Germanwings crash spurs talk of self-flying planes. I’m on board.

Driving home today, I heard some interesting talk about self-flying planes on both the Michael Smerconish show and CNN. The impetus was the recent crash of Germanwings Flight 9525, which was commandeered and flown into the ground by an apparently suicidal copilot.  Smerconish asked listeners if they'd be OK with flying on a pilotless plane. Meaning, the "pilot" would be a computer endowed with artificial intelligence. I thought to myself, Sure, why not?  This will surely come to pass eventually. It's just a matter of time. Self-driving cars already are being tested. Regular cars are beginning to be equipped with rudimentary…

Trevor Noah will be a great replacement for Jon Stewart

My wife and I have been worrying about Jon Stewart's departure from The Daily Show, which comes on the heels of Steven Colbert's ending of The Colbert Report -- two stressful events for us. So when I saw today that Trevor Noah has been named as Stewart's replacement, I wasn't sure whether this was good or bad news.  We're not wild about The Nightly Show with Larry Wilmore, which is a big step down from The Colbert Report. Wilmore and company are OK, but not nearly as watchable as Colbert. Usually we skip it and just watch The Daily Show.…

Salem boasts McMenamins #1 “Cosmic Tripster”

Take that Portland, Seattle, Eugene, and every other town in Oregon and Washington with a McMenamins something or other (pubs, historic hotels, movie theatres, etc.).  You may feel superior to somewhat sleepy Salem in many regards, but we boast the #1, numero uno, top dog McMenamins Cosmic Tripster in the entire universe.  This is a huge freaking deal. I have no idea why a statue showing our Cosmic Tripster'ing dude hasn't replaced the Golden Man on top of the state capitol. Or why a major street hasn't been named after him. Regardless, having learned his identity last night, I want…

Ted Wheeler makes good case for Oregon Retirement Savings Plan

I headed off to today's Salem City Club noon meeting thinking, this won't be very interesting. The subject was "Retirement Security (Or Not) for Oregonians: Can We Avoid a Crisis?" Well, I was wrong -- mostly because I'd forgotten how fluently entertaining the speaker, State Treasurer Ted Wheeler, is. Likely he could make a talk on "How Paint Dries" interesting. I've heard Wheeler speak several times before. Whenever I see him, I feel grateful that Oregon has talented guys and gals such as Wheeler in state government. This thought also runs through my head: He'd make a great Governor someday.…

Encouraging glimpses of Salem coolness in City Council meeting

When I go to a Salem City Council meeting, typically it feels like a dentist visit: I need to do it, but the experience isn't high on my Fun List. However, last Monday's meeting left me with more positive feelings than usual. I actually came away thinking, "Hey, Salem may be poised for some enervating bursts of coolness."  Maybe I'm making too much of what amounts to a few vignettes during a lengthy meeting. But, hey, when I see encouraging glimpses of coolness in, gasp!, a City Council session -- that's eminently worthy of sharing with my fellow Salemians. I'd…

Correction: Wild Pear restaurant isn’t worried about food trucks

Hey, nobody's perfect. Certainly not me. (Just ask my wife.) After noticing a Twitter tweet pointing to a Wild Pear Restaurant Facebook post that said they weren't part of the downtown restaurant owners who expressed concerns about food trucks at the July 14, 2014 Salem City Council meeting, I checked the notes I'd taken during the public hearing on this subject. Couldn't find a mention of Wild Pear, even though I'd mentioned them in a blog post where I'd (correctly) said that representatives of Venti's, Gamberetti's, and Napoleon's said they worried about the effect of downtown food trucks on their businesses.…

New 2-door “Mini” Cooper is too maxi. I like my 2011 Mini much better.

Recently I had to take my 2011 Mini Cooper S up I-5 for a service appointment at Mini of Portland.  A month or so earlier I'd been there for scheduled maintenance. Which came with a surprise: a technician discovered that my Mini's computer system needed to be reprogrammed/updated so it wouldn't think that I had a non-existent brake problem. The service advisor told me that it could take up to four hours, so I told her "I'll come back on another day." That day turned into two, irritatingly. Rather than sitting in the waiting area, I'd gotten a ride to…

Next Monday, tell the Salem City Council “More bike boulevards, please!”

OK, I readily admit that going to City Council meetings really isn't a fun thing to do. But sometimes it is important to show the Mayor and Salem's eight city councilors that people in this town care a lot about some issue. Such as building more and better bike lanes, and converting busy unsafe streets into bike boulevards -- the much-needed goal of Salem Bike Boulevard Advocates. They're calling on biking/walking-loving Salemians to attend next Monday's City Council meeting. Their email alert says: Salem Bike Boulevard Advocates asks you to attend the Capital Improvement Planning Hearing on Monday, March 23rd at…

Salem food truck dustup connected to downtown politics

Salemians who love their newly-legal food trucks are upset that the Fusion truck was forced to move from its downtown location after some restaurants complained about it. I've blogged about this hot topic in "So Salem: downtown restaurants kick out a food cart" and "Wow! Fusion controversy shows Salem loves food trucks." Here's a March 14 Facebook posting by Sean Mulrooney that contributes nicely to the discussion over how downtown Salem should evolve, and who should be involved with that evolution. I'll add some thoughts of my own below Mulrooney's. Regarding the food truck thing -  It's hard to know…

It’s our 25th anniversary. And St. Patrick’s Day. Green beer + kiss.

Wow. Hard to believe it's our 25th anniversary today. But it's easy not to forget, like I said in "14th anniversary -- take that Dr. Laura!" We had the smarts to get married on St. Patrick's Day in 1990, which means that as soon as I start seeing mention of green beer in the newspaper or on TV a small still voice in my head starts speaking... “Anniversary, anniversary, anniversary.” Laurel looks particularly beautiful in this photo. A wedding brings out the glow in a gal. We got married at our newly-bought house, which entailed a whole lot of scrambling…

Wow! Fusion controversy shows Salem loves food trucks

Man, I'm blown away by the support Salemians have for food trucks in this town -- judging by the reactions to my "So Salem: downtown restaurants kick out a food cart" post. I plugged it on both my personal and Strange Up Salem Facebook pages. In the Strange Up Salem posting, I said: Crazy -- some downtown restaurants felt so threatened by the Fusion food truck, they got it kicked out from an alley behind the Reed Opera House. I really like food trucks. Hopefully Fusion will return to downtown soon. Even more: we need a whole freaking food truck…

High winds or not, I hate to exercise indoors now

I got my Streetstrider, an outdoor elliptical bike, back in December 2013. Since, I've found it increasingly difficult to exercise aerobically indoors.  It's just so much more enjoyable to be out in nature, usually on the Minto Brown Island Park paved trails, than chugging away on an indoor elliptical bike at the Courthouse Athletic Club, like I did for many years. Here I am, selfie'ing myself and my beloved yellow Streetstrider this afternoon in the midst of a day that saw 58 mph gusts at the Salem airport. Starting out from parking lot 1, heading toward the dog park, I'll admit that…

So Salem: downtown restaurants kick out a food cart

Only in Salem… we finally get support for a vibrant Food Truck Scene after a restrictive city ordinance is loosened up. 

Fusion Food Truck

But now some downtown restaurants have forced Fusion, a Vietnamese food truck, to leave its spot in the alley behind the Reed Opera House.

Where Fusion operated for a whole freaking 4 hours a week!

Deeply irritating. For those of us who want downtown Salem to be cooler. For the evolving food truck industry in this town. And naturally, most of all for Fusion.

Here's what happened, as reported in a recent Facebook post:

Due to restaurants "raising their voices" – this is the last day Fusion will be in downtown Salem. So frustrating that downtown Salem has become a place where a food truck gets pushed out of being here just 4 hours a week. It's a shame. Restaurants were feeling so threatened – they "convinced" the property owner to "ask" Fusion to "move along". Support food trucks, support diversity in our cuisine, support people starting up a business and chasing their dreams! Follow @salemfoodtrucks for news, specials and reviews.

I don't know which downtown restaurants were threatened by Fusion. However, last September I wrote a blog post, "Some downtown Salem restaurants may try to keep out food carts." Excerpt:

Today a Facebook post clued me in to a worrisome possibility: some restaurants in downtown Salem might attempt to keep food carts from establishing a long-term "pod" in the area. Or maybe even ban temporarily positioned carts.

…This seems really dumb to me, a few restaurants trying to stifle dining competition from food carts in Salem's urban core.

I was at a city council meeting where representatives of Venti's, Gamberetti's, and Napoleon's (will be re-opening its crepe cafe soon) testified that they feared losing business to downtown food carts. 

Whoever the restaurants are, they need to rethink their irrational opposition to food carts in downtown Salem. 

Last Tuesday I had to get my Mini Cooper serviced in Portland. Instead of waiting at the dealership, I asked for a ride to downtown. Chatting with the pleasant shuttle driver, I said that I was a vegetarian and needed some lunch.

"Oh, you should go to the 10th Street Food Truck pod. It's a whole block of food trucks. I recently had some great Indonesian food there."

I took her advice. And had an excellent veggie meal from the Rolling Gourmet Fusion food truck. The shuttle driver was right: food trucks lined the entire 10th and Alder block, all four sides. 

Downtown Portland restaurants also are thriving. Here's an excerpt from my Strange Up Salem column, "Embrace downtown food carts." 

Food carts are a big success in Portland, drawing national acclaim from Bon Appétit magazine and CNN. So what’s not to like about having a vibrant food cart scene everywhere in Salem, including downtown?

Nothing. But to some people here change is scary even when it is for the better. Diversity, creativity, more eating options… Eek!

At the July 14 city council meeting I was surprised to hear several councilors and restaurant owners talk about their Big Fear that people would flock to a downtown food cart pod and — oh no, the horror — enjoy eating there!

