Republicans will kill 19,000 people a year by foregoing Medicaid expansion

Here's another nail in the coffin of claims that Republicans are the "party of life." No, they're the party of death. Big time! A RAND Corporation study says that expanding Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act (a.k.a. Obamacare) is the best financial option for states. However, at least two dozen Republican-led states are planning to turn down this Medicaid expansion. After all, if Obama wants something, it must be bad, right? So thinks the addled Republican brain. In this case, the addling isn't simply humorous -- as was the case with Michelle Bachmann's infamous babbling lies. (Thirteen straight PolitiFact ratings…

Why Salem downtown businesses don’t want parking meters

Putting parking meters in downtown Salem (Oregon) strikes me as a dumb idea. There might be a way for them to make sense, but the current City of Salem leadership doesn't seem capable of heading in that direction. Carole Smith -- a downtown resident, business owner, and building owner -- agrees. Recently she emailed me some thoughts about why downtown businesses are so negative about the parking meter proposal. And why they're irritated at how the City has been treating them. I've mildly edited Carole's message, which she gave me permission to share. Carole says: I haven't talked to anyone…

Cougar bill killed, thankfully, in 2013 Oregon legislature

My wife and I agree with Democratic state Represenative Brian Clem on most issues. But not on allowing individual counties to overturn Oregon's statewide ban on using dogs to hunt cougars. 

This legislative session Clem sponsored House Bill 2624. The bill would have permitted county-by-county votes on a question that a majority of Oregonian voters said "NO" to twice: whether dogs should be allowed in cougar hunting.

Thankfully, HB 2624 never made it out of committee in the state Senate.

How to manage mountain lions became one of the more hotly debated issues of the session. Clem led the charge to allow counties to opt out — by a local vote — of the law that bans the use of hounds to hunt the lions. He won big in the House, only to see the bill die in the Senate, stymied by Sen. Jackie Dingfelder, a Portland Democrat who chairs the main environmental committee.

There are two main reasons why HB 2624 was a really bad idea. I talked about both of them in written testimony that I submitted to the Senate Committee on Environment and Natural Resources (attached in full as a continuation to this post).

First, allowing counties to opt out of voter-approved statewide initiatives would set a horrible precedent. I told the committee:

No longer would statewide initiatives truly apply in the entire state. The legislature will have given a green light to those who fail to defeat an initiative to say, “Hey, you let individual counties opt out of the cougar initiative; now we want the ability to have counties opt out of [whatever].”

Consider Measure 49, a reform of Measure 37, which passed in 2007 with over 60% of Oregonians voting in favor. Yet majorities in many counties were in favor of a weakened land use system. Imagine the legal chaos if a county could opt out of Measure 49. Or any statewide law that a majority of voters in that county deemed unacceptable to them.

Yes, the legislature would have to authorize the ability to opt out of a law. But if you do this in HB 2624, the gate will be opened for other attempts to undo the statewide will of Oregonians — leading to a balkanization of our state. We already are unduly divided by unnecessary political rancor. Do we really want to add to that?

Second, cougars, a.k.a. mountain lions, are not a real problem in Oregon. They are an extremely minor threat to people (hugely less than domestic dogs are), and don't do much damage to livestock. So why kill them?

Well, my wife sat through several HB 2624 hearings. Apparently deer hunters are irked that cougars are killing deer — which, of course, is what cougars do. And why cougars, wolves, and other top predators are part of a healthy ecosystem.

Hunters kill the largest and healthiest game animals. Top predators tend to kill the smallest and weakest. Thus cougars do a better job at game management than hunters do. No reason to hunt them with dogs, as I said in my testimony.

No one has ever been killed by a cougar in Oregon. Many people have been killed by hunters. So if we're really concerned about protecting human life, there should be a thinning of the ranks of hunters, not of cougars.

Irrational hysteria is the only reason this bill has been introduced. My wife and I live around cougars. I've walked by fresh cougar deer kills. I frequently take walks at night in woods frequented by cougars. I'm not afraid of cougars.

Hopefully legislators will become similarly educated about these valuable top predators before they vote on HB 2624. Just as wolf management shouldn't be based on "big bad wolf" fairy tales, neither should cougar management.

Below is the rest of what I said in my testimony. I sure hope I never have to submit something similar again. Let this issue die, Representative Clem.

Black menu bar on Retina MacBook Pro: how I make it go away

This can't be a common MacBook Pro problem, or I would have found a solution more easily. But fairly often my 13 inch Retina MacBook Pro presents me with a black OS X menu bar at the top of the screen after I've closed and opened the cover. About all I can make out is the American flag on the right side. The black pixels that comprise the other icons are almost completely hidden, being black on black. When I'm using Safari, I have to visualize where the File menu, or whatever, is, then fiddle away in the dark to…

My Maui stand up paddling lesson goes, um, swimmingly

Stand up paddling (SUP) is the new hot thing on Maui's Napili Bay, where my wife and I vacation frequently. Me, I'm an avid bodyboarder, a.k.a. boogieboarder. I also am an avid land paddler on a longboard/skateboard.  This year on Maui, most days the waves weren't very big. So I spent a lot of time on the beach, boogieboard and fins sitting on the sand, wishing for larger waves. And watching the stand up paddlers do their thing. It didn't look that difficult. I decided to give it a try. So I perused a bunch of surfing/SUP brochures, each of which…