I tell-all about Salem’s U.S. Bank tree killings in The Valley View video

Aside from my bad hair day, I'm pleased with this 30-minute interview about my recently-released report about how the City of Salem and U.S. Bank cut down five beautiful, healthy, large trees in downtown Salem for no good reason.  I enjoyed talking with Ken Adams on his CCTV "The Valley View" program. Ken gently told me ahead of time, "I wear a jacket and tie," which made me decide to dress up and wear a Hawaiian shirt. Hey, I usually just wear t-shirts, given my casual retired lifestyle. The interview will be shown on cable Channel 21 at these times:…

City Council candidate lies to Statesman Journal, gets their endorsement anyway

Great job, Salem Weekly -- putting up an online story about how Ward 6 city council candidate Daniel Benjamin lied to the Statesman Journal about his criminal record. Benjamin claimed in his candidate questionnaire he didn't have one, but actually he has been convicted of assault twice.  Here's how the story begins: Earlier this month Salem’s Statesman Journal newspaper endorsed a candidate for the Salem City Council who lied to them on his candidate questionnaire.   The endorsement was made while the paper possessed documentation of the misrepresentations made by the candidate – Daniel Benjamin, who is running for the open seat in…

I channel the dead U.S. Bank trees’ city council endorsements

Back in 2006 I had a session with a Hollywood afterlife medium, Marcel Cairo. Eight years later, I'm able to contact the deceased on my own.  After releasing my tell-all report about the needless killing of the five U.S. Bank trees in downtown Salem, I've been receiving strong messages from the trees. They're really happy that I wrote: "Outrage: Salem's U.S. Bank tree killings" The true story of how City officials and the bank president cut down five large, healthy, beautiful downtown trees for no good reason, and misled citizens about why they did it. Download Outrage - Salem's U.S. Bank…

Outrage: the true story of Salem’s U.S. Bank tree killings

I like the subtitle of my just-released "Outrage: Salem's U.S. Bank tree killings" report. The true story of how City officials and the bank president cut down five large, healthy, beautiful downtown trees for no good reason, and misled citizens about why they did it. The highly readable report is based on new information I got about this debacle after forking out $726.61 for public record requests that reveal for the first time how truly outrageous the tree killings were.Download Outrage - Salem's U.S. Bank tree killings  (1.5 MB PDF file) These trees were entirely innocent. They weren't diseased. The sidewalk…

Salem Community Vision expands its horizons

Salemians (the only correct name for people who live in Salem, Oregon) should take a look at a new page on the Salem Community Vision website.  I'm intimately familiar with the Projects page, because I put it up fairly recently. I volunteered to handle the SCV website; it's been fun most of the time, except when it isn't (anyone who deals with web design knows what I mean). So far Salem Community Vision mostly has been focused on saving taxpayers $40 million via a much smarter alternative to the City's over-priced $80 million police facility and Civic Center renovation proposal. …

Yikes! Salem’s invasion of the mind snatchers!

Read all about it in my Strange Up Salem column that's in the current Salem Weekly issue. We've got to get the word out to everybody in town! The May election has revealed the presence of... mind snatchers!  Salem’s invasion of the mind snatchers The mind control device wasn’t visible.  Not surprising. I figured the Chamber of Commerce surgeons would be too skilled to leave any traces. They’d be the best money could buy. So after an election forum I decided to dive into the belly of the beast.  I looked Sheronne Blasi, a City Council candidate, in the eye.…

I’m so outraged at Jen Selter’s “butt selfies,” I had to look at them three times

My intellectual interest in Jen Selter arose when I read a piece on Jezebel, "We Need to Talk About 'Butt Selfie Queen' Jen Selter." Though I noticed two photos of Selter at the top of the page, I hurried past them to study what I hoped would be a serious post-modern feminist critique of the objectification of women -- a practice that I have heard about, but naturally have no personal experience with, given my lifelong heterosexual male practice of paying attention only to a woman's inner essence, not her bodily form. The article, sadly, turned out to be a…

John Oliver rants about Oregon’s “fucking idiots”

Hard to disagree with John Oliver: we do have ourselves some fucking idiots in this here state. But, hey, give us some credit.  It takes a special skill of sorts to spend about $250 million on a Cover Oregon website that is almost completely useless. Achieving that level of abject incompetence is impressive in a certain disturbing way.  Nice to see that Oregon can be made fun of on a national stage, Oliver's new Last Week Tonight show. A video of his right-on rant can be watched here. (scroll down to bottom of page)

Ugh! My review of new Statesman Journal web site

I had high hopes for the supposed newly-local freshly-designed Salem Statesman Journal web site. But my first impression of it was Ugh! Subsequent impressions haven't been any better. I've been a frequent visitor to the online Statesman Journal, even though I'm a print subscriber. My main reasons: (1) Commenting on a story, or reading comments from others; (2) Saving a PDF copy of a recent story; (3) Seeing if there is any breaking news that will appear in tomorrow's paper. The new design makes all of this more difficult. But an even bigger gripe is the whole look and feel…

Cherriots needs to get its Salem public transit act together

Oh, geez. What a letdown. Not an uncommon experience here in not-cool-by-comparison Salem, Oregon -- where we are regularly and spectacularly overshadowed by nearby much more with-it cities: Portland, Corvallis, Eugene. Thanks to No 3rd Bridge plus my comrades in local blogging, Salem Breakfast on Bikes and LoveSalem, I learned that Salem-Keizer Transit, a.k.a. Cherriots, is poised to cave on demanding that a new bridge across the Willamette be mass-transit friendly. The Cherriots board is meeting as I write this. Maybe they will change their mind at the last moment. Regardless, just the fact that a mass-transit organization is willing…

Oregon League of Conservation Voters blew Blasi endorsement

When I heard Sheronne Blasi say at last Friday's City Club meeting, "I was endorsed by the Oregon League of Conservation Voters," a what the hell? alarm bell rang in my head. Blasi is a Ward 2 candidate in the 2014 City Council race. She favors building a $400 million unneeded, unwanted, and unpaid for third bridge across the Willamette River.  The bridge would be an environmental, conservation, and land use disaster. Let us count some of the ways: -- The west end would land outside of the urban growth boundary, so the bridge would need exceptions to four statewide land…

No Typepad for past five days, so no blogging or blog

It's been a frustrating five days or so for Typepad, my blogging service. Also, for me and other Typepad customers who were taken offline by a nasty DDoS (distributed denial of service) hacker attack.  Actually the attacker jerks are worse than ordinary hackers, since apparently they made a ransom demand to Typepad which led to an FBI investigation.  I just noticed that my blog is back, so wanted to get an explanatory post up as soon as possible.

Civic Center police facility gets zero support from Salem city council candidates

A new police facility at the Salem Civic Center got ZERO support from nine City Council candidates at today's City Club meeting. Nada. Zilch. Not one candidate, including four who have gotten Chamber of Commerce endorsements, raised his/her hand when asked if a new police facility should be at the Civic Center.  The eight non-hand-raisers: Sherrone Blasi, Bradd Swank, Scott Bassett, Steve McCoid, Daniel Benjamin, Xue Lor, Jim Lewis, Christopher Proudfoot. Finally, something liberals and conservatives can agree on! The ninth, Ward 2 candidate Tom Andersen, was on an overseas business trip. A campaign supporter made a speech for him,…

Good news about Salem’s High Street trees

I just put this good news update on last night's blog post, "City of Salem kills more downtown trees for no good reason." UPDATE: After emailing Steve Ross (one of the property owners) this morning, I got a reply that he is open to trimming the trees if this can be worked out with everyone's approval. Steve said, "I love trees also." Great news. I asked to be kept informed as this approach to saving the trees moves forward. Many thanks to Steve. And to Elwood Newhouse of Elwood's Tree Service, who offered up his professional opinion of the trees' condition.…

City of Salem kills more downtown trees for no good reason

UPDATE: After emailing Steve Ross (one of the property owners) this morning, I got a reply that he is open to trimming the trees if this can be worked out with everyone's approval. Steve said, "I love trees also." Great news. I asked to be kept informed as this approach to saving the trees moves forward. Many thanks to Steve. And to Elwood Newhouse of Elwood's Tree Service, who offered up his professional opinion of the trees' condition. "It's all bullshit." This is a conversation opener that's guaranteed to capture my interest. Especially when I'm talking with someone about why…

Scott Bassett calls out the Chamber’s “Create Clones PAC”

Scott Bassett, the candidate voters should choose in the Ward 4 City Council race, spoke at last Saturday's Salem CityWatch meeting. I liked Scott's new term for the Salem Chamber of Commerce's Create Jobs PAC: the Create Clones PAC.  He's right. The four candidates endorsed by the Chamber -- Sheronne Blasi, Steve McCoid, Daniel Benjamin, Jim Lewis -- all have the same tax-and-spend position on the unneeded $400 million bridge across the Willamette that has been proposed. The bridge would take hundreds of dollars a year out of taxpayer pockets for decades, yet won't help with rush hour congestion and will destroy…

Sometimes great video art just happens

My wife and I do not consider ourselves great artists. However, if you wish to acknowledge us as such after watching the video we made today, feel free. When art just happens; when a soul-stirring creation is born from the ever flowing well-spring of spontaneity; when the actions of man, woman, and dog flow together in a never-to-be-seen-again moment (well, 105 second/moments, to be exact) -- such can only be called great art. Though of course Laurel and I are too humble to call our You Tube video that. Again, it is for others to decide whether the title of…

Salemians mourn trimmed trees — and U.S. Bank’s cut-down trees

It's been about a year since U.S. Bank and the City of Salem cut down five, large, healthy beautiful trees in the downtown historic district for no good reason.  Today the Statesman Journal ran a story about a less outrageous, yet still disturbing tree tale: "Salem residents mourn trimmed trees." Download Salem residents mourn trimmed trees (Caution: this excerpt from the story begins with an offensive word, Salemites. The official term for residents of Salem is Salemian. I know this, because I have issued that Official Proclamation from the height of my Strange Up Salem perch. Statesman Journal, Obey! ) Salemites are…

I’m grateful for 10 years of Salem Weekly

Before the current issue came out, A.P. Walther, the publisher of Salem Weekly, told me that the cover story would be the 10 year anniversary of our town's alternative newspaper. A.P. asked if I had any favorite stories from that decade of reporting on issues that the Statesman Journal, our decidedly traditional newspaper, almost entirely ignores.  I replied: Hmmmm. I have thoughts. Not a favorite story. My basic thought is…  Gratitude.   So many times (like every issue), I’ve been grateful that Salem has an alternative newspaper voice. Salem Weekly makes me realize that there are many people in this…

Salem Chamber of Commerce tries to buy City Council seats

Read all about it in the Salem newspaper, Salem Weekly, that prints what you won't read in the Statesman Journal. In this case, facts and opinion about how the Salem Chamber of Commerce and other special interest PACs (political action committees) are spending big money on City Council races that should be all about the public interest. Facts, in a Special Interests Dominate Salem City Campaigns story. Four weeks before ballots will be mailed, notable disparities can be seen between funding amounts and sources for Salem city council candidates.  The totals suggest lopsided special interest funding. Voters concerned about the…