History, politics, people of Oly WA

Author: Emmett O'Connell (Page 79 of 176)

Kemmis: A chance to do it right in the West

If Daniel Kemmis isn’t the man for Secretary of Interior, Daniel Kemmis himself has a pretty good list. Former Oregon Governor John Kitzaber for secretary and Courtney White (Quivira Coalition) and Jan Brown (Henry’s Fork Foundation) as undersecretaries would bring the broad coalition building that Western Democrats have been successfully using into the federal government.

Read the entire piece by Kemmis, its very good:

Politically, Democrats are poised to continue the region’s realignment by delivering 30 or more electoral votes in 2012, and perhaps promoting rising stars like the Democratic mayors of Salt Lake City, Boise and Denver to statewide offices. But presidential appointments that simply swing the pendulum back to a “now it’s our turn” approach to public land and resource issues are liable to be perceived as a new “War on the West.” That will certainly make it harder to elect or re-elect Western Democrats and harder to hold and expand Obama’s foothold in the region.

Now there’s an opportunity to move beyond the pendulum swings in policy that produce more gridlock, more litigation, more bitterness and less sustainable protection of Western ecosystems and ways of life. Westerners should be using every ounce of influence they have with the transition team to make sure that opportunity isn’t lost.

Democrats haven’t become a stronger party in the West since 2000 because Westerners have over eight years given up on being libertarian-bent conservatives.

First, there are a lot of smart Democrats out in the West who have made their moves since Bush came into office.

Also, Bush (a Southern fried style religious Republican) was a nice foil for those smart Western Dems to leverage against, just as previous Democratic administrations were for Republicans.

Don’t give Western Republicans any ammo, its time to do it right in the West.

My blogging prehistory: Olympia News Boy

From August of 2001 to the spring of 2004, I maintained Olympia Newsboy. It was my first shot at blogging and, for the most part, I think I did a pretty good job.

I started out with complaining about the scalping laws in Seattle and their selective enforcement and also got into local politics.

I can’t really remember why I shuttered Olympia Newsboy, but from what I can tell from this blog’s archives, I started Olympia Time just about time I shuttered Olympia Newsboy. I can’t explain it, but despite shutting the blog down, there wasn’t much of a lapse in blogging.

Anyway, thank God for the internet archive, I’m probably going to sweep up as many posts that were saved there and fold them into this blog.

Why Daniel Kemmis should be appointed Interior Secretary

Les Blumenthal writes a headscratcher about how Obama will relate to the West:

Here’s the question: What does a community organizer from Chicago who spent four years in the Senate before being elected president know about spotted owls, endangered salmon, mountain bark beetles, Western water rights, old-growth forests and the maintenance backlog in the national parks?

The answer: Probably not much.

That’s a bit of an unfair characterization. While Obama may not know that much about the technical aspects of governing the West, his experience as a grassroots organizer would put him smack dab in the middle of the spiritual center of the West’s recent history of conflict.

To put it bluntly, Obama knows all about the West. The conflicts the federal government has been fighting for the past 30 or so years in the West have been against Western versions of Obama.

Organizers (sage brush rebels) who want a distant bureaucracy to not roll over their communities. People who have rallied their neighbors to effect change.

The person Obama would appoint as the federal government’s liaison to the West would be someone who could engage the federal government in not fighting the old fights. Rather, that Interior secretary would attempt to break down the old walls that divide communities, corporations, users of public land, environmentalists and local governments.

Daniel Kemmis
, has a deep history of a politician (mayor, state house speaker), writer and thinker. It also needs to be said that Kemmis is one of the most Western of Western Democrats. He wouldn’t be seen as a Democrat from the Pacific Coast or east divebombing into the interior West, ready to put the leg-irons of a distant bureaucracy on an entire region.

His short and dirty prescription for Obama’s approach to the West:

Daniel Kemmis, director of the Center for the Rocky Mountain West at the University of Montana and an influential Democrat, said Obama should listen to Democratic elected officials who gained their offices by working with both environmentalists and industry and governing from the middle. Historically, Democrats wrote off the West and Republicans took it for granted. But this time wins in Colorado, Nevada and New Mexico were crucial to Obama’s victory.

“I think it would be foolish for a new Democratic administration to treat the West in the same way it has been treated in the past,” Kemmis said.

Kemmis and Chris Wood, chief operating officer of Trout Unlimited, hope the Obama administration works with Western states, loggers, sportsmen and other land users to craft compromises like Idaho’s own compromise on its 9 million acres of roadless national forest lands.

“The lesson of the last eight years is that when you listen to local people, you can still gain significant conservation benefits,” Wood said.

Kemmis’s less short and dirty prescription is “This Sovereign Land,” an Obama-esque outline for how the West can be governed in a new way with everyone at the table.

