Posted inOpinion

Congratulations, Jodie – and let’s set the record straight.

As I have already told Jodie Barram, I am happy for her and I think she will do a good job in filling Bill Friedman's council position. I have worked on the Bend Planning Commission with Jodie for many years, and have found that she takes a cautious and reasoned approach to her decisions. I look forward to working with her in some capacity with the City in the future.

However, I want to address some "misrepresentations" of my positions in Eric Flowers' article "One Way or Another: After losing election, Barram wins council appointment." First, while I do disagree with the current vision of Juniper Ridge, I have never said that I want to dismantle the City's Juniper Ridge Economic Development Plan. I believe there should be more industrial land and less research park. It will be the industrial land that will help create family wage jobs for all segments of the population. I have stated publicly that it is time to let the Juniper Ridge Management Committee do its task of guiding the future of Juniper Ridge. I wouldn't stand in the way of that process.

Posted inCulture

Our Picks for the Week of 12/3-12/11

Leif James & The Struggle
wednesday 3
We profile the new
reinvention of Leif James in the Sound section. Read that, then
immediately head to the Moon to see him and the Struggle rip it up with
an all-out acoustic rock show. 8pm. Silver Moon Brewing Co. 24 NW
Greenwood Ave.
DJ Barisone
thursday 4
Yeah, we've
spilled a lot of ink about DJ Barisone over the last year, but our
prolificacy of writing on this man is worth it - he throws some of the
best (if not the best) parties in town whenever he's behind the wheels.
So, spend your Thursday with Barisone for some worldly jams and healthy
amounts of funkalicious party music. 10pm. Bendistillery Martini Bar,
850 NW Brooks St.

Posted inNews

Back To the Drawing Board: Homes for acres deal at Skyline hits the wall

A proposed deal that has divided conservationists about the best way to
preserve a large chunk of undeveloped forest land just west of Bend has
been shelved by the property owner as it weighs its options.

Fidelity
National Timber Investments, which owns the 33,000-acre tree farm known
as Skyline Forest had planned to ask the Oregon legislature to sign off
on an unprecedented plan that would have allowed the company to
essentially donate most of the forest to the Deschutes Basin Land Trust
in exchange for permission to build several thousand homes on the
remaining acres between Bend and Sisters. But at this point, the
company has essentially pulled the plug on the proposal because of
state planning hurdles and a lack of local support for the deal.

Posted inNews

Surviving the Blogoshpere

All For This?If you were to enter the word "Suterra" into your Google search bar, you'd get a long list of results, the third of which would read: Suterra Buys Bend Oregon - New Bio Weapon Factory… from a California based website. That's news to those of us living here in Bend who know Suterra as a small spinoff of one of Bend's longest running and most respected high tech companies, Bend Research.

The company, which employs less than 100 people, specializes in producing non-toxic chemicals that serve as an alternative to traditional pesticides by confusing breeding insects. But to hear Internet posters tell it, Suterra is a bio-weapons manufacturer on par with a pre-Gulf War Saddam Hussein whose operations are secretly funded by the Bush administration. This information is found on page after page of Internet material and the prolificacy of blogging on Suterra has increased in recent weeks after it became public that the company was working with the city of Bend on a deal that would sell the company a plot of land in the Juniper Ridge development.

It goes without saying that blogs have reinvented the way information is consumed by the public. But blogging has also allowed for a rampant spread of misinformation and it seems Suterra has been made into an Internet boogeyman of sorts. Suterra has been the target of a wide array of groups in Northern California where the company's pheromone-based pest control products were sprayed on entire communities. Now, with the company moving to Juniper Ridge, it seems that Bend's vocal group of bloggers have jumped on the Suterra blog bandwagon, in some cases teaming up with the California bloggers, creating a sort of perfect storm of unfiltered misinformation.

Posted inOpinion

A Noxious Shade of Green Energy

Everybody - well, almost - loves green energy. It holds the promise of cutting our reliance on imported oil, making our environment cleaner and reducing global warming.
But all colors of green are not the same, and a wind energy project being pushed in southeastern Oregon near Steens Mountain is a rather noxious shade.
Actually, to be technical, it's three wind energy projects, not one. Under state law, any project that will generate 105 megawatts of power or more has to be reviewed by the state Energy Facility Siting Committee. So the developers of the Steens project, a Washington-based outfit called Columbia Energy Partners, have set up three dummy corporations and are presenting proposals for three separate "wind farms," each producing 104 megawatts.

Posted inOpinion

White House Washing: X-mas decorations, recession bulletins, and more

Have a white washed ChristmasMuch to the chagrin of Blue America, the whole impeach Bush thing never got beyond a bumper sticker slogan. But there are still apparently some hard feelings as evidenced by the decision this week to censor one of the decorations submitted by Congress for the White House Christmas Tree.
Seattle area artist Deborah Lawrence found out earlier this week that her congressionally commissioned Christmas bulb won't be hanging this year on the Bush Christmas tree. Lawrence was one of dozens of artists tapped by Congress to submit decorations for the tree. She chose to use her submission as a tribute to her local Congressman, Rep. Jim McDermott, a left-leaning statesman who had pushed for an impeachment of Bush. Lawrence's submission, a nine-inch bulb covered in swirling red and white strips with text alluding to McDermott's support for Bush's impeachment also referenced Washington's 1919 labor strike and the state's suffrage movement. But it's the impeachment references that caught the attention of the public after McDermott started telling her friends about the political message on her submission, which was initially accepted by the White House.

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