Oregon Strategist

Reinventing the Oregon Dream

A Bold Earth Day

April 21, 2013 by Oregon Strategist

Portland celebrated Earth Day with high volunteer turnout as the Johnson Creek Watershed Council (“JCWC”) tilled the soil, putting down Ash tree, native grasses and shrub roots at the mouth of the creek where it meets the Willamette River. The JCWC has been a forerunner for salmon restoration efforts in the Portland region and has served as a premier example in Oregon for the transformative effect of volunteerism and local compassion for habitat renewal, sustainability, and species co-existence particularly in an urban environment.

This Earth Day weekend provides Oregonians a special opportunity to reflect on our vision for the state’s rivers and tributaries – perhaps our most precious resource here in the Northwest. Oregon’s waters have irrigated our farms, brought energy to our homes and businesses, and have made possible the transportation of goods across the state. The times, however, are largely different from those when the first federal levees rose out of the waters of the Columbia River by the Public Works Administration and President Roosevelt’s New Deal during the 1930s.

Over the previous five to ten years, much effort has been made to remove four obsolete dams on the lower Snake River: Ice Harbor, Lower Monumental, Little Goose, and Lower Granite. Their removal could bring such potential benefits as new nature tourism and fishing, outweighing the costs of dredging backed-up silt and dam maintenance. However, these dams remain standing today. And our fish populations continue to bear the impact.

A chasm stands between what we, as those who live and are sustained by the river, desire for our future and the removal, not merely of dams, but of outdated ideas. New ideas must take shape that meet our energy demands but that leave our rivers flowing more like rivers and less like a gauntlet for fish. As we learn to become less energy dependent and, likewise, as energy is created at a more local level and stored in a more efficient manner, perhaps our need to dam their flow will wane. In the meantime, politicians, elected and appointed officials, and administrators must take bold steps, perhaps even overturning unpopular international treaties regulating flood control, in order to realize our vision for a renewable and sustainable Oregon.

Today, Oregonians are uniting behind the salmon and wild fish populations that are crucial not only for the full expression of our rivers and streams but also for the future generations of our state. Our uniting begins and ends with the time we volunteer restoring these waters. Our uniting begins and ends in local efforts such as those of the Clackamas County Democrats, who, last Thursday, voted to endorse a different kind of levy (Measure 26-152) that would be used to enhance the renewal and restorative efforts of organizations like the JCWC.

To paraphrase from David James Duncan’s inspiring keynote address to the “Extinction Stops Here” rally in 2006, we’ll give up fighting for the salmon’s birth rivers and safe passage to the sea on the same day we see a wild salmon give up migrating. And we all know that they will never give up.

Filed Under: Portland Tagged With: Clackamas, Clackamas County, Clackamas County Democrats, Columbia River, Dam Removal, Earth Day, JCWC, Johnson Creek, Johnson Creek Watershed Council, Measure 26-152, Oregon Dams, Restoration, Salmon, Snake River, Volunteerism, Willamette River

Local Plight, Federal Bite: Portland Community Budget Forum 4-11-2013

April 13, 2013 by Oregon Strategist

Local Plight, Federal Bite: Portland Community Budget Forum 4-11-2013

The City of Portland held its Community Budget Forum yesterday evening with Mayor Charlie Hales, Commissioner Nick Fish, Commissioner Dan Saltzman, and Commissioner Amanda Fritz presiding.

Educational, homeless and environmental groups dominated the floor and commenting session in the packed conference center at Montgomery Park. Audience members chanted “No More Cuts” as students implored the City Council to preserve funding for SUN Community Schools and the Multnomah Youth Commission. Hacienda CDC and Portland’s Clark Center also made a splash alongside supporters of the Buckman community pool.

Portland is a beautiful city, due in large part to the efforts of organizations like Friends of Trees (which stands to have 50% of its public funding cut from its budget and, of which, Mayor Charlie Hayes is on the board). The tranquility of the upper Willamette and the pace and lifestyle in Multnomah is creating an influx of folks from out-of-state, seeking a better existence and community. Portland is a growing community, and despite high unemployment figures, it is shaping itself into a formidable small business and incubator environment. Now is not the time to sell the future short.

Difficult economic times has required city, county and state governments as well as the federal government to make difficult decisions as to the programs that will continue to receive funding and those that will experience cuts or obsolescence. In these times, citizens should be thinking about the structure and relationship of these entities to one another and to the citizenry.

Healthy skepticism of government is only possible where such skepticism is impactful. The power and dominance of Washington D.C. override any such expressions and mute the voices that were so abundant at yesterday’s gathering. The fiscal cliff and sequestration are perhaps among the first signs of a dismantling of this industrial political complex, however, our state’s leaders in Washington D.C. need to begin the process of giving power back to their localities and citizenry – or face their own obsolescence.

Yesterday, Mayor Hales and the Commissioners physically heard their citizens’ outcries. Direct democracy of this kind does not exist at the faceless level of federal governance. Democracy at this level is a derivative of popular support.

The conversation surrounding local budgets should be one of the highest priorities for an Oregon politician in Washington D.C. Their concern for local budgets should coincide with the removal of our troops from foreign soil, the cleanup of antiquated federal infrastructure that has compromised our waterways and forests, and the protection of the principals of our Constitution for all citizens, regardless of color, creed or orientation.

Under the above circumstances, the conversation at yesterday’s Community Budget Forum would have sounded radically different. Folks would have been discussing further ways to collaborate and integrate. Instead, the health and well being of youth, women, minorities, the homeless and vulnerable are being jeopardized by the City’s cuts. Changing this outcome requires Oregon politicians in Washington D.C. to make the short-term sacrifices of power necessary for long-term care of our cities and state.

Filed Under: Portland Tagged With: Community Budget, Friends of Trees, Mayor Hales, Portland

« Previous Page

Recent Posts

  • Floating Solar: Smoothing the Energy Cycle
  • FERC Denies Jordan Cove, For Now.
  • Prison Reform and Mandatory Minimum Sentencing
  • ODA’s Beetles Take a Bite Out of Portland
  • Chemical Forestry: A Clear Cut Challenge

Tags

Afghanistan animals BLM Bureau of Land Management Columbia River Congress corporations Crony Capitalism deficit economics Economy ecosystem Education eminent domain environment Europe Federal federal government Government House of Representatives Immigration Reform income inequality Iraq Jeff Merkley military Monsanto Oregon Partisan politics Peter DeFazio Portland Senate Senator Merkley Sequester Spending Syria tax taxes tax reform trade deficit trade surplus United States War Washington D.C. water wealth inequality

Copyright © 2025 · News Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in