Sunday, September 14, 2014

Did Lynn Morgan file required Upcountry Council reports?

Lynn Morgan established herself politically as chairperson of the Upcountry Council during the four years before this year. Since the council is an official advisory to the Board of Supervisors, its bylaws require an annual report to the BOS. Apparently, Lynn Morgan did not file these reports. If she had they would be a matter of public record in the BOS meeting minutes.


At this past Tuesday’s BOS meeting, as an aside during the presentation of another required report, Supervisor Brian Oneto asked if prior years’ reports for the Upcountry Council had been filed. No one present had an answer. However, Brian Oneto noticed Sherry Curtis, the present chair and former vice chair of Upcounty Council, in the audience and asked her. Sherry Curtis said to ask Lynn Morgan if she had fulfilled this obligation or not.


Lynn Morgan arrived at the BOS after this discussion ended, but I assume that she became aware of it. I have not seen an answer from her anywhere, and combed her website for at least a plausible explanation or an excuse. None was found except for this statement: “Public service as an elected official is an honor, not a right-and it should be earned in an honorable way.”


So I am publicly asking Lynn Morgan to state why she didn’t file these required reports. This venue provides an accessible response platform. And if she didn’t file them, and has no reasonable excuse, what does this error of responsibility foretell about her possible tenure as a county supervisor?

Friday, September 12, 2014

Updates: Elizabeth Warren plus Titanium

A little over a year ago I posted Guilty of Fraud about Elizabeth Warren and her brainchild, the then new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB). I stated: “Perhaps an agency with illegitimate powers, run by a fraudulently appointed director and designed by a fraudulent person is best suited to root out fraud from consumer financial products? Perhaps I don’t understand the wisdom by which Washington governs today?”


Despite its now brief tenure as a going concern, the CFPB is under investigation by the Government Accountability Office and the House of Representatives Financial Services Oversight and Investigations Subcommittee where 32 CFPB employees have testified. Employees also filed 115 official grievances in 2013 alone with their bargaining unit, the National Treasury Employees Union. Described as a toxic workplace, the CFPB is rift with intimidation, retaliation, favoritism and cronyism. Black employees are segregated into a low level data entry unit known as the plantation. They have no promotional path from this unit, despite their often outstanding credentials.


Some unaware people might find it ironic that the Democrats during the House Subcommittee hearings accused the Republicans investigating racism of racism. But it is not surprising since the CFPB partly finances itself by creating racism where none exists. Foregoing evidence, they use “disparate-impact theory” to accuse banks of racism and blackmail them with threats of litigation and bad publicity for profitable out of court settlements. Those that thrive from racism must keep it alive. As a consequence those at the CFPB they have internalized (or reinternalized?) those sick attitudes. Apparently they are too arrogant to realize that the spiritual poison of prejudice is infectious.


This past June in Wild & Scenic at Pardee and Environmental Observations I posted: “The SR-71 Blackbird spy plane replaced the ill fated U-2 and served us from 1964 to 1998. It was 92% titanium. We had to buy this titanium from the Soviet Union through various foreign intermediaries. And while global demand for titanium grew by 60% from 2009 until leveling off in 2013, DuPont granted their titanium deposits near the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge, totaling 16,000 acres, to The Conservation Fund. I call this treason.”


Also this past June, an F-35 Lightning II engine caught fire. Pratt & Whitney immediately suspended production and considered the likely culprit to be suspect titanium in a key component. This component has already been installed on about 150 aircraft. These engines are anticipated to cost us taxpayers a mere $68.4 billion over the course of the entire F-35 project, a joint strike fighter for the Air Force, Navy and Marines.


Our defense and aerospace industries are dependent upon America importing 79% of our titanium needs. Most of this comes from Russia and often through third party enterprises. One of these was recently received a Federal indictment and is best described as a billionaire Ukrainian titanium gangster. Not surprisingly, Crimea and other places being contested between the Ukraine and Russia are titanium rich. But it’s easy for Washington to turn the other cheek as the body count rises, since we now import our spy satellite rocket launchers from Russia, along with many key minerals. Boeing’s need just for titanium alone has resulted in an ongoing investment totally $18 billion in Russia. At times my mind fogs over trying to remember who won the Cold War. I sarcastically hope that the Conservation Fund bird watching guides, as they hike over our domestic titanium resources, feel secure and also sympathetic to their unemployed neighbors.


Following that 1778 winter of sacrifice at Valley Forge, Alexander Hamilton observed that we have no blankets because they are made in England, and that we have no gunpowder because it, too, is made in England. He concluded that political independence is a weak position without economic independence.


We appear to have gone full circle, all 360 degrees, to where we started. We import almost everything.
We finance it through debt held by hostile nations. We pay more for milk because much of ours goes to China.

Copyright 2014, Mark L. Bennett

Saturday, August 30, 2014

What is Lynn Morgan’s position on Dollar General in Pine Grove?

Lynn Morgan established herself in the community as chair of the Upcountry Council and her leadership role in defeating the takeover of the Buckhorn Market for a dollar store. While the controversy rages over Dollar General in Pine Grove, she has not taken a clear public stand on this issue while her opponent Ted Novelli’s support of Dollar General’s right to open in Pine Grove is well known and well articulated.

Her website states: “Work with local businesses to support their long-term viability ...Actively recruit new local businesses...” Obviously, these statements do not support Dollar General’s presence in Pine Grove, yet she has not taken a definitive public position. My suspicion is that her political base knows she opposes Dollar Genera, but that if too many of the former Mike Spence voters were aware, she wouldn’t have enough votes to win. So she maintains a public ambiguity. Does this illustrate the statement on her website: “I believe in transparency in government”?

Her website also states: “Work with the county sheriff to re-establish an upcountry substation.” She must be aware that this was ended some time ago because most of what happened were deputies racing down Highway 88 back to the county core cities. This wasted precious time along with fuel and money. What level of priority is this for our cash strapped county? What is her cost/benefit analysis for this possible service?

So Ms. Morgan, I am asking you to publicly and clearly state your position on Dollar General in Pine Grove, and to do the same on why an Upcountry substation is a priority over other needs for our county. What is Lynn Morgan’s position on Dollar General in Pine Grove?

Monday, August 11, 2014

Grant Dependent, or Under Our Control: Amador’s Transit Future

Recently I was appointed to the Social Services Transportation Advisory Council, an organization required by law for the process of receiving Federal funding. The appointment was made by the Amador County Transportation Commission. Two members, whom I had never met, voted against me presumably based upon my “ideological” reputation. They appeared to put partisanship above qualifications since I was vastly more qualified than the only other candidate.

Over the past several weeks I have digested the about 150 pages of the Amador County Coordinated Public Transit Human Services Transportation Plan, 2014 and the Amador County Short Range Transit Development Plan, For Years 2014 through 2019. Both of these plans are excellent. I don’t say that to be patronizing or conciliatory, but rather because I have seen too many horrid plans. But however excellent these two plans are, with reams of data and thoughtful and workable solutions, they are both conceived (as would be expected) within a narrow frame of reference. My approach is different and delivers a more business oriented perspective to solving Amador’s public transportation needs. It also radically alters the proposed staging of improvements. But I only examine certain aspects of the plans where I have concrete suggestions. Other areas are left untouched.

My proposals contain the concept of seat turnover. Transit is only economically efficient when a seat is turned over several times between the two ends (terminals) of a route. This is like table turnover in a restaurant or merchandise in a store. Can you envision someone from Buckhorn getting off in Pine Grove to visit Pine Cone Drug or Dollar General and their empty seat being taken by someone traveling to the Rancheria (on a new routing)? Then that vacated seat is filled by someone leaving the Rancheria for Jackson? This is three times the revenue for the same expenditure of time and money as in the present service. Another concept is two directional travel. The plans gave little data in this area, but I assume that there are many near empty backhaul (deadhead) type runs in our system. Therefore, I will explore other ridership markets. It seems apparent that neither of these two concepts are included in the plan’s elasticity of demand calculations.

I believe both professionally and personally that the present leadership of Amador Transit is doing a truly outstanding job considering their funding and other constraints. My ideas are outside the realm of what they can do.

All quotations and other references from the texts will be cited by page number with the Human Services plan referred to as HS and the Transit Plan referred to as TP. Both of these plans are available to any interested member of the public.

Work was the reason for 30% of Amador Transit’s ridership (TP47). And despite the successful shuttle service in the Jackson/Sutter Creek county core 70% of all riders (TP47) said they don’t transfer between bus routes. While part of this is due to the no free transfers/separate fare per ride policy, much of it is due to the skeletal nature of the system that precludes certain transfer possibilities. An on board survey commentator wrote (TP Appendix A): “Can’t get early bus to Sacramento and can’t get back to Pine Grove on same day.” Not coincidentally, both these routes are considered for priority improvement.

Amador Transit riders are loyal since 75% said that they have ridden for over a year (TP48). While this clearly speaks to the quality of the existing service, it is also a warning against making any changes that would discourage existing riders. Occasional riders (TP48) include those 4.5% of riders who ride 1-4 days per month and the 3% of riders who ride less than one day per month. This 7.5 % total of occasional riders is not a bad number considering about 10% or slightly more would be considered normal in a large city system. Occasional riders are often those picking up their car from repair or going to meet someone and returning home in the other person’s car. However, in Amador County the occasional riders are probably mostly seniors running non daily errands or going to medical appointments. But this discussion is important because this latent occasional rider market is there, but needs more frequent and convenient service to ride. Of the general public surveyed 93% stated that Amador County should provide public transit (TP58).


Upcountry

The Upcountry area of Buckhorn, Pioneer and Pine Grove is served by Bus Route 2 which provides three daily round trips: am, pm and mid day. Volcano is not served. “...many Upcountry residents find the current bus schedule to be a barrier to using public transit” (HS29). “The current schedule requires Upcountry residents to spend a total of five hours of travel time in order to complete a round trip to Jackson” (TP92). The 25 or so daily riders (TP31) travel a route that covers 24 one way miles (TP84) at a cost of $28.61 per trip (TP30). This compares with a system wide average of $18.49 (TP30) and a low of $10.31 for the Route 3 service to Plymouth (TP30). 

This wide discrepancy of subsidy is grossly unfair and subsidizes Upcountry at the expense of others.  Due to this situation a fare increase is proposed for the UpCounty service (TP86, TP93). Needless to say, many Upcountry residents oppose this and objection has been voiced several times at Upcountry Council meetings. The plan makes clear that while fare box revenue will rise, ridership will decline (TP86). So this option contains an element of self defeat. Decreased ridership cannot demand increased service. But the two plans clearly document the need for more service now and in the future.

“Increased service to the Upcountry region is one of the most requested Amador Transit improvement suggestions. This is also a top priority for the SSTAC” (TP75). This same need is repeated in the human services plan (HS32). Both plans document an area of low income residents in Buckhorn (HS10, TP58) and concentrations of elderly people in Pine Grove, Pioneer and Buckhorn (HS9, TP58). While elderly is the definition they use, the real demographics reveal middle aged people becoming elderly, in place, and representing a possible increased demand for transit.

Some of this demand is met by the much higher cost DAR (Dial a Ride) service of which there are 36 ADA certified residents in the Pine Grove and Pioneer areas (TP75). Both plans advocate avoiding this higher cost service which doesn’t yet exist Upcountry by expanding the present bus service (HS30, TP44). Very apparent in the Upcountry area is another lack in the existing system, the inability of lower income high school students to attend after school (and after school bus) activities needed to pad college and scholarship applications (HS38, numerous comments in TP Appendix A). Many would consider this a civil rights issue. The present plan calls for adding an additional Upcountry bus run in Fiscal Year 2018-2019 (TP97) and assumes increased subsidy.

I have three interrelated proposals to attack these problems of Upcountry transit. First, we have the competing tax-supported system of school buses. We don’t need nor can afford two separate systems. In larger communities high school students ride only public transit. At present the school district bus system transports 2,000 daily passengers (HS21, TP34). Of these, 495 high school students and 288 grades 5 to 8 students live in the Upcountry area (TP18). This dwarfs the Upcountry Bus Route 2 ridership.

Presently, 24% of youth fare riders are Upcountry riders contrasted with only 9% of youth fare riders system wide. Amador Transit is presently acquiring 32 passenger buses. Given this situation I propose Amador Transit operate the school runs east of Pine Grove for older students. Depending upon their specific school destination, some students may transfer at the Pine Grove School as is currently done in the existing school bus system. Presumably the Highway 88/Pine Grove Improvement Project will fix the traffic congestion problem at the Pine Grove School. It appears that these additional school riders will give the Upcountry service sufficient critical mass to expand service, add additional non school riders and ameliorate the needs cited in the two plans. On the primarily school runs the 3⁄4 mile route deviations for ADA certified riders should be suspended (TP25). This should also address the possible concerns some may have about mixing the students and the disabled.

Also, East of the county core, and related to Upcountry service is the Jackson Rancheria, with no public transit service. It’s a major recreation destination, one of the county’s largest employers with 1,000 to 5,000 employees (TP7, 58, 71, HS12) and hosts the MACT clinic. MACT “...provides medical, dental, outreach, and behavioral health services for Native Americans as well as the general public” (TP37). Their health and dental clinics serve about 100 people per day (TP71, 90). The need to serve this destination repeats through both plans (TP44, HS31). The dental clinic is the only such low income clinic in the county (HS36). One plan provides the necessary discussion of alternatives to best serve the Rancheria (the shuttle from Highway 88 is not discussed here) and notes the problematic one mile distance between the casino and the clinic (TP71).

They rightly conclude that altering the existing Upcountry runs to serve the Rancheria via a five mile round trip to and from Highway 88 would increase travel times sufficiently to discourage existing riders and discard that option (TP74). So their preferred solution is a route between the county core and the Rancheria in Fiscal Year 2015-16 (TP97) which only operates 3 days per week to cut costs (TP90) but includes expensive dead head hours (TP73). This would require Upcountry riders to travel to the country core and then transfer to the separate service, repeating this process to return home. The separate service proposal “solves” the problem of access to the Rancheria. It’s probably the best solution given the present and proposed minimal service/ridership because the school bus riders are not considered. While it serves a need in isolation, it does not build a transit system. Productivity is limited to a one way fully seated load and revenue is limited by their single fares.

If the additional runs replacing the school buses are implemented the Rancheria could be served via the Route 2, Upcountry service. Seat turnover is achieved and unnecessary transferring is eliminated. The route should not be a time consuming off route and return to Highway 88 trip but rather continue via New York Ranch Road and Ridge Road to the county core. This may even take student riders closer to the surviving high school, if that situation occurs, than the current routing. However, which Route 2 runs take which routings need be a judicious selection process with the present commuter runs probably left unchanged.

Another solution presented for Upcountry Service was the Hopper (TP44) with a variant that went to Volcano (HS39). This concept of short lining, not traveling the full route, is useful Upcountry . Not all runs, especially with expanded runs, need go to Amador Station or even Buckhorn. This could be a factor in making that expansion more affordable. Volcano, of course, could be served on selected runs of an expanded Upcountry service. One plan discussion of the Hopper (TP44) implies an Upcountry circular ending in Pine Grove. While no terminal is suggested, the perfect location would be the new Dollar General store. But given all the other options discussed and the overall constraints, this idea is dismissed from the Implementation Plan (TP97).

I propose that passengers can shuttle between their homes and the bus stops in a shared taxi mode with few distance restrictions that starts with an expansion of the new volunteer driver program (TP44, HS31). System wide 13% of existing riders are dropped off (TP45).There may be security concerns here, but I assume that they are solvable. Riders getting off a bus at the scheduled times could simply meet a waiting vehicle. Those in their homes could request a pickup via the Amador Transit dispatcher or via a mobile device using a variant of the Uber technology now disrupting the established taxi industry. Eventually this could even evolve into a private sector service like the post World War 1 jitneys or the longer lasting “peso cabs” in some North American cities. This would solve the problem of those having mobility concerns or just living too far away (HS37). This does not include students that I assume would walk to their bus stop.

The two plans make thoughtful trade off decisions and meet specific needs with isolated solutions, dependent almost solely on increased grants, but they do not build a transit system that can be significantly more self sustaining.


Sacramento Service

Amador Transit operates an am and pm round trip to Sacramento. Like the Upcountry's Route 2 it is scheduled for commuter times and has a loyal ridership. And like the Upcountry service it is a skeletal service that leaves many needs unserved and lacks enough trips to attract more riders. However, it is the only service that takes people outside the county and provides a vital link to Amtrak and, via a transfer to Yolo Bus, the Sacramento Airport. This route also provides service to Rancho Murrieta and is subsidized by SACDOT (Sacramento County Department of Transportation) at about $70,000 per year (TP27).

Travel to medical appointments in Sacramento is a primary unmet need (TP44, 57, 58, HS31, 32, 37).  Of the general public surveyed 59% expressed a need for more transit service to Sacramento (TP57). The VA hospital in Mather was a frequently noted destination (HS27, 37, TP Appendix A). The Mather VA facility is accessible from Sacramento’s Bus Route 74 which connects to their light rail system. So this trip is feasible, even if time consuming and arduous for someone with medical problems. But the present configuration of the Amador Transit route involves backtracking, generally conceived of as time wasting. If there were more trips to Sacramento, some could be routed to the Sunrise Light Rail Station. This would cut the distance and time to the Mather VA facility and significantly lower the costs of additional Sacramento runs. More trips to Sacramento would also solve the UpCountry to Sacramento transferring problem and as with all plans that induce system interaction rather than isolated routes, incremental ridership could increase system wide.

Like the proposed relationship between service to the Rancheria and Upcountry , the Ione Route 7 service is geographically linked to the Sacramento service. Route 7 provides three daily round trips between Ione and the county core. It transports about 27 passengers per day at the highest productivity in the system (TP31) given its short distance and the need for service. Ione is one of the county’s pockets of elderly (HS9). But many of the current riders are daylong social service clients (TP76) with the current schedule possibly precluding shorter medical and personal business trips (TP76) as occurs with the present Upcountry service. And Mule Creek Prison, with 500-999 employees (TP7, 58, HS12), is not served by the present routing. Present riders from Ione have to backtrack to the county core to travel to Sacramento (TP Appendix A). However, increased service to Ione is not in the Implementation Plan (TP97) given the other priorities.

With the Sacramento bus service expanded and the commuter runs left untouched, all or most additional service to Ione should be via the Sacramento route. This will lead to seat turnover and serve new transit travel patterns. Also this routing would serve Mule Creek Prison. A possible scheduling would be the early am trips from Sacramento returning via Ione and eliminating some deadheading. However, this proposal is dependent upon Michigan Bar Road being considered a safe transit route. I propose that, like with the Rancheria & UpCountry service, the Ione and Sacramento services be considered as an organic whole. Since the Implementation Plan for Fiscal Year 2014-15 includes the Intercity Feasibility Study (TP97) required for funding of the additional Sacramento service, this linkage and its advantages should be included in that study.

All the plan discussions mention, almost exclusively, Amador County to Sacramento travel. Noexposition of Sacramento to Amador County travel occurs. Yet our county “....is heavily dependent on tourism...” (TP39). According to the 2010 Census, Sacramento County has 229,000 residents over 60 years of age. If only 5% of them took a bus to Amador County once a year that equals 46 round trip riders a day. If each of these visitors spent, in addition to their bus fare, $20 a day (a meal and some trinkets) that would add $230,000 to the local economy. Certainly this should be a consideration. Coupons from local merchants would add a psychological allure for some. Others may just enjoy getting out and having a ride through the countryside. Some attractions such as the County Museum involve uphill walks and some are distant such as the Kennedy Mine. However, walking tours of Jackson and Sutter Creek, even if self guided, would probably be appealing to many. Certainly ridership of this type would be looked on favorably by SACDOT in their subsidy decisions beyond their obligatory funding of Ranch Murrieta/Sacramento service.

I propose that the Amador Council of Tourism, the Chamber of Commerce, the various merchant associations, Amador Transit and all other respective parties form a working group, along with senior citizen groups from Sacramento, to investigate the possibilities of Sacramento to Amador County transit tourism. Can this working group get their findings into the next round of plans? How much would the financial equation change if every return trip from Sacramento except the last trip carried a fully seated load? While the Chamber is a private organization that receives County tourist funding, and other organizations are nongovernmental, Amador Transit and the Amador Council of Tourism are both government entities. In fact, the Council of Tourism is already located at the Sutter Hill Transit Center (TP33). Like the school bus system/Amador Transit situation, we the taxpayers and citizens also own both the tourism council and the transit service.


Conclusion

Will any of the proposals I’ve made work? I haven’t run any numbers. It’s quite possible that given increased ridership, even vastly increased ridership, will still require even higher levels of subsidy and make my suggestions unfeasible. But I will have succeeded if the perspective of the participants in this process is enlarged. The present plans are adopted, but hopefully my proposals are thought provoking enough to influence the next round of plans.

Some of our expenditures are not under our local control. The Amador County Local Transportation Fund spent $125,000 on Ped/Bike planning between 2004 and 2014. Presumably this was to meet State requirements. But it could have been better spent on transit and roads. 

Beyond funding, the “institutional framework” is another stumbling block. Many of the parts of government I’ve noted are very separate entities with their differing styles and organizational cultures. Certainly the fact that the school bus drivers are unionized and the transit bus drivers are not is a significant issue. But are we to be ruled by the institutions we have put in motion to provide us services or are we a self governing people? Is it not wise and efficient to best use the resources we now have, or should we just complain about what we don’t have such as transit subsidies to expand the system beyond its skeletal structure? Can we reach a critical mass of ridership for a more complete transit system on our own and avoid some high cost DAR and other social service transportation expenses? Has anyone forgotten that for reasons still not clear the school buses of New Orleans sat in storage during the Katrina evacuation? 

Over a hundred years ago Londoners faced a confusing, uncoordinated muddle of rail lines for their daily travel. The British upper classes that owned the competing railroads were dismissive of public demands for a unified system. So citizens groups got together and hired a man described as a foul mouthed, cigar chomping, pot bellied Irish American railroader from Chicago. He did what we Yanks would call "butt heads together" and created what is now known as the London Underground. Closer to home, some years ago citizens groups got the planners to discard their proposed express bus system in favor of the now existing Sacramento light rail.

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Will the real Lynn Morgan please stand up?

At one of the spring candidate forums I submitted this question that asked Lynn Morgan: “There are rumors that you are possibly involved with a Central Valley PAC, the Steve Wilensky/SEIU political machine and have agreed to their agenda. What is your relationship to this organized political faction?” She answered that she attended one of their meetings and nothing more. There is more to this story than is commonly known. Presently there are rumors she travels to Calaveras County, probably for political training, on a regular basis and that she has agreed to their extreme left wing agenda.

During the candidates’ forum at the Jackson Civic Center, Steve Wilensky was in the background acting as puppet master. He is at the center of far left political network in the Foothills and the Valley. Lynn Morgan appears to be their coached and chosen candidate. A major part of this network is the Central Valley Progressive PAC. You can witness them on YouTube: Steve Wilensky Speaking at the October 2013 CVPPAC fundraiser, The Central Valley Progressive PAC Fall fund raiser and Phil Giarrizzo speaks at the CVPPAC Fall fundraiser. While there are probably more, these three make clear a radical agenda, far beyond mainstream liberalism.

Part of this network, of which Steve Wilensky is the listed contact, is SNOPAC, the Sierra Nevada Opportunity Political Action Committee. They sponsor the Campaign Summit and Training “...to win key progressive victories in the Sierra and Central Valley in 2014 and subsequent cycles.” They emphasize “social justice issues” and consider their training to be “part campaign boot camp.” This website was linked to www.closethegap.CA that runs women for the state legislature because women are superior to men to many ways. A link from there led to the California List website where a women praised Communist Cuba because so many of the legislators are women. Clearly, the vote for me because I am a woman has been part of Lynn Morgan’s campaign.

So who is the real Lynn Morgan? Her website contains the usual glib statements and her specific positions on Wild & Scenic, Dollar General, etc; but nowhere does it state her political philosophy. Ultimately, this is the most important question because it determines what she may propose and how she will vote on issues not yet known. Therefore, I am asking Lynn Morgan to directly answer several questions. This format will allow her to answer completely and unlike being on the spot in a live forum, she has sufficient time to write up detailed responses.

1) What is your political philosophy? Do you consider yourself a liberal or a progressive and what do those terms signify for you?

2) What is your political relationship with Steve Wilensky?

3) Have you participated in SNOPAC training and, if so, how many times?

4) You stated that you attended a Central Valley PAC event. Was this the progressive PAC, and was your attendance a onetime occurrence or part of your ongoing involvement?

Ms. Morgan, the voters of Amador County would appreciate your candid answers to these questions.

Copyright 2014, Mark L. Bennett

Thursday, July 24, 2014

What is Environmentalism?