From the dust jacket:

In This Sovereign Land, Daniel Kemmis offers a radical new proposal for giving the West control over its land. Unlike those who wish to privatize the public lands and let market forces decide their fate, Kemmis, a leading western Democrat and committed environmentalist, argues for keeping the public lands public, but for shifting jurisdiction over them from nation to region. In place of the current centralized management, he offers a regional approach that takes into account natural topographical and ecological features, and brings together local residents with a vested interest in ensuring the sustainability of their communities. In effect, Kemmis carries to their logical conclusion the recommendations about how the West should be governed made by John Wesley Powell more than a century ago.Throughout, Kemmis argues that the West no longer needs to be protected against itself by a paternalistic system and makes a compelling case that the time has come for the region to claim sovereignty over its own landscape.

Soon to be President Obama has the opportunity to change the game in the West. Kemmis would be able to bring the kind of change to Western governance that we hope happens throughout the country.

Special preview on my new technology white paper

I’m working on a new white paper for my good friend Ken as we attempt to use technology to leverage his Ken-ness to the world.

Here’s a new section for you to chew on while I finish up the rest of the white paper, titled “Keeping Ken Blue”:

Blogging & Podcasting

Ken Camp currently has no blog. So why should he start one? Think of it as an on-going staff meeting. Ken puts out ideas and is offered instantaneous feedback and suggestions. A blog is only as effective as the community it engages. A blog should not just be a one-way conversation or an extension of the Ken’s nasty emails. Nor should a blog be an ATM for his beer budget. The blog needs fresh content 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. The blog should be a team approach with at least one “front-page” author to maintain relevance and content. Examples of team blogs are Daily Kos (www.dailykos.com) and Washblog (www.washblog.com). Ken should be a regular contributor to the blog.

Ken’s friends and co-workers should be encouraged to establish blogs, in their own words, and to take time to respond to questions in the comment threads. Successful blogging is about establishing dialogue and trusted two-way communications. It is important to note that it isn’t enough to just post your thoughts and leave. Chris Bowers of MyDD (www.myDD.com) notes, “to post and not respond is the blog equivalent of ringing a doorbell, leaving a note and running away.”

Ken should be available monthly, if not more often, to take questions from bloggers via meetings or teleconferences. Make available weekly, Ken, for questioning by local and state bloggers through in-person meetings, teleconferences or the Internet.

Ken should also send daily talking points, press releases and reports to local and state bloggers for dissemination throughout the progressive blogosophere.

In addition, Ken’s website should have a “Blog News” page that aggregates and organizes discussions in the progressive blogosphere. Websites such as the Pacific Northwest Portal and Google News are good examples of this.

“A successful organizational blog expresses the needs and character of an organization, permitting people to engage beyond the talking points.”

* Zephyr Teachout, Dean campaign – Blog for America Get This Party Started: How Progressives Can Fight Back and Win (New York: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., 2006)

Ken also needs to be friendly to young people who are increasingly mobile. Content should not just be accessible by desktop computer or laptop, but also through RSS feeds on a PDA or on a mobile phone. Text messaging with targeted messages to voters should be explored. In addition to the traditional activists of the Ken centered world, the website needs to encourage the participation of young people. Using current and future technology will engage young people in ways other technologies have failed.

Furthermore, podcasting should be available on the website. Podcasts provide an excellent means for sharing interviews, speeches, and answering questions or addressing issues. They personalize Ken in ways a written message cannot, and provide another means for getting out his message.

Podcasting might be considered this era’s counterpart to President Roosevelt’s “fireside chats.” Direct contact, whether verbal or visual, provides a far greater bond with the recipient that email or a web page. Given the mobility and work style of so many adults today, podcasts provide not only a means for citizens to download and listen at their convenience (“on demand delivery of content”) they can be easily shared on a web page. Most recently, podcasts can be streamed to mobile telephones, a popular trend with the youngest members of the Ken supporting citizenry.

Ha!

Seriously though Ken, you really need to start blogging more often. At your own blog.

Susan Bogni makes her case for commissioner seat

Susan Bogni, retiring county commissioner Bob Macleod’s assistant, wrote a letter to newly elected PCOs, making her case for why she should be appointed to the upcoming vacant seat.

Nothing in the letter takes care of my reservations towards her here.

Again, I’m sure she’s really nice, but the whole idea of a staff assistant taking the position feels wrong.

Actually, her letter spells out and amplifies my reservations, at least in my reading.

For the past six years, I have sat by Bob’s side as his teammate with shared values for the many topics in county government. I sit at the table with him on water quality and flooding matters — I am the designated alternate on the Tri-County Flood Authority.

I have drafted and helped advance ordinances such as noise control, no shooting zones and the apprenticeship utilization ordinance…

She goes on to spell out her knowledge of county government from the inside, he involvement in the county Democratic organization and her laudable community involvement. But, that no more qualifies her for the position than any other engaged, committed citizen.

Using words like “team mate,” “sit at the table” and “drafted and helped advance,” it seems like she’s trying to tell us that she’s already a county commissioner.

The only other thing I’m worried about is that Susan has never run for office herself. She’s of course helped out on campaigns, she knows how they’re run. But, I think there is something vastly different when you’re the one on the spot.

The one positive thing I can say about Susan is that she lives in unincorporated Thurston County, where the people most effected by this commission seat also live.

Show Jeff Kingsbury some love today

UPDATE: More threads here at Olympia Standard, Olyblog and Olyforums. Show your support folks!

Because he needs it.

Today’s going to be hard for Jeff, one of our city council members, not just because he’s dealing with this, but because of all the talk that is going to surround it, a significant portion of that negative.

So, do your part and take part in the conversation in a positive way.

Here’s a message I sent around to friends this morning:

I’m sure most of you have already heard about the vile hate mail that targeted Jeff Kingsbury in the last few days.

Please show your support for Jeff in the discussion going on right now in various places online around town. Here are is the link to comment thread at the Olympian where you can show your support for Jeff

I’ll forward more threads when they pop up if you’re interested.

Just a few thoughts on how to best respond:

There will be negative comments towards Jeff, please do not directly take on this posters or engage in a “flame war.” This is exactly what they want you to do, to rise to the bait.

Instead, make sure you contact the forum administrators or editors so they can take the hateful, hurtful comments down. This is especially true for comment threads on the Olympian, as they have well laid out rules for their threads.

A simple positive message that you support Jeff and that he’s in your thoughts and/or prayers should do. Thanks.

How Bob Macleod will actually be replaced (Thurston Democrats process)

Forget what I wrote here, here’s the actual process (via email):

Just a week ago, we were all saddened when Bob Macleod, Thurston County Commissioner, announced his mid-term resignation from the District 3 position effective December 31, 2008, due to health concerns. Our community is united in its gratitude for the 6 years of service Bob gave as our commissioner and the preceding decades of community service he generously provided while serving as news director at KGY radio. We all hope the challenges of his declining health may be minimized and that he may continue to stay active to the extent he feels comfortable.

We are now ready to begin the difficult task of “filling his shoes” for the remainder of his term. In accordance with Article II, Section 15 of the Washington State Constitution, the two other commissioners, Cathy Wolfe and Sandra Romero, will have 60 days after December 31 in which to appoint a successor who will serve until November 2009, when a successor to serve the remainder of Bob’s term will be elected. The Thurston County Democratic Central Committee (Precinct Committee Officers) will provide the names of three candidates from which Cathy and Sandra are to choose one as the temporary successor.

Although our newly elected Precinct Committee Officers (PCOs) do not take office until December 1st and the upcoming holiday season poses some scheduling challenges, we do intend to provide the three names to the two other commissioners by mid-January at latest. This is the process we will follow:
Applications

Applications from Democrats resident and registered to vote in Commissioner District 3 are now being accepted, provided they are postmarked or emailed by December 1st. In addition to providing contact information (name, address, phone numbers and email address), applicants must indicate

(1) why they want to serve as county commissioner,
(2) what they believe makes them uniquely qualified to fill this vacancy,
(3) how they are prepared to stand for election in 2009 and then again in 2010, and
(4) what they intend to accomplish during their term as county commissioner.

Applications may be emailed to commissioner@thurstondemocrats.org or post mailed to PO Box 164, Olympia, WA 98507.
Review Process

By mid-December (before the holiday vacations), the PCOs officially elected in 2008 whose precincts are in Commissioner District 3 will meet to interview the applicants and develop a ranked list to submit to the full Thurston County Democratic Central Committee (TCDCC). This date of this meeting will be announced after December 1st.

In early January, a special meeting of all PCOs officially elected in 2008 shall be convened to review the recommendations of the district PCOs and develop a final ranked list of three candidates to submit to the two remaining county commissioners.

Each meeting will be chaired and moderated by the Thurston County Democrats’ chair or designee.
Public Comment

Written comments from the public are welcome and may be sent to commissioner@thurstondemocrats.org. All comments received by December 15 will be distributed to all PCOs who are participating in the review process.

John Cusick, Chair
Thurston County Demcocrats

Olympia WA Acoustic version

Here’s the first of what I hope is a somewhat regular feature, all the various versions of Rancid’s Olympia WA I can find on the internet.

Beyond the obvious, this song holds a special place for me because I first got to like it when I was away from Olympia. I picked it up … And Out Come the Wolves at a record store in Dover, DE during the two years between graduating high school out there and deciding to move back out here.

So, here’s a Spanish (?) punk band with their acoustic cover:

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