M a y 17, 2000 Page A 4 (Tljp (Observer Articles do not necessarily reflect or represent the views of (The ^Jurtlanh (Dbscruer |H BaH iaBB H BH aB aaaH BB aH BaH H IBB M aaaH aiM aaijM (Cl|e ^ n r tla tth (©bseruer USPS 959-680 Established 1970 STAFF E d it o r C h ie f , in P u b l is h e r Charles H. Washington E d i T o R Larry J. Jackson, Sr. B u s in e s s M anager Gary Ann Taylor C E opy d it o r Joy Ramos C r e a t iv e D ir e c t o r Shawn Strahan 4 7 4 7 NE M a r tin L u th e r K ing, Jr. B lvd. P o rtla n d , O R 9 7 2 1 1 5 0 3 -2 8 8 -0 0 3 3 F ax 5 0 3 - 2 8 8 - 0 0 1 5 Civil Rights USDA: A The waist is a terrible thing to mind success story in progress BY l.S . S ee Hl LAMLOl A u KK LLILK Lß AM G l It KMAN Five years ago, w hen 1 b ecam e Secretary o f Agriculture, 1 discovered th a t th e d e p a r tm e n t w a s s till struggling - as much o f our society still is - to m ake racial equality an institutionalized and unshakeable principle, one that em bedded in every decision and every program. 1 im m ediately m ade it a top priority to m a k e th e U .S . d e p a r tm e n t o f A griculture (U SD A ) a place w here e m p lo y e e s , c u s to m e rs an d constituents are all treated with the fairness and dignity they deserve. It has been m y goal to m ake USDA a civil rights leader in the federal g o v e rn m e n t. O n e o f o u r m o st im portant steps in that direction was the settlem ent w e reached last year in a class-action suit brought by a group o f African-American framers al leging d is c rim in a tio n by U S D A . T h e settlem ent calls for debt forgiveness and paym ents to individual plaintiffs w ho can prove discrimination, even if it occurred as long as 1981. A s o f A p ril 2 6 , p a y m e n ts to ta lin g $206.5million havebeenm adeto4,130 farmers. As im portant as the settlem ent is, our civil rights agenda includes more than reactively m aking am ends for past injustice. In 1 9 9 6 ,1 appointed a com m ittee o f USDA employees toexam ine the state o f c iv il rig h ts th r o u g h o u t th e departm ent and report back to me w ith suggested actions. A fter three m onths o f exhaustive fact-finding, they delivered 92 recom m endations covering everything from w ays to savem inority-ow ned farms to USDA hiring practices to disciplinary action for civil rights violators. We have also established a new Office o f O utreach, w hich will help get inform ation about our program s to m inority com m unities and socially and ec o n o m ically d isad v an tag ed populations. O ften, these com m unities qualify for U S D A a s s is ta n c e w ith o u t ev en know ing it. The O ffice o f O utreach will serve as a central repository for inform ation and assistance, helping ensure the fair distribution o f USDA resources to people and places that have never before received them. I n te r n a lly , a lm o s t a ll U S D A em ployees have now com pleted some civil rights training, w here they learn about th e p articu la r se n sitiv ities involved in w orking w ith historically undeserved com m unities. M any supervisors and m angers have received additional training, to help them m anage the diversity on their staffs. And our agency heads are now evaluated as m uch on their ci vi I rights perform ance as any other o f their job. We have introduced accountability, so that those w ho do not follow civil rights guidelines can expect to bear the consequences. O ver the last two years, w e have issued 94 disciplinary actio n s, ran g in g from letters o f re p rim a n d to 14 d is m is s a ls . O verhauling an institutional culture is not an overnight job. It will take a sustained com m itm ent and relentless vigilance over an extended period o f time. We have yet to reach the mountaintop, but we have begun the climb. A braham Lincoln, w hen he signed the legislation creating USDA, called it th e “ P e o p le ’s D e p a rtm e n t,” because o f its ability to im prove the lives o f so many di fferent A m ericans in so many different ways. With our vigorous civil rights agenda, w e are beginning to live up to that name in its fullest sense. The “People’s D epartm ent” is starting to make good on its obligation to serve all o f the people. A little over a half-century ago, I joyfully displayed on my M arine Corps uniform the “ruptured duck” pin, sym bolic o f an H onorable (and m ost w elcom e) Discharge. At the time, that uniform encased only 130 pounds o f me, including a fat content som ew hat approxim ating that o f the average bullw hip. O n a recent m orning, my avoirdupois hit a new high, when 1 recorded a startling “200” on the bathroom scale (after sucking in the locale o f m ost o f that poundage). The w eight gain w e’re talking about here is pure, uncut tlab - not ju st the suet that accum ulated on a once youthful, lithe and svelte frame, but the additional adiposity that filled in w hen, with age, my m uscles, bones, height and other things atrophied. (Theoretically, I