The INDEPENDENT, July 5, 2012 Where to Find Them U.S. Senator Ron Wyden (Dem) 1220 SW 3rd Avenue, Suite 585 Portland OR 97232 Phone: 503-326-7525 223 Dirksen Senate Ofc. Bldg. Washington, D.C. 20510-0001 Phone: 202-224-5244 E-Mail: http://wyden.senate.gov/ contact Website: http://wyden.senate. gov U.S. Senator Jeff Merkley (Dem.) One World Trade Center 121 SW Salmon St., Suite 1250 Portland, OR 97204 Phone: 503-326-3386 313 Hart Senate Ofc. Bldg. Washington, DC 20510 Phone: (202) 224-3753 E-Mail: http://merkley.senate. gov/contact WebSite: http://merkley.senate. gov U.S. Representative Suzanne Bonamici, (Dem) OR District 1 620 SW Main, Suite 606 Portland, OR 97205 Phone: 503-326-2901 2338 Rayburn House Ofc. Bldg. Washington, DC 20515 Phone: 202-225-0855 Website: http://bonamici.house. gov Senator Betsy Johnson (Dem) Senate District 16 PO Box R, Scappoose, OR 97056 Phone: 503-543-4046 900 Court St. NE, S-314 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1716 E-mail: sen.betsyjohnson@ state.or.us Website: http://www.leg.state.or. us/johnson Representative Brad Witt (Dem) House District. 31 21740 Lindberg Road, Clatskanie, OR 97016 Phone: 503-728-4664 900 Court St. NE, H-373 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1431 E-mail: rep.bradwitt@state.or.us Website: http://www.leg.state.or. us/witt Representative Deborah Boone (Dem) House District 32 PO Box 926 Cannon Beach, OR 97110 Phone: 503-717-9182 900 Court St. NE, H-375 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1432 E-mail: rep.deborahboone@ state.or.us Website: http://www.leg.state.or. us/boone Page 3 Letters Time to innovate for affordable energy To the Editor: Open letter to Marc Farmer: Marc, I get it. You are in a sys- temic Catch-22: damned if you do and damned if you don’t. The realities are: WOEC is ge- ographically stretched over 1,224 square miles through millions of trees and rough ter- rain; the power-load is domi- nated by residential users; it has few, and dwindling com- mercial users; and no signifi- cant percentage of industrial use. There are long-term de- ferred major repair issues, a huge recession, inflation, rising operational costs, declining revenues (people are leaving); compliance-forced office relo- cation and a single-sourced wholesale power supplier un- der Federal control. The situa- tion is like ingesting pure habañera hot sauce by the ta- blespoon full. Not only you, but your staff, employees, friends, neighbors and all the cus- tomers are faced with the pain. And there are those who simply cannot afford WOEC power and are locked out. Everyone is upset and they are looking at you, the general manager …and your new building (which, per square foot in cost is a technical value but not less expensive than a lower cost in- dustrial grade clear span con- struction. But that is done with; it’s here). You have said there is noth- ing that you (and your Board?) can do outside of your 10-year plan and wage freezes, be- cause of the iron grip, and na- ture of, WOEC’s service area, customer base, wholesale sup- plier and the economy. Yet, you must do something. What? Punt! Look outside the 9 dots! (1) Go back to the concept of being a “co-operative”, and not a pyramidal, profit-focused, CEO-led business model. Co- ops utilize member ownership, an expanded, active board of directors who set policy for you to follow, as their co-op manag- er, in order to achieve maxi- mum member and employee benefit, rather than seeking to deal with volatile investment risk, lowest labor cost, lowest supply cost and highest, re- tained earnings and dividends (Our co-op has dividends. Where are they?). The two concepts, co-op vs private prof- it structure, are diametrically opposed, especially when con- cerned with public utilities. WOEC needs to operate as a co-operative, not as a private business enterprise. (2) Next, work with, not against the BPA; they are look- ing “down the road”, as Ger- many and the Netherlands have very successfully demon- strated with alternative and soon-to-be dominant energy strategies. Otherwise, WOEC will simply go out of business because of avoidable, heritage (old time) costs and independ- ent former-customers who will have their own, home-based energy systems (exclude ex- panded natural gas develop- ments which require invasive secret ingredients, highly toxic fracking). (3) Pro-actively embrace lobbying for and developing al- ternative renewable energy in all its manifestations, including fish-safe micro hydro (we have an abundance of adequate, un- dammed water flow even in summer). (4) Put solar and wind tur- bines on your HQ roofs. (5) Explore banking relation- ships that work with WOEC Ike Says… From page 2 understand or care about is the steady decline in older hunters, who are simply giving up hunting or moving their hunting out of state to bet- ter areas. To top this off, non- resident hunters are finally fig- uring out that Oregon is not the best place to spend their hard- earned money. It is becoming apparent that non-resident hunters are spending their points on lesser hunts, then not applying anymore. This will im- pact the ODF&W budget more than a resident hunter dropping out, due to the substantially higher fees that non-residents pay. I will give you one guess as to who they will ask to make up the difference. Izaak Walton League, Nehalem Valley Chapter meets monthly on the 3rd Thursday at 7:00 p.m. Call 503-429-7193 for location. customers on alternative ener- gy packages, rebates, tax in- centives and reverse metering; (6) Hire tree crews locally (we have an abundance of skilled forest talent and crew chiefs). (7) Clear tree cuts on power- line easements to the max and sell saw-quality logs and chip trees to the mills, corded fire- wood to both residential and commercial users (like hotels, B&Bs, restaurants) then com- post the vast quantity of excess chips (in your clear cut strips) for sale to commercial nurs- eries, who, by the way, at the right price, will lease your cleared line paths for nursery stock production. This will get employment and cash flow mo- mentum going for the member- ship, none of which will flow out and away to outside investors. We, out in the yonder, can help lobby the State, Feds and pri- vate businesses to participate with us. And one last thing, no trips to Washington D.C., et al, to communicate with our repre- sentatives…they can be dealt with here in Oregon for a lot less money. So there it is, outside the 9 dots. Lead, don’t plead. No ex- planations needed. I wish you, and all of us, good sailing. Jack Phillips Vernonia Thanks for the great 2012 All Night Party To the Editor: The VHS Class of 2012 All Night Party Committee would like to thank the sponsors, donors and chaperones for your support of the June 2 event. 51 seniors attended and all reported having a good time. The all-night graduation party is a drug and alcohol free event sponsored by the Vernonia Prevention Coalition. It is or- ganized each year by parents, host families and guardians of high school seniors. The sponsors were Vernon- ia Prevention Coalition and DeAnna Pearl, VHS Class of 2012, Curl’s Transportation and Shelley Cota, and the Ver- nonia Christian Church. The chaperones were Scott Rethwill, Aaron Miller, Christina Morgan, Torie Fallau, DeAnna Pearl, Lisa Edgar, LeeAnne Krause, Darby Dooley, Mary Ann Shaw, Jennifer Butcher, Kelley Murphy-Shaw, and Bet- sy Miller. Donors were Scott, Marla and Janet Rethwill, Aaron and Betsy Miller, Vernonia Florist – Ben and Lisa Edgar, Keith and Kelley Shaw, Jon and Kinnell Steward, Cristi Tungwenuk, Randall Harvey, Amber Bozaid, KaptansKraft, Rainbow Lanes, Bullwinkle’s Family Fun Center, Vernonia Sentry Market, Bridge Street Mini Mart, Black Bear Coffee Shop, Napa Auto Parts, Vernonia Golf Course, and Blue House Café. Thank you again, Betsy Miller 2012 VHS All-night grad party committee Grateful to Genny’s Vernonia home folks To the Editor: The family of Genny Fisher would like to thank the commu- nity of Vernonia for all the car- ing support given to us during our time of loss. We would also like to thank all the friends, co-workers and residents for the kindness and respect you have shown for Genny over the years. During the last few months of Genny’s time with us, she would often say to us “I just want to go back to Vernonia, I want to go Home.” So now she is, home in the community that she so deeply loved. Her favorite quote was “I Love Vernonia”. She was so proud of her community. So… Should you be walking down the sidewalk and happen to see some litter, think of Genny and toss it in the beautiful garbage cans that line the com- munity. I am sure you will feel that beautiful smile she had saying “Thank you for helping keep Vernonia beautiful”. In Thanks and Gratitude, Dale, sister Lois, brother Bob, Gary, Christy, Larry, Robby and families Please see page 18 Policy on Letters The INDEPENDENT will not publish letters with per- sonal attacks on private citi- zens. Preference will be giv- en to brief letters, 300 words or less. All letters must be signed and include a verifiable ad- dress or phone number.