pressure city leaders to do what is right for the long term, not what short-sighted politicians and business types are advocating.

Like almost everyone who loves central Oregon — we're part owners of a cabin in Camp Sherman, about 45 minutes from Bend — I don't want to see the Bend area become a miniaturized version of southern California, with the countryside eaten up by sprawling subdivisions and the city dominated by ugly strip malls, traffic jams, and a declining downtown. 

Sadly, this seems to be what the Bend Bulletin wants. Hopefully the state's land use planning process will continue to protect what the editorial board doesn't care about: a beautiful, sustainable, livable Bend.

Marion County subdivision vesting case in judge’s hands

Beginning in 2005 our neighborhood here in rural south Salem (Oregon) has been fighting a proposed 43-lot subdivision that threatens our ground and surface water. Since my wife and I are leading the fight against what is usually called the "Laack subdivison," we're used to sitting through long meetings.Planning Commission meetings. Board of Commissioners meetings. Hearing's Officer meetings. And today, a three hour Marion County Circuit Court hearing before Judge Nely Johnson (a retired Multnomah County judge who was brought in for this vested rights case).The attorneys for our neighborhood's Keep Our Water Safe committee, Ralph Bloemers and Sean Malone,…

Salem’s curse continues: riverfront development stalls

I've lived in and near Salem (Oregon) since 1977. That's thirty-three years of exposure to a city whose lifeblood is blah. I'm hoping that just as researchers have found that caloric restriction extends life, so does urban excitement deprivation.Glancing at the front page of the Statesman Journal today, I was disturbed -- but not all that surprised -- to see that the Salem Curse continues. A promising effort to convert the downtown riverfront area into a mixed use development has stalled. Download Salem Riverfront project stallsSo now, instead of staring at ugly Boise Cascade industrial buildings, we'll be treated to…