NEWS
GREEN PARTY
FIGHTS FOR EQUITY
While many Eugeneans have already settled on voting for
Democrats or Republicans in the Nov. 6 election, other parties
are on the ballot, and third parties are actively registering new
voters. According to the Oregon Blue Book, about 26 percent
of Oregon voters were registered with third parties or are un-
affi liated with a party.
Pat Driscoll, Pacifi c Green Party candidate for Oregon
state treasurer, says that in the upcoming election, the Green
Party’s goal is to provide voters with information and alterna-
tives on issues and give voters a broader point of view than
they see from the two “corporate parties.”
Driscoll says that environmental destruction, corruption
in the banking industry, targeted kills abroad and the deaths
of innocents by remote drone control all go completely un-
checked under President Obama, so it’s hard to consider him
the lesser of two evils. “When you talk about evil, what line
do you have to cross before recognizing that certain actions
— like murder, theft, torture, destruction of the environment
— are those actions enough on their own to warrant saying,
‘I’m not voting for that; that’s a line I’m not willing to cross’?”
Driscoll asks.
While the Green Party is known for its pro-environment
positions, Driscoll says that the biggest misconception vot-
ers have about the Greens is that they’re only concerned with
sustainability. “We’re also very supportive of social and eco-
nomic justice and also peace and nonviolence,” he says. “Our
four pillars of the Green Party are sustainability, social and
economic justice, grassroots democracy and peace and non-
violence.”
To make the elections process more inclusive of third par-
ties, Driscoll thinks that barriers to participating in events such
as debates need to be removed. “Any candidate who’s on the
ballot should be in front of the American people,” he says,
citing Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein’s presence
on 85 percent of U.S. ballots this year. He says that getting the
money out of politics is also vital to leveling the playing fi eld.
IT’S ABOUT TIME
Driscoll says that about 11,000 Oregonians are registered
with the Green Party, including about 2,000 voters registered
in 2012. About 69 percent of Oregon’s Green Party voters
were born after 1980, he says.
Green Party presidential candidate Jill Stein and Liber-
tarian candidate Gary Johnson debated for the Independent
Voter Network Oct. 17, and footage can been viewed at wkly.
ws/1dj. EW did not get a response to an interview request with
a representative from the Oregon Libertarian Party, but you
can check out our interview on marijuana regulation with
Libertarian vice-presidential candidate James P. Gray at wkly.
ws/1dk — Shannon Finnell
MORE VOTERS
REGISTERED
ON CAMPUSES
People in their late teens and early 20s don’t have the
best track record when it comes to voting. That’s why
around election time, voter registration volunteers show up
on college campuses, encouraging students to fi ll out their
registration cards. The registration deadline has passed, but
now it’s up to students to follow through and vote.
Students especially tend to not vote “down the ballot,”
meaning they vote for president but not for key local races,
but student voters living close to campus will want to pay
attention to Phil Barnhart in District 11, Paul Holvey in
District 8 and Nancy Nathanson in District 13, all state rep-
resentatives in districts surrounding UO. Also of interest is
longtime City Councilor Betty Taylor vs. Juan Carlos Valle
in a race for southeast Eugene’s Ward 2.
Merriam Weatherhead, president of the Associated Stu-
dents of Lane Community College, says she wants to make
a positive change at LCC through voter recruitment.
“The moment we don’t vote is when we lose our voices
in the political system,” Weatherhead says. “We’ve seen tu-
ition increases year after year, and I think that students see
registration and voting as a way to be more involved than in
the past. If we don’t vote, we’re contributing to our tuition
going up.”
In the last presidential election, voter turnout in the 18-
BY D AV I D WA G N E R
T
he American wigeons are back in the Delta Ponds. I
believe these are the first of our winter migrants to
arrive. I look forward to the increasing diversity of
waterfowl. On our side of the Delta Highway we have had
only mallards and Canada geese for a long time.
Turtles can be seen in the Delta Ponds on the west side
of Delta Highway but it appears the cormorants have
usurped them from their favorite logs. With increasing cold
weather and less sun showing, the turtles will burrow into
the mud at the bottom of the ponds to brumate.
Now that summer is over, the old needles are falling
from the Douglas firs in great numbers. These are last
year’s needles for the most part. The needles that emerged
from their buds this spring will finally get around to doing
their job. Over the rainy season they will double in
thickness, storing carbohydrates. When the weather gets
warmer in the spring, they will transport that energy down
to the tree trunk and put on some board feet.
Seedlings have sprouted everywhere now that the
rainy season has begun. Things like bedstraw and bitter
cress have a pair of seed leaves, called cotyledons. They
were already present in miniature inside the seed. Grass
seedlings send up a single, tiny, green spear. That’s why
members of the grass family are known as monocotyledons
while those families with two seed leaves are called
dicotyledons. Conifers are different; hemlock seeds have
up to six cotyledons.
David Wagner is a botanist who has lived in Eugene for more than 30 years. He teaches moss classes and leads nature walks. fernzenmosses@me.com
8
November 1, 2012 • eugeneweekly.com
to-24 age group was at 49 percent, the lowest percentage of
all the age groups in 2008. With LCC’s voter recruitment ef-
forts this year, the registered LCC student population now
surpasses the average.
Weatherhead says that 6,886 students were registered to
vote at LCC, comprising more than half of the on-campus
student body. Calling it the “single largest voter registration
campaign ever” for LCC, Weatherhead says registration this
year is an improvement over two years ago, when less than
4,000 students were registered.
The UO saw a record-breaking year as well, with more
than 9,000 students registered. Greg McAteer, legislative di-
rector for Associated Students of the University of Oregon,
says ASUO far surpassed their initial goal of registering
6,000 students. Starting in the summer, ASUO volunteers,
along with volunteers with the Vote OR Vote Campaign, gave
classroom speeches and recruited voters off the sidewalk.
McAteer says that while registration is important, the next
step is being informed.
“Read up, do some literature searching and make sure you
understand the language on ballots,” McAteer says. “Educate
yourself — it’s your obligation.” — Amy Schneider
SANDY’S ENERGY
IMPLICATIONS
Just days before Hurricane Sandy smacked into the East
Coast, turning New York City streets into waterways, a tsuna-
mi advisory was issued for the West Coast from Alaska into
California, as well as Hawaii, as a result of an 7.7 earthquake
off the coast of British Columbia. These water disasters, or
near disasters — the tsunami was in the end rather small —
call to mind the 2011 Japanese quake and tsunami and the
subsequent nuclear plant dangers that arose. Oregon State
scientists recently announced that trace amounts of radiation
from the Fukishimi nuclear reactors were found in Northwest
albacore tuna, but say the fi sh are safe to eat.
The Oyster Creek nuclear plant in New Jersey shares
the same design as the Fukushimi Daichi plant that released
radiation after being hit by the tsunami, according to news
reports. A press release from the Nuclear Regulatory Com-
mission says an alert was released for Oyster Creek on Oct.
29, “due to water exceeding certain high water level criteria
in the plant’s water intake structure.” The agency listed 10
other plants, including Three Mile Island, that were being
monitored by NRC inspectors during the storm.
Oyster Creek was already shut down for a regularly
scheduled outage, the NRC says, but nuclear energy critics
say the danger is as much from the spent fuel rods, which are
cooled in pools of water, as it is from the energy generation
itself. An “alert” is one level above an “unusual event” and is
the second lowest of the four NRC action levels.
Meanwhile on the West Coast, Canadian papers are re-
porting that activists say the Oct. 27 earthquake and tsunami
was a wake-up call for the companies working to build oil
pipelines through Canada to the coast where the oil would be
loaded onto tankers. They warn of dangers to the pipelines
due to quakes and fl ooding — the 2011 oil leak into the Yel-
lowstone River was believed to be caused by fl ooding — and
the activists warn of oil tankers 10 times the size of the Exxon
Valdez that could be swamped by a tsunami.
While earthquakes have not been linked to climate change,
scientists have predicted that storms and hurricanes will in-
crease as the global temperatures increase. Scientists at the
Oregon Climate Change Research Institute in a 2011 study
wrote that in Oregon, “Coastal infrastructure will come under
increased risk to damage and inundation under a changing
climate,” and they note impacted sectors include transporta-
tion and navigation, coastal engineering structures and fl ood
control. With the current debates over the International Port
of Coos Bay’s attempts to export coal via trains and tank-
ers, and liquefi ed natural gas through pipelines and tankers,
it appears that natural disasters, climate-change induced or
otherwise, have implications for Oregon’s energy industry.
— Camilla Mortensen