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About Northwest labor press. (Portland , Ore.) 1987-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 2, 2012)
...Building ‘the cloud’ in Central Oregon (From Page 1) Local 29, Cement Masons Local 555, Heat and Frost Insulators Local 36, Painters Local 10, Roofers Local 49, Operating Engineers Local 701, Car- penters, and Laborers. Burger, a business agent for Tu- alatin-based Local 290 who lives in Redmond, explained why the giant tech companies like the Prineville area so much: 1) Data centers need to keep their closely packed servers cool, and the high desert climate in Central Oregon is great for that purpose. “We have 300 days a year with freezing temperatures,” he said, “so the area offers lots of free cooling and low humidity.” Low humidity is even more impor- tant than low temperatures. That’s be- cause where humidity is low, super- high-tech data centers can use a version of low-tech swamp cooler technology that dates back to ancient Persia. On a second story — above the long halls of servers — evaporating water can cool very efficiently. The high desert’s natu- ral cooling capability means data cen- ters there don’t need to rely on mechan- ical air conditioning, which provides a huge cost savings. 2) Even with the natural or “free cooling,” data centers still require a lot of power and Central Oregon has lots of cheap hydroelectric power available. Mike Baker, a member of IBEW Local 280 employed at Rosendin Electric, installs a buss fuse at Building 1 of Facebook’s data center complex in Prineville. Prineville sits just four miles off Bon- neville Power Administration’s (BPA) main transmission line to California, and the agency is speeding up expan- sion of a substation to serve the new data centers. Andrew Blum, a writer at Wired magazine, told the Oregonian newspa- per recently that data centers “are kind of like the aluminum smelters of the In- ternet.” In fact, data centers are now using more and more of the electricity once used to power the region’s aluminum plants before they were shut down. The Northwest Power Council projects that data centers may be using 10 percent of the Northwest’s energy — two-thirds of the aluminum industries peak in the 1980s. Put in perspective, Oregon data centers already are using as much elec- tricity as 239,000 homes. 3) Oregon offers huge tax advan- tages to high-tech industries, including data centers. No sales tax means com- panies can purchase equipment cheaper, and locating in an “enterprise zone” brings a 15-year property tax exemption on buildings and machinery. Burger related how forward-looking Crook County and Prineville city offi- cials were when they assembled huge tracts of “bare land — no farming or grazing, just sagebrush” — into enter- prise zones to attract high tech invest- ment. Jason Carr, Prineville manager of Economic Development for Central Oregon (EDCO), said another 500 to 600 acres are sitting ready for develop- ment today. Carr defended the tax breaks, point- ing out that Facebook and Apple will pay property taxes on their land, and franchise fees to the City for their elec- tricity, as well as voluntary payments in lieu of taxes. And while acknowledging that the data centers will provide very few long- term jobs, he still characterized the de- velopments as “a pretty big boon for the city.” When Facebook’s project is com- pleted, he estimates that long-term em- ployment will be “close to 100 full time employees with health benefits.” Oregon’s construction workers aren’t complaining either. Several members of Local 290 who live in Central Oregon talked to the La- bor Press prior to a union meeting in Redmond. “I sat home for a year-and-a-half. Now I’m back to the tools,” said Jeffrey Nelson, who has 21 years in the trade. Nelson said he enjoys the regular work, too — Monday through Friday, eight hours a day, 40 hours a week, without much overtime. Foreman Steve Kerr, who lives in John Day, said it’s nice to work locally. “Now I can go home every weekend. I could make it for my grandkid’s birth,” Chris Rockwood, a plumber with a wife and two kids, was out of work for a year-and-a-half. “Eighteen months with no work was challenging,” he said. Foreman Steve Kerr, who lives in John Day, pointed out how nice it is to work locally. “Now I can go home every weekend. I could make it for my grandkid’s birth,” he said. he said. Fitter Brent Bishop said before Face- book broke ground he sat out of work for a year. “It was real ugly. I lost my insurance. This is the steadiest and (Turn to Page 8) DON’T FORGET TO VOTE MARY NOLAN FOR CITY COUNCIL PROUDLY ENDORSED BY: Portland Firefighters Association IBEW Local 48 AFSCME Local 189, Local 328, Council 75 SEIU Local 49 ILWU Local 8 and Oregon State Council Portland Police Association Columbia Pacific Building Trades Roofers Local 49 Sheet Metal Workers Local 16 Carpenters Local 156 Teamsters Joint Council 37 Painters & Allied Trades District Co. 5 Laborers Local 320 Operating Engineers Local 701 Laborers Local 296, Local 320 and District Council With a record of protecting economic fairness and advancing family-wage jobs. (Paid for and authorized by Mary Nolan for City Council) NOVEMBER 2, 2012 NORTHWEST LABOR PRESS PAGE 5