Editorial Now & Then Dev. Ilults What a long strange year it s been The paper you hold in your hand was at this time Iasi year a four pager 'one broadsheet) that was more or less one big ad for Upper Left Coast Productions music listings, w ith a blurb on recycling some pithy sayings a little home grown philosophy by Dr karkeys and some lovely line drawing by Ms Lackaff A merciful few of the one thousand eiamples printed remain This present issue has sixteen pages and a press run of five thousand In the last year we have introduced you to a lot of folks who live w rite draw play music, run businesses, and are concerned about life on the Edge in the Valley, in the Northwest in this country, and on this planet We have attempted to be a different voice, a voice that does not shout in your face, but speaks to your heart and your brain Some folks think we have a lot of ads. so we make a lot of money No, we are not running these ads for the money though without money we can l run these ads These ads are a directory of people in business whom we think our readers deserve to know about Some are doing well enough or like what we are doing enough to support us So enioy the paper, enjoy the ads and we hope to be talking to you again next issue and next year I n j p r e R - L L r r E D & E I E a ito r /P a b lis h e r The Beloved Reverend Billy Lloyd Hulta A ssisto al E d ito r /G r a p h ic i E d ito r The Wonderful Ms SaJly Louise la c k a ff l a p r a r is a t i a a a i E a g ia e e r Dr Karkeys V i l d l i f e / M a t i c R e p o rte r Peter Spud Siegel S cience E d ito r /V e ic e o f Renton Michael Burgess E n v ir e n a e n t o l C o n s u lta n t Kathleen K rush as F o re ig n C o rre s p o n d e n t Bill Wicklsnd C o rre s p o n d e n t nt la rg e Soup M e a n v k ile ia N o w p o rt Alei LaFolleUe Lncnl C olor Peter Lindsey Alison Pride Mary Ann Radmacher-Hershey Margi Curtis Tom Carlson and many more M r. Baseball Himself On th e edge Dave Bartholet and a Cast of Thousands1 more stuff ... Your beloved Rev /Ed is just a little upsei’ Not unusual in itself, but this lime there is more than ample reason Oregon is a unique slate We have a history of wanting to get on with it and solve our problems w ith what used to be called common sense W’e are famous for our Bottle Bill, we already have a Motor Voter Bill, when the Energy Crisis happened our Gov Tom McCall (the last Republican your editor had the privilege of voting fo ri suggested we could cut gas lines in half w ith an odd/even license plate plan and we also have the Initiative process, originally called the Oregon Solution This is our method of direct voting by the people to deal with problems the Legislature is unwilling or unable to handle Some good and some bad things have resulted from this type of direct Democracy’ Measure 5 sent a very clear message that property taxes in Oregon were too high and that people wanted the Stale to trim the fat Now they are unable to handle that We are threatened w ith cuts to the bone in education, human services and the largest campaign so far in a long history of thwarted Sales Tax schemes So this Legislature must be aw fully busy dealing w ith Ihese issues Right? No! Guess what s on the front burners lately' Whether every house m Oregon should be required to have a firearm available and someone who can use it' Disbanding ihe Ways and Means Committee so that it is twice as difficult to decide who spends whai where And of course where the City of Cannon Beach puts the money n collects from Motel Taxes and our local laws as they concern Short Term Rentals' Apparently Rep Calouri has a few empty units in the Tolovana Inn during the w'inier and would like some of the city tax money to go to promoting tourism (Might we suggest a fu ll page ad in the Edge?) House Bill 3322 it s not just going to keep Cannon Beach busy all winter, it w ill keep ihe Legislature busy doing anything but what they are payed to do' (Oh we mean their salaries Not what they earn on the side i And then there is HB 2747. which concerns itself w ith zoning laws in Cannon Beach and Seaside We are told there are more important issues at stake than w’hal it is like to live in a resort, issues like, who owns the resort' The old Golden Rule Those w ith the (»old make the Rules1 Of course a would allow you to open a Bed & Breakfast m Lake Oswego Please folks, what about doing w hat you were elected to do You can work for your buddies and vour own interests on your own time solve the big problems firs t' W’e can muddle along trying in our own small town way to deal w ith our problems here You have enough to do' Just a suggestion You can fool some of the people all of the time, and all of the people some of the time, but you can't fool all of the people all of the time. A. Lincoln You can fool too many of the people, too much of the time. J. Thurbcr LE.FT LDGE. SUBSCRIPTION^ N aml of G iylh : R ecipient or VAUlUWG $U 65C A lPTlO N P l IML SLND A CHCCk OM M ONLf D ollars OAOC.A FOX 7HL UfVth LIFT LOC[ p . o . box 118 canron beach , ok TVs Svtotrybm is wortl, > Z j/rrtt ttrr ro&t afkil to J io Michael B u rg e s Behind Jthe Time« Another mystery has risen from the foggy bottom land of Salem W'e II call this one The Case of the Per loaned Commission Say you lived in a slate where blood sport was the custom where humans were not just encouraged to hit each other about the head and chest and stomp each other s soft body tissues, but were paid to do it while others watched, ate popcorn and drank beer After 100 years of concussions retinal detachments and body damage vile and various you d probably (unless your population included nothing hut sociopaths I lay down a few ground rules This is the persuasive logic that led to the formation of the Oregon Boxing and Wrestling Commission in 1985 Now we come to the mystery As we speak, the Commerce Committee (Business R L’s lo fth e Stale House of Representatives (Smothering Heights) is quietly suffocating an ugly duckling HB 2125 is a funding measure that would levy a 6 percent tax on pay- per-view boxing and wrestling events Having no shame. HB 2125 would ask the Don kings of the world (a k a . Those With Diamond Pinky Rings! to leave some scraps on the table after loading the cash in the trucks Were Don and the Boys to take time from lighting cigars to think about it. they would see it w as a nice gesture lor those at the top of the food chain to underwrite regulation of the local events whose gate receipts they ritua lly gut Well, they might It s a better bet that, if HB 2 1 25 dies m committee, so w ill the Boxing and Wrestling Commission With its fiscal plug pulled, the agency would be a toy poodle flung into an alligator pond Local promoters I who by tradition, are hilariously unable to regulate themselves' w ill take ofl the gloves and get back to business - tough guy brawls in saloons, pretend ring names, fanciful w in- loss sheets and Friday nights with cocaine steroid cowboys slicing their foreheads w ith razor blades, bashing each other w ith folding chairs and las m the case of Art Barr' sexually assaulting fans on back stairways Ah. the good old days For those w ith the brains (kxJ gave a two by four, questions natually arise Who would want to deregulate sports w hich if performed on the streets would lead to arrests? And w h y ’ The man with the answers is Sneaker of the House Larry Boom- Boom Campbell Here s how things work in the fog filled back rooms of Salem (Grease City). If a bill has anything to do w ith money, and what doesn t. it must originate in the House It s Bixim Boom s job to assign bills to committees whose leadership owe their position 'or political hfei to him By tradition. Boom Boom also gets to tell them which get to the House floor and which get put into a canvas bag and pitched into the Willamette : HO When v e got into office, the thing that surprised a e aost was to find that things were just as bad as we d been saying they w ere John F. Kennedy