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About Northwest labor press. (Portland , Ore.) 1987-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 20, 2015)
NORTHWEST LABOR PRESS | November 20 , 2015 | PAGE 5 ...Portland City Council: No new fossil fuel infrastructure From Page 1 equality in our state by the city taking a stand against the work- ing class to earn a living in these sectors.” Myers was joined by Labor- ers Local 737 President Dave Tischer and IBEW Local 48 po- litical director Joe Esmonde in speaking against the resolutions. “Basically what Portland is doing is taking on the fight of special interests,” Tischer said. “I believe these resolutions are bad for jobs, bad for business, they’re bad policy, and they’re bad for Portland.” Esmonde lamented that the City didn’t reach out to minority communities, and challenged climate change activists at the hearing to have the same pas- sion on income inequality. Es- monde served on a City fossil fuel export advisory committee, which met twice. “We were told we’d have in- put into anything coming out of that committee,” Esmonde told City Council. “We’ve had none.” But other union leaders at the Nov. 4 hearing spoke in favor of the resolutions. Cager Clabaugh, vice president of In- ternational Longshore and Warehouse Union Local 4 in Vancouver, said his union voted unanimously to oppose a new oil terminal, in part for safety concerns, and because a spill could put other terminals out of action. “One of the first jobs I had as a longshoreman was putting a lumber mill on a ship in pieces to send to the Philippines,” Clabaugh said. “You can look over the Lewis and Clark Bridge to see all the timber we send out. Let’s not make it easy to send our natural resources overseas. Let’s export finished products.” And schoolteacher Ned Has- call delivered a message from Portland Association of Teach- ers president Gwen Sullivan. PAT’s Oct. 28 rep assembly passed a unanimous resolution in favor of stopping all new large-scale fossil fuel projects in Portland. “We support these res- olutions on behalf of our chil- dren and their future in our city and in our world,” Sullivan said. A regionwide controversy The Portland resolutions are the latest development in a region- wide controversy. More than a dozen large fossil fuel infra- structure projects have been pro- posed in the Pacific Northwest in recent years, including the proposed $500 million Pembina propane export facility at the Port of Portland and the pro- WATCH IT ONLINE See the whole Nov. 4 hearing at http://bit.ly/1QKniFb. Testimony from building trades union leaders starts at 3:55:00, from ILWU at 1:02:55, and from PAT at 3:13:10. posed Tesoro-Savage oil termi- nal at the Port of Vancouver. Mayor Hales at first wel- comed the Pembina project, which had an agreement to be union built, only to later deliver the killing blow. The Tesoro Savage proposal is still waiting for approval from the State of Washington. If con- structed, it would be the nation’s largest oil-by-rail terminal — a $100 million, 42-acre oil-han- dling plant. It would enable up to 15 million gallons a day of crude oil to be transferred from the Bakken fields of North Dakota — by train through the Columbia Gorge — to ships bound for West Coast refineries. The terminal has been a hot political issue in Vancouver. On Nov. 3, project opponent Eric LaBrant won election to the Port of Vancouver by 56 percent, in a vote seen as a referendum on the project. LaBrant testified in favor of the Portland City Coun- cil resolution at the Nov. 12 hearing. “Coal, oil, and gas are actu- ally distractions from the kinds of jobs we need to bring into this region,” Labrant said. That echoed language in the second resolution that sought to down- play the jobs impact: “Eco- nomic opportunities presented by expanding fossil fuel infra- structure are modest, with few jobs and little value added when compared to the related environ- mental costs,” the city council resolution declared. In a nod to jobs concerns, Commissioner Nick Fish was able to add a requirement that city staff will analyze the eco- nomic impacts of any proposed code changes, especially im- pacts on local blue-collar jobs. Fish also was able to add a non- binding clause saying the City will “explore opportunities to invest in Portland’s ‘human in- frastructure’ by supporting pro- grams to retrain our workforce as the city transitions to a clean energy economy.” In the end, the resolution op- posing oil trains passed 4-0 (Commissioner Dan Saltzman was absent), and the resolution opposing fossil fuel infrastruc- ture passed 5-0. And they’re un- likely to be overturned: State Treasurer Ted Wheeler, the lead- ing candidate for mayor, said he supports the resolutions. Federal law limits cities’ abil- ity to stop trains and interstate pipelines, but they have broad authority over local land use is- sues. The Portland ordinance wouldn’t limit seismic or other improvements to existing fossil fuel infrastructure, and it would- n’t affect “end-user” infrastruc- ture like gas stations or natural gas hookups for new buildings. But it would prevent proposals like Pembina’s from gaining fu- ture approval. Keystone XL RIP The Portland ordinance also came at the same time a much bigger fight played out nation- ally over the Keystone XL pipeline. The U.S. State Depart- ment has spent seven years re- viewing Trans Canada’s appli- cation for permission to build the pipeline, which would bring oil from the western Alberta tar sands to refineries along the Gulf Coast. Between the pas- sage of Portland’s first and sec- ond ordinances, President Obama finally took a side: against. He concluded it would not serve the national interest of the United States, and rejected the application. All three Democratic presi- dential candidates oppose Key- stone, while all the Republican candidates are for it. New Year’s Resolution! Membership subscription to the NW LABOR PRESS Local Union Annual Group Rate of 25 or more subscriptions only $9.60 each That’s less than the cost of a first class stamp Members receive: • Local labor news twice a month • Official Meeting Notice announcement • Free Classified Ad section CALL 503-288-3311