now have the same gross am ount o f blood and internal organs as in my salad days, right?) Getting back (and front) to the 200 pounds that currently accom pany m e w hithersoever I go, I have sworn to shed at least 10% o f it before the D olphins’ sum m er training eam p begins. (No, 1 w o n ’t be trying out for the team this year; that w as ju st a test to m ake sure y o u ’re paying attention.) The problem is that every w eight-loss program I’ve investigated is tainted w ith flaws or side effects that have prevented me from getting under “w eigh” with any o f them. One, I ’ m told, will m erely wring water out o f my system, reducing my m easurem ents, but m aking me a human version o f those dehydrated sponges that swell up like blow fish when im m ersed in water. T his suggests that, for the rest o f my dehydrated 1 ife, 1 w ould have to avoid ingesting fluids, bathing and going out in the rain. O ther plans threaten to clog my arteries, destroy m uscle mass, mess with my metabolism and/or turn my liver into a hockey puck. Long-range, these developm ents would only enrich som e funeral director and lessen the burden o f pall bearers - neither o f w hich benefit would accrue to my favorite fat boy. Kindly people have told m e that my problem m ight be genetic - therefore, perhaps, unsolvable. I took refuge in this theory at first, given the fact that neither my parents nor their siblings ever had to await the late afternoon sun to cast an im pressive shadow. I do, though, have a sister w ith the sam e genes, but a rem arkably lean profile. Ergo, no alibi there. I ’ m somewhat concerned about the psychological impact o f dieting on a man o f my septuagenarian vintage, who takes alm ost obscene pleasure in scarfing up almost every fattening food know n to man, beast o r pig farmer. M ight the stress o f deprivation drive m e into a slough o f despond, progressing to clinical depression and ultimate suicide? My otherwise loving and compassionate spouse greets this theory w ith a fit o f derisive cackling, which I take to be reassurance that this is not a likely danger. After sorting through all the drugs, deprivations, devices, dodges and dubious theories that abound in magazines, junk mail, TV ads and cocktail party chit-chat, I’ve discarded everything except these few unspectacular guidelines: 1. If 1 take in few er calories than I burn up, I will lose w eight and it w o n ’t com e back. 2. If I exercise aerobically, I will b um calories, either torching stored fat or lean m uscle mass. 3. If I engage in strength-building exercise, that muscle mass will be preserved and enhanced. 4.1 will not enjoy any o f these pursuits. One more thing. I’ll have to drink a lot o f w ater - some say a couple o f gal Ions dai ly - i n order to carry o ff any tai low I might be shedding; alm ost all o f the rem edies for o b e s ity m e n tio n th e n eed fo r in c re a s e d w a te r consum ption. I’m rem inded o f a patent m edicine, popular a num ber o f years back, called C arter’s Little L iver Pills, tyid touted as a m iracle laxative. Its radio com m ercial included the adm onition to “every day, drink eight glasses o f w ater.” Well, it turned out that those w ho drank th eeig h t glasses o f w ater needed those little liver pills like O ld Faithful needs an alarm clock to ensure regularity - in addition to w hich C arter’s had no m ore affect on the liver than the Sixth Com m andm ent has on minks. Could be? (Naah!) So there it is: Fergie, the D uchess o f York and M onica, the Sultana o f Sleaze notw ithstanding, 1 shall subscribe to no short-cuts, w acko schem es or group efforts in my cam paign to get back into the w ardrobe that lies a- m olding in the back o f my closet. I’ll do it the hard way, as outlined above. If it works, w e ’ll market it as the K lockw ise Kure. If it doesn’t, it’ll be a hot day at the South Pole before the subject is again brought up in this space. I am, for now, my blubber’s keeper, but - mark iny words - not for long! Statement from UO President Dave Frohnmayer “ Recent news reports may have given the m istaken im pression that the U niversity o f O regon has suddenly reconsidered its decision to jo in the W orkers’ Rights C onsortium . T he UO is jo in in g the W RC for one year. The university action has always included establishing a process for internal review in cooperation with the U niversity Senate during the next academ ic year to evaluate w hat has already begun. O ur conditions include ensuring proper influence for university m em bers and m ore clarity regarding selection o f advisory board m em bers; a m em bership balance that includes business and corporate participation; and ensuring m eetings and outcom es are open to the m edia and non-m em ber observers. A ny decision on w hether to renew our relationship will be m ade only after a scheduled review and consultation with the UO Senate. 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