WHAT’S HAPPENING AT Indoor Soccer Manager’s Meeting - Monday, October 10th at 4:00 pm in Multipurpose Room #4 located in the Student Recreation Center. Volleyball Managers Meeting - Tuesday, October 11th at 4:00 pm in the Ulrich Room located in the SRC. 3-on-3 Basketball Manager’s Meeting Wednesday, October 1 2th at 4:00 pm in the Ulrich Room located in the SRC. Dr. Pepper 4 on 4 Flag Football Tournament - Friday, October 14th. Entry deadline is Wednesday, October 12th, pick up an entry form in the Rec Sports Office located in 102 Esslinger Hall. This event is free! T- Shirts for all participants plus prizes and giveaways. 18-Hole Golf Scramble (2-person team) - Sunday, October 23r at Emerald Valley Golf Course. Men's, Women’s and Coed Divisions offered. The cost is $80 per team. Deadline for entries is Tuesday, October 18th. Group Cycling Classes: We still have room! Register for a non-credit group cycling class in 102 Esslinger Hall. m CELEBRATE INDIGENOUS SOLIDARITY DAY Conscious Unity for Our Common Survival Wilma Mankiller is an activist, former principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation. Her books include Mankiller. A Chief and Her People, and Every Day Is A Good Day. She is the Wayne Morse Center Chair &. visiting scholar. John Trudell is an acclaimed activist, spoken word poet, musician, film actor, co-founder and former chairman of the American Indian Movement; author of Stickman, composer of Bone Days. Monday, October 10, 2005 University of Oregon EMU Amphitheater: EMU Ballroom: 10 a.m. - 12 noon: Music and Art 3 p.m. - 5:30 p.m.: Community Speakers 5:30 p.m. - Poetry by John Trudell 7:00 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. Public leadership conversation between John Trudell and Wilma Mankill^ All events presented by the Native American Student Union, Wayne Morse Center for Law & Politics, Ethnic Studies and the Multicultural Center nRFfiON DAILY EMERALD your independent student newspaper Nicole Barker | Senior photographer Oregon attorneys Susan Marmaduke, left, Ross Day, center, and Carrie McLaren discuss the lawsuits related to Measure 37 at Friday’s symposium by the Journal of Environmental Law and Litigation at the Knight Law Center. Opposing groups gather to debate on Measure 37 Oregonians in Action and 1000 Friends of Oregon met Friday to discuss the future of the law BY CHRIS HAGAN NEWS REPORTER Foes in the battle over Oregon’s controversial Measure 37 met in a symposium at Knight Law Center Friday. Much of the debate focused on ambiguities of the law, such as what is a valid claim, which govern ment bodies have the right to give waivers and whether Measure 37 rights are transferable or not. Oregon voters approved Measure 37 last November, and the law went into effect last December. The law al lows property owners who file claims to receive compensation when new land-use laws restrict how they can develop their land. Governments can either pay the owners or waive the new law, allowing owners to use their property as the law allowed at the time of acquisition. “For government, we didn’t know what the measure meant in terms of what does it really take to have a Measure 37 claim,” Eugene City At torney Glenn Klein said. Klein noted that the lack of a leg islative answer this summer means the city is “going to spend an awful lot of money litigating over what the measure means.” Bill Moshofsky, vice president for government affairs for Oregonians in Action, the group that authored Mea sure 37, said that while officials in the Oregon ballot measure process en couraged his group to craft a more compact and readable measure, the law is acceptable as written. “We believe the measure is clear enough to point the way in almost every direction in order to carry it out,” he said. Moshofsky said the law’s critics have exaggerated its ambiguities. The Oregon Legislature attempt ed to rewrite and clarify parts of the law and the claims process in its session this summer but was unable to reach a compromise. Oral argu ments were held in Marion County on Sept. 13 in a lawsuit by 1000 Friends of Oregon that challenged the constitutionality of the law. Panelists and speakers at the symposium discussed the effect the law will have on land-use plan ning. Many panelists are concerned that cities would be less likely to change land-use policy because of possible Measure 37 claims and the uncertainty about how they will be handled. “A new land-use law creates a city full of claimants,” Klein said. Carrie Richter of the law firm Garvey Schubert Barer said she is concerned that governments will be paralyzed into inaction because of the law. “What I fear is the lack of plan ning and the fear that will result from Measure 37 and its ilk as it evolves,” Richter said. Others see Measure 37 as a deter rent to land-use policies that have already gone too far. “To the extent that Measure 37 in hibits some of that, more power to it,” Moshofsky said. “Measure 37 provides a much-needed balance. ” The future of the law is currently up in the air, and while members of Oregonians in Action are confident they will win the constitutional challenges, Carrie McClaren of 1000 Friends of Oregon believes the law will eventually have to change. “I don’t think, as written, the law will be the same in 15-20 years,” McClaren said. While most of the proceedings centered on the legal issues sur rounding the law, the political flavor of the debate was not lost. The issue of whether or not Ore gon voters understood the measure when they approved it was brought up frequently, and a discussion on the death of the rewrite in the legis lature offered the opportunity for each side to point to the other as the cause of the meltdown. “I think most of the issues are po litical issues disguised as legal is sues,” Oregonians in Action Direc tor of Legal Affairs Ross Day said after the symposium. Despite the strong feelings, the symposium was more an academic debate than an emotional confronta tion; the panelists traded opinions on different facets of the law instead of shouting each other down. The possible tension was made light of in a panel on Measure 37 lit igation. McClaren skipped a part of her presentation and said if it hap pened again to “just kick me.” The crowd broke into laughter and Day offered his assurance that he and McClaren were friends and that he wouldn’t “kick her now.” “Just because we disagree with each other doesn’t mean we want to slit each other’s throats,” Day said after the panel. “We can disagree without being disagreeable.” The symposium was sponsored by the School of Law’s Journal of Environmental Law and Litigation. Contact the city, state politics reporter at chagan@dailyemerald.com