TO THE EDITOR
MARCUS VS. DEMOCRACY
I was interested to read last week’s cover story (4/1) in which Gary Marcus explained
his distrust of county government. State law gives him two choices for obtaining the land
use approvals he needs to build his massive power plant near Coburg. The first option is to
present the land use questions to the elected government of Lane County, as most develop-
ers must do when they seek zoning changes in rural Lane County. The second option is to
sidestep our local officials and present the proposal to the unelected Energy Facility Siting
Council (EFSC) in Salem.
Mr. Marcus chose the second course. You can’t blame him. If you were building a plant
that would emit 50 to 100 million tons of carbon dioxide over its lifespan, as well as lesser
amounts of other pollutants such as nitrogen oxide, arsenic, formaldehyde and mercury,
and if you were planning to sell the plant’s power to far-flung communities, then you
would naturally want to seek approval from unelected officials living in a different airshed.
According to last week’s article in EW, Marcus believes that EFSC has greater expert-
ise on the questions he otherwise would have presented to the county commissioners. But
let’s look closely at what these questions really are. The issue that Marcus wrested away
from the commissioners is the application of Lane County’s land use law to the conversion
of farmland to an industrial use. When EFSC officials consider this question, they will
need to call up Lane County officials to find out what our land use regulations are. There’s
no way that EFSC has greater expertise on this issue.
Marcus insists that the commissioners don’t understand the power industry well
enough. But the local power experts are also raising questions about his proposal. EWEB
Commissioner Sandra Bishop, a democratically elected official, mentioned in the EW arti-
cle that “it is a bad idea to build this kind of plant in this location.” EWEB Commissioner
Dorothy Anderson said at a meeting of the Southeast Neighbors Association that Lane
County doesn’t need the Coburg power plant, and that EWEB has not made an offer to buy
any of its output. I guess Bishop and Anderson can’t be trusted either. That’s the problem
with democratically elected officials.
Former Congressman Jim Weaver put it best in a letter he wrote last February. “Marcus
[should] take his project before the Lane County Commission. What is he afraid of? If it is
not a swindle, then he should not fear the elected representatives of the people.”
There are places on this earth where you don’t have to worry about the nuisance of
democracy. The U.S. isn’t one of them. The Soviet Union used to build power plants with
little popular resistance. Then again, the Soviet Union built Chernobyl.
The phrase “power to the people” doesn’t refer to selling electricity. It’s about demo-
cratic control.
Tom Lininger
Eugene
TOP-HEAVY OREGON
After a long absence I recently returned to
Oregon to help expand an old family busi-
ness. When I first started reading EW I found
it entertaining. However, after discovering
the dismal state of affairs in Oregon, I began
to realize that EW is more than just laughable,
it’s also a window into some of the minds re-
sponsible for Oregon’s mess.
It appears that over many years, while
seeking the perfect safety net, many Oregon
I-5 corridor voters micro-managed every-
thing from zoning laws to minimum wage
and have created an unbalanced, over-regu-
lated, top-heavy, bureaucratic nanny state.
Oregon has far too many public employees
with functions that are redundant, intrusive,
ineffective or insignificant.
Plus, these I-5 dreamers also distrust, or
simply hate, the agriculture and timber indus-
tries and often times this sentiment includes
other businesses. Oregon’s failed land-use
zoning “experiment” (maybe well-intended)
is now illogical, draconian, confiscatory and
suffocating. Plus, the current system allows
special interest groups (apparently with no
filters or repercussions) to impede or prevent
almost anything. Overall, this system is an
BY DAN CAROL
Mods and Rockers
Holding your nose is an option.
S
o what if the future of a progressive policy agenda — things like tolerance of di-
versity, support for environmental protection, tax fairness and actual regulation
of corporate activities — depended on the resurgence of so-called moderate
Republicans? You know, Republicans in the tradition of Abraham Lincoln (remember
him), trust-buster and national parks advocate Teddy Roosevelt, and Oregon’s own Gov.
Tom McCall — who among many accomplishments here at home was one of the first
prominent Republicans to call for Richard Nixon’s resignation.
Is the idea of growing and nurturing moderate Republicans in political “terrariums”
around the country a crazy notion?
Not really. If you throw away the rose-colored glasses, and take a look at the long-
term Congressional and political landscape, a progressive-leaning agenda is not going to
pass in Washington, D.C., very soon — no matter how things turn out in the presidential
election. We critically need to find ways to undercut the unbridled dominance of Tom
Delay and the Republican extremists. What better way than to give the Christian
Coalition crowd a little competition in their own party. Look at how Republicans success-
fully split our natural base through the use of so-called wedge issues — they’ve been
doing that with impunity for 25 years. Now it’s their turn.
So if you accept the strategic argument that having a Republican wedge is good for
our agenda, what are you prepared to “stand for” (handy tip: holding your nose is an op-
tional accessory)?
I am personally and strategically “comfortable” with the following:
• John Kerry picks Senators John McCain (R-AZ) or Chuck Hagel (R-NE) as his run-
ning mate. McCain and Hegel are both GOP mods and fellow Vietnam veterans. (I know
you know McCain, but did you know he is also as good as it gets right now on the envi-
ronment?) Kerry wins. We’re happy on Nov. 2 and yet harbor no illusions — we keep
rolling along with smart state organizing strategies to build progressive power that
lasts.
4 APRIL 8, 2004
This one is harder: Rooting for Republican Senator Arlen
Specter to beat nut-wing Patrick J. Toomey in the April 27
Pennsylvania primary. (Keep in mind, I can’t stand Specter
for his treatment of Anita Hill and many more votes down
the line over the years.) But Specter actually is a moderate
blocking point for Bush’s craziest judicial nominations in a
likely still Republican-controlled Senate, so this is one lesser of
two evils choice I’ll take.
• Calling Arnold Schwarzenegger an environmentalist. Arnold is so
far taking cues on the environment from his brother-in-law Robert Kennedy, Jr., an envi-
ronmental advocate with Riverkeeper and the NRDC. The new head of Arnold’s
California EPA, Terry Tamminen, is advocating a Hydrogen Highways proposal and talk-
ing to some of the “big box” retailers about the possibility of putting large arrays of
solar panels on their big, flat roofs, electrolyzing water and having stations in the park-
ing lots. Is this a dirty hydrogen smokescreen or the real deal? We’ll just have to see. But
it’s a pretty serious improvement over Arnold’s predecessor Gray Davis — and soon per-
haps a political problem for George Bush. Other Republican moderates to watch (and
maybe root for) on this front are Govs. Mitt Romney (Mass.) and George Pataki (N.Y.).
• Bookmarking www.logcabin.org. This is a national group of Republicans (Log Cabin
invokes GOP stalwart Abe Lincoln) opposed to radical right domination of the
Republican Party that stands on the front lines of today’s most important battleground
for gay and lesbian civil rights. Is supporting this group with your political donations
more important than other checks you might write this year? Maybe so. In their own
words: “The GOP must choose between fairness and freedom or intolerance and exclu-
sion. Log Cabin works tirelessly to make sure the Republican Party chooses the right
path. Ending up on the wrong side of history will cost the GOP for decades to come. So
we tirelessly strive to achieve liberty and equality for all Americans.”
So that’s a look at the Mods. Next time, we’ll preview the Rockers. Groups like Music for
America, Rock The Vote, The National Hip Summit and Convention and The Rolling Thunder
Tour, who are, in the words of my pal Jessica Tully, mixing up a new brew of “hip hop,
Birkenstock and alt rock” to promote new forms of community and civic participation.
Dan Carol is a Democratic political strategist and a founding partner of CTSG (www.ctsg.com), a progressive political
consulting firm based in Eugene and Washington, D.C.