Katherine Evatt recently posted on her Facebook page a call to appear at the upcoming Calaveras County BOS to support the Wild & Scenic designation for part of the Mokelumne River. In that posting, she used the expression “anti-environmental forces”. She is defining, based on her point of view, what is environmental and what isn’t. I find this to be a statement of supreme arrogance. Here at the Sutter Gold Mine all the groundwater that seeps into the mine goes through a filtration system that removes the arsenic. This is environmental, and I suspect that all Amadorians agree.

I know what lack of environmental protection is, coming from Buffalo, NY. Every Spring time we would go to the Erie Canal section of river and see dead fish so dense that the surface of the water could not be seen. But after several years, there were no more dead fish because there were no more fish left to die. As I got older, I watched my father’s friends die of liver and kidney cancer. In grad school, I read environmental studies where I could find the childhood homes of those men on the maps of factory smokestack plumes. I have always advocated environmental protection and still do. We can manufacture products in an environmentally safe manner, and I have seen state of the art factories where this occurs.

Instead, we buy goods from Third World countries where the populace is poisoned and smugly state how America is now environmental. We can, and should, manufacture here in a safe manner. Because I care about other people, believe in economic development projects that need water from the Mokelumne River, and well up with tears every time I read another article about the increasing size of our food banks I am considered, as are many others, anti-environmental. I resent this, and suspect many others do.

Wednesday, July 2, 2014

Carbon Capture Refugees

Their Sunday morning worship was disrupted by gunshots. Soldiers had entered their village and said, “Get out”. Those that didn’t run fast enough were beaten. A sick eight-year-old boy was alone in his house as his mother was out getting medicine. He was burned alive when his home was set afire as they destroyed the entire village - all the homes, schools, livestock, crops, etc. Their land - much of which was given to them or their parents as a benefit for British military service in World War Two - was to now become a carbon capture forest for the international environmental elite. One of the over 20,000 dispossessed stated: “I lost my land. I’m landless. Land was my life. I have no rights. I’m not a human being.” Some of these new homeless now have jobs on the forest plantation. Their sign reads: “Towards a sustainable healthy, and environmental healthy community.” Given the bitter irony of that sign, I couldn’t help but think of the entrance sign that read: “Work Makes You Free” at the Auschwitz concentration camp.

But this all happened in far off Uganda. We are all sadly used to ghastly events in the so-called Third World, and many folks probably possess a rather smug attitude toward all this. Perhaps we are ignoring a dry run of our future. Experiments are made, and procedures perfected on those most helpless. The infamous Nazi doctors practiced on black Africans, in what is now known as Namibia, and the world didn’t seem to notice or care. A few years later, Turkish Muslems murdered one and a half million Christian Armenians. The world-wide public outcry was taken in stride by those in charge. A little more than a decade later, Europeans faced this brutality in their backyards.

This carbon capture project to save the world from a fictitious threat that benefits the few and mighty is not surprisingly blessed by the omnipotent Forestry Stewardship Council, an organization I’ve referred to in a prior Outside the Ivory Tower. One financier is the Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, although they prefer to be called HSBC to distance themselves from their origins in bankrolling the opium trade to enslave the Chinese almost 200 years ago. Another backer is the World Bank, an institution many people believe is here to help. The only real environmental problem, the primitive techniques of the farmers which they could have helped improve, was nothing but another excuse for the project. But the New Forests Company, often lauded as socially and environmentally responsible, is confident that it will all work out better in the end based on statistical modeling.

Uganda long ago signed on to the UN Small Arms treaty which Obama has constantly advocated for the USA. Ugandans have no 2nd Amendment rights, so self-defense or a standoff like at the Bundy Ranch was impossible. They were branded as illegal encroachers, just like the Feds told Clive Bundy, that he suddenly had no rights to graze land his family has used for over a 100 years. And just like our veterans who are judged by de facto death panels called wait lists, the Ugandans’ benefit was a sham promise.

Our nation was largely founded by English people who had lost their grazing rights under the Enclosure Acts, and understood the relationship between land ownership and freedom. This became encapsulated into Thomas Jefferson’s concept of the yeoman farmer. Today, we take this to mean a strong middle class as the basis of freedom and social stability. But this is being stripped away, piece by piece, in a process far more subtle than in Uganda. The Wild & Scenic designation for part of the Mokelumne River is part of a much larger picture and a far more ominous future.

Copyright © 2014, Mark L. Bennett