Theoretically, possibly, just maybe, the worry was that some of these people might choose a quick and easy food cart meal over a sit-down restaurant offering.

Well, this is called competition and free enterprise.

Even in the People’s Republic of Portland, where downtown food cart pods harmoniously coexist with restaurants. On SW 9th and Alder there are more than 60 food carts; on SW 4th and Hall, 25 food carts.

A post on the Fusion Facebook page nailed the problem with whatever Salem restaurants are threatened by downtown food trucks/carts. It quotes Bert Gall, an attorney who is the "patron saint of food trucks."

If you need protection from a food truck, maybe you weren't a great restaurant to begin with.

Right on.

Hopefully Fusion will be back in business soon downtown, along with other Salem food trucks. They don't pose a threat to downtown restaurants. But even if they did, so be it: that's what competition is all about.

I'll share some Facebook comments in reaction to the Fusion-kicked-out news as a continuation to this post. It's pretty damn clear that downtown food trucks have a lot of support from Salemians.

Salem Police Facility Task Force meeting makes my head explode

OK, don't take the title of this post literally. I couldn't be typing these words if my head had actually exploded.  But after sitting for 90 minutes, watching 3/4 of the scheduled meeting time of the Police Facility Task Force belatedly set up by Salem Mayor Anna Peterson and not-so-ably chaired by T.J. Sullivan, I felt like my head was going to burst from a combination of boredom and amazement. Not positive, pleasant amazement, like what happens when I watch highly skilled circus performers. No, this was the "are you freaking kidding me?" sort of amazement as I realized that,…

Steiner drops Oregon vaccine mandate bill. Disappointing day for science.

On the whole, I've been happy with how the Democratic leadership in the Oregon legislature have been going about the people's business.  But not today.  Killing the much-needed bill that would eliminate non-medical reasons (philosophical and religious) for not vaccinating children was a stick in the eye both to the health of Oregonians, and to those, like me, who care about using science as a guide to social policy-making. I just sent an email to Elizabeth Steiner-Hayward, after learning from a Statesman Journal story that she has dropped Senate Bill 442.  Download Senator drops Oregon vaccine mandate bill That's a…

Let’s make daylight saving time permanent, in Oregon and everywhere

Some Oregon state legislators want to do away with daylight saving time in this state. Bad idea! We need to make daylight saving time permanent, giving Oregonians an extra hour of light in the evening year-round.  Great arguments for doing so can be found in a Vox post that is aptly named, "It's time to make daylight saving time year-round." Looking at the lobbying groups in favor of DST, however, hints at the real benefit. DST means that people who work a standard day shift (and kids who go to school during the day) get more daylight after work. Manufacturers like…

Why Salemians should come to the March 11 Police Facility Task Force meeting

Richard Reid, a founding member of Salem City Watch, has put out an informative email message about the urgent need for people concerned about the direction Salem is going, and the quality of life here, to come to one of the final meetings of the Mayor's Blue Ribbon Police Facility Task Force: Wednesday, March 11, 6 to 8 pm, Broadway Commons (upstairs), 1300 Broadway St. NE, Salem I went to the last Task Force meeting, but got there late and didn't speak during the public comment time. Which, appropriately, was at the beginning of the meeting, when it should be.…

Another City of Salem “what the hell…?” moment

I'm used to City of Salem officials doing stuff that makes me scratch my head in bafflement. In fact, it's amazing that I've got any head hair left, given the many "what the hell is going on here?" moments those of us who follow goings-on at City Hall have been exposed to recently.  -- Cutting down the five beautiful U.S. Bank trees for no good reason. -- Trying to take over part of Riverfront Park for an access road to a private development.-- Planning to install downtown parking meters without first talking to businesses there. -- Demolishing historic Howard Hall…

Salem Weekly’s A.P. Walther gets Media Environmental Award

OK, it isn't a Pulitzer prize. But pretty darn close: the Salem Business Journal has awarded A.P. Walther, publisher of Salem Weekly, the first SBJ Media Environmental Award for outstanding coverage of environmental topics. I'll admit that I was surprised to come across this story on the very last news page, p. 25, of the March 2015 Salem Business Journal. When I see a fresh issue of the monthly SBJ, I usually pick one up -- since they lurk in a free box on the Court Street sidewalk next to a Salem Weekly box where I'll also score a bi-weekly…

Some 1970’ish photos stir up wonderings about time and identity

It was like seeing a ghost. Except, the ghost was me, and I'm still alive. The first startling image that popped up in my Facebook feed yesterday was of the 1970 (I believe) wedding of my best friend in elementary and high school, Ken Hart. There I am, standing to the groom's right in the photo, all bearded, long-haired, and dressed-up.  I have absolutely no memory of the wedding. I haven't given a single thought to it, so far as I know, for as long as I can remember. Yet... I obviously was there. Well, let's put it this way:…