LET TERS
HOT AIR SOCIETY
BY TONY CORCOR AN
My Favorite Uncle Phil
DID DEMS JUST OUTSMART REPUBLICANS?
E
veryone in Oregon has a favorite Uncle Phil.
Certainly Phil Knight fills that roll for many
Duck fans. But even though I was once Sen-
ator Duck with the University of Oregon in
my district, I’ve always had an uneasy rela-
tionship with that Uncle Phil.
That Uncle Phil has been on my radar screen for years.
It all started with union concerns about trade policy,
workers’ rights and corporate decisions to move manu-
facturing overseas. And these days I hold that Uncle Phil
responsible for a lot of the angry public PERS (Public
Employee Retirement System) perspective. Remember
the Bellotti Effect?
When Mike Bellotti retired as athletic director, he
didn’t even have a contract with the UO. The university
ultimately reported Bellotti’s last year of compensation at
$300,000. Ultimately, PERS staff calculated his final av-
erage salary at $1.35 million. That resulted in an obscene
yearly payout of over $400,000. Why?
Because that Uncle Phil and all the other shoe com-
pany owners forced athletic departments to count any en-
dorsement money into the coach’s salary package. They
did this to ensure coaches wouldn’t cut their own deals
on the side with other shoe companies that weren’t the
school-sponsored sneaker. All for that Uncle Phil.
While the Top Ten list of obscene PERS payouts ran-
kles all of us, actuaries will tell you it’s a tiny, minute
part of the PERS unfunded liability. But it’s a huge public
perception problem. To the extent that any coaches at any
Oregon public university or college must add endorse-
ments to their final average salary, that shoe seller should
have to pay into PERS!
Anyway, I digress. My favorite Uncle Phil is the cur-
rent chair of the House Revenue Committee, a job he’s
held for the past 10 years. This Phil, Phil Barnhart, started
in the House in 2001. We served together during the 2001
and 2003 sessions. He’s one of the most intriguing people
I’ve ever met. He’s a practicing psychologist and attorney.
And he’s done forensic psychological evaluations for the
courts. Smart guy with a passion for public service and a
true state revenue junkie. I say that fondly, having served
on the revenue committees in both chambers.
er’s parents told her, we are not pre-or-
dained to be carnivores. We are fully ca-
pable of making food choices that support
life. Killing and eating animals is a violent,
bloody business that causes immeasurable
damage to our environment and our health.
The continuing closure of slaughter fa-
cilities is cause for hope and celebration.
Diana Huntington
Eugene
FALSE FLAGS
When I was up in Salem a few weeks ago, Phil and I
went for a walk. I asked him how his gross receipts tax
(or “commercial activity tax”) proposal was going. He
said prospects were getting worse by the day; he antici-
pated Gov. Brown, Speaker Kotek and the senate presi-
dent throwing in the towel. But he wanted a vote, to hold
House Republicans responsible for the lack of adequate
education funding.
Then with a glint in his eye, Phil said: “I don’t think we
need a supermajority to rescind a tax break. We can get $200
million more into the general fund with a simple majority.”
But Phil, bills to raise revenue require 36 votes in the
House. Oregonians passed Ballot Measure 25 in 1996 re-
quiring a 60 percent majority in both chambers for any
revenue-raising legislation. Phil responded that our courts
haven’t been asked to address the question: does rescind-
ing a tax break require the supermajority threshold?
You’ll get the answer to this final jeopardy question in
a few months or years. House Bill 2060 passed last week
by the slimmest of margins 31-28. All 31 “yes” votes
were Democrats. Republicans, of course, went apeshit!
I so feel their pain. The inevitable lawsuit will follow.
Republicans have had a rough couple of weeks. First,
as we discussed last week, Democrats were successful in
passing HB 2391, the health provider tax that will gener-
ate $550 million to pay for medical care for the state’s
low-income residents and keep Junction City’s state
hospital open. That bill required 36 votes, a feat accom-
plished with one vote from a retiring Republican.
Then my favorite Uncle Phil snuck in House Bill
2060. Democrats argued that this specific tax break had
unintended consequences and didn’t produce the jobs it
promised when it was part of the “grand bargain” reached
between Republicans and then-governor Kitzhaber in
2013. So now, we’ll all wait for the court decision.
That’s the kind of spunk I like to see in Democrats.
Rather than totally throwing in the towel after failing to
get any Republican support for the commercial activity
tax, Uncle Phil just added $200 million to the pot. I’m
sure he’s not the only Democrat who dreamed up this
scheme. But he’s the only one named Phil. Stay tuned.
Former state Sen. Tony Corcoran of Cottage Grove is a retired state employee.
Thanks for printing “White Suprema-
cist Activity in Eugene” (EW, June 8) by
Corinne Boyer. To effectively oppose rac-
ism, we must be honest and must call out
“false flags.”
Because I make videos that point out
when and where antifa physically attacks
members of marginalized groups, local
members of antifa doxed and threatened
myself and my girlfriend (we are both part
Native American, BTW) online and said
they would “pay us a visit” at our home.
Two hours later, we found a sticker on
our front door that had the letters AF on
it. We told them we were not intimidated
and they repeated their threat and placed
another such sticker on our door.
The officer that filed our report pointed
out that these stickers represent Ameri-
can Front, not antifa. These stickers were
freshly peeled. What is more likely: that
the American Front was spying on antifa
and on us and left their sticker on our door
after antifa threatened us? Or that antifa
had freshly printed American Front stick-
ers and put two of them on our door?
This sort of thing is counterproductive. Be
suspicious when you see stickers with the let-
ters AF. Fight actual racism. Don’t false flag.
Justin Antitheist
Eugene
A CAP ON WASTE
On Jan. 1 of this year I started saving all
my plastic tops the companies say are too
much trouble to recycle. I’m doing this to
prove that plastic lids take a lot of room in
the landfill. I will be saving them until the
first day of next year.
This is an environmental problem. You
think a plastic bottle cap isn’t much. How-
ever, if you drink bottled water and recycle
the bottle but not the cap, you are adding
to the landfill.
An
Asian-Fusion
concept
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541-636-3306
Monday-Sunday
11am - 12am
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June 29, 2017 • eugeneweekly.com