Thursday, January 29, 2015
Wednesday, January 28, 2015
Replacing Sam Crawford
Council member Sam Crawford has resigned from county council, effective March 1, 2015. A video of his statement and some of the other council member's responses can be seen here.
Sam Crawford Resigns from Whatcom County Council
There will be time to review council member Crawford's 16
year legacy of public service. There will be time to say, “Thank you!” and ask
“Why?”. Sam will become a full time, Westside Building Center manager. Best
wishes, Sam!
But what reality presses hard? A position needs to
be filled. The council will choose a replacement. There will be no election. An
appointment will be made. If council cannot agree on a replacement in thirty
days, the county executive has fifteen days to appoint a person to fill out the
balance of Mr. Crawford’s term.
Six elected council persons will either cross swords
intractably (remember Bob Kelly), or will collaborate to make an appointment.
What do you expect? How many candidates will apply? How
will council members frame their favorites?
Here is my prediction.
There is one determined, progressively aligned council
member who heavily supported a progressively aligned District 2 person who lost
the race for District 42 State Representative in November, 2014.
This council member is one of four progressively aligned
council members who vote as a progressively aligned bloc on appointments for key
council appointed boards. It is highly likely we will see this district 2
council position filled by this district 2 progressively aligned person who was
soundly rejected by district 2 voters.
Period.
When Bob Kelly resigned, Pete Kremen wisely avoided
appointing the progressive favorite who had lost elections two times just
before that event. Conservative voters picked Tony Larson a few months later,
and the retired Pete Kremen, as a new councilman unseated Larson a year after
that.
However, the business world operates bone on bone. Free
markets pick winners and losers. Canny business men buy low and sell high, and
delight in extending their business reach. Patronage works. The only problem is
that an unbridled drive to “control” ends up destroying both patrons and heirs.
Successful public policy thrives, not on bitter force, but on trust built
through servant leadership.
Tonight at county council, this same council member pressed
very hard to deny $30,000.00 for WRIA 1 planning
unit quarterly operations. He said to wait for the state to fund this unfunded
mandate. This is chump change. $20,000.00 for a two day, one time water seminar
was freely given to WRIA 1 naysayers in the recent past.
This was nothing but a thinly disguised effort to crush dissent
and irregularity. Rud Browne proposed a new “water council” that would
supersede the WRIA 1 planning unit, an advisory only board totally synchronized
by the executive’s office. Bone on bone. Crush “employee” dissent. Fire those
who are shouting “fire”.
Tonight, two new, progressively approved persons were
appointed to the planning commission, shutting out the reapplying conservative
planning commission chair. David Onkels, known for challenging progressive
planners and their dogma, with experience and counter balance, was tossed on
the trash heap by county council.
Time will tell if the progressive Gang of Four on County
Council have shown foresight in appointing only their own ideological kin to
the leading Whatcom County advisory boards. Time will tell if the WRIA 1
planning unit’s contrarian instincts truly adds value or just angst to the WRIA
1 Joint Board, which has operated outside the RCW legal framework since 2009.
Time will show who truly can meld
- fair, big government, mercy minded progressives, (give to gov't charity)
- free, big market, justice minded conservatives, (give to private charity)
- USING “humble” servant minded leadership. (invest in adversaries).
It is the model and values of the servant leader Christ
on the cross that gave us our western civilization. It is both the progressive AND
conservative abandonment of that model for self actuated nihilism in the “new”,
Post Modern West that is steadily leading us into a new dark age.
JK, Whatcom Works
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Saturday, January 17, 2015
Whatcom Water Trust – The Progressive in My Mirror
Observations from
the recent Water Rights Exchange Trust Forum
I started writing this early Monday morning, my chest ripped
with the painful coughs of a common cold. With time, rest, nutrition and
exercise, breathing will return to normal.
I am finishing this Friday morning. This is draft #5. This post got longer, and then shorter. Thank
you for reading it.
The cold is almost gone, and I am wondering what will be
the new normal of this new day. There is work, there is family, and there are
the hard-to-pin-down public policy service opportunities. I suppose community
involvement never was a linear thing. The more I learn, the more holes and
frayed edges and dangling threads I see.
My used-to-be-tidy life is more and more ripped with the
spasms of water and land use conflict in Whatcom County. PSNERP. Meat packing
on farms. Lawsuits over rural wells. Shellfish bed closures. Lynden water withdrawals.
Small farm plans. Cycling paths. Wetlands. Water Improvement Districts. Senior
water rights. Salmon and herring. Pacific Rim shipping.
Fresh cheeked youth spill into hearings to berate
grizzled farmers. White haired seniors argue with each other over natural
resources for the future. Planning technicians and planning commissioners
redline out each others copy. Managers of parks and land trusts silently build
empires. Volunteers snoop behind farms while distant lawyers and globalists unload
on local elections. News editors and profs pull strings and spin the fresh
cheeked youth, hawking this thing called “progress”. The racking spasms go on.
Progressives. Last night I viewed a lecture by the former progressive community organizer and
publisher, David Horowitz. A key leader in the 1970’s leftist movement, Horowitz turned on his progressive peers in
the early ‘80’s, abandoning the “fight for justice”, arrested by the long list of
civic destructions generations of progressives had wrought.
Born to card carrying American Communists, Horowitz was
shocked out of the “dream” by
San Francisco’s hot anger when he confronted ‘80’s gays
over sending AIDS throughout America from the SF gay bath houses. Pressed with feeding
his four children, he abandoned the donors of the new left and became a
capitalist, working in the traditional American free market economy.
What was Horowitz’ message? Don’t make deals with
progressives when they are in the driver’s seat. They cannot be trusted.
But do not most key
water players in Whatcom County call themselves progressives?
Why would Horowitz
so vehemently accuse progressives? Who is a progressive? What makes a person
progressive? Is this truly relevant to Whatcom County? To water rights?
Last Thursday afternoon, Jan 8, I saw my face in the
public mirror. I went to a water forum in Lynden examining the idea of a trust to facilitate local water rights exchange. I
use water to feed livestock. The issues of tribal senior water rights on the
Nooksack River, the current urgency to prove a hydrological flow between river
and ground water, and the resulting attachment of groundwater rights to tribal
salmon management is a critical concern.
I went to hear what the heavy lifters would say.
After a 2.5 hour survey of laws and water rights exchange
trusts in other places, things were very quiet in the room. When an informal
survey of audience affiliation was taken, at least one half of those present declined
to identify themselves with any group—agriculture, government, NGO or citizens.
This was hardly a gregarious day.
In the last hour, six agency leaders talked for three
minutes each about how they might relate to a water rights exchange trust.
Lynden’s representative was very positive. The PUD was warm to the idea.
Bellingham talked about things that had failed, and Whatcom County was quite
guarded, notably qualifying ideas with questions. A local water services manager shared his
perspectives, and a county staffer tried to decopage the natural resources
marketplace model onto water rights.
I was amazed at the meekness of normally quite self-assured
local government water managers when the lawyers interviewed them, pointing out
gaps in their understanding of water rights exchanges. As I watched and
listened, I began making my own list of trust
breakers that I have observed in Whatcom County.
1) 6+ highly polarized scientific issues that kill water
policy consensus.
2) 8+ agency motivations that divide rather than build
cooperation in water use policy.
3) 12+ events or interveners that have shredded trust between water users.
The lawyers gave a very concise, easy to understand,
helpful presentation of water rights law. The DOE expert gave multiple, interesting
examples of water rights exchange trusts. A full video of the afternoon maybe viewed by going here.
I learned several new things.
1. WA state law treats water rights as property rights.
2. Water rights are extremely valuable.
3. Water rights are guarded intensely. Legislators are
very unwilling to risk any fix of RCW problems.
4. Water rights transfers are very expensive. Water
rights exchange trusts could offer scales of economy.
5. Current Washington water banking models use free
market pricing principles.
6. WA state government does not currently set water
rights pricing.
7. Water rights banks can ease water shortages with no
grants needed.
8. Government grants have been used to buy and resell
water rights to preserve existing water users who have no or faulty water
rights.
Other takeaways:
9. Other property rights such as stream buffers and fish
habitat, have extremely little market value compared to water rights. It seems
grants and donations, not free markets is the only funding stream a Natural
Resources Marketplace could swim in.
10. Selling water rights as property rights could force
progressive light persons to see the historical value of property rights. Such
a trust could provide some very teachable moments, reversing the Democrat / progressive
choice to forecast no personal property rights in the future—IF Olympia leaves
pricing alone.
After this forum, my first question was not
“Could a water
rights exchange trust help here?”,
BUT
“Who locally could
be trusted to search out if a water
rights exchange trust would work,
AND
“Who could be trusted to manage it?”.
Let me illustrate. Several days earlier, a sharp observer
pointed out to me a $20,000.00 line item in a recent WRIA1 joint board budget
for hosting this forum. Having been involved in putting on forums, I know that
amount is much, much more than what is needed to rent a room for up to 150
people, buy some cookies, and pay even high priced lawyers to speak for 3-4
hours. So, who might be getting all that dough?
I brought up this line item in a meeting a couple of days
earlier, offending a colleague who really liked this forum. I decided to go
straight to the organizers, and found out that the budget line item was based
on a prior event that was 16 hours long, with multiple meals. It was a budget
number, not a disbursement.
(Was a two day forum planned? Then reduced to one day?
Then reduced to one afternoon? Are water rights, property rights too explosive
for local water use gurus to unpack?)
Now why not just trust the government bean counters? (See item #4 below).
David Horowitz, a formernational progressive heavyweight, identifies four trust busters that define today’s progressive
leaders from his 1960s group. Saul Alinsky is their prophet, and Bill Ayers, Hillary Clinton, David Axelrod, Valerie
Jarrett and Barack Obama are the “born
with a progressive spoon” rulers who inherited the 1930-50 communist
progressive legacy.
1) Progressive
leaders are dialectic contrarians. Progressives work a cycle of institutional
destruction to “set innocents free”. This is the opposite of America’s founders,
who “checked and balanced sinners” against eternal, unchanging laws.
2) Progressive
leaders are arrogant. They are jihadi-envangelists of a never before
seen, soon to be seen utopia that common sense does not confirm.
3) Progressive
leaders hate Judeo-Christian America. America’s sins are magnified, and her excellences
are discredited. Progressives create class warfare to conquer Americans and
destroy their institutions.
4) Progressive
leaders are liars. Spin, argument, denial is the habituated progressive
yellow brick road to the future.
But, you ask, what does this have to do with our green,
verdant Whatcom County home? Who dares to class the fine friends and children
of conservative Lynden with Lenin, Stalin or Mao. Even Alinsky, nasty god son
of the Chicago Mafia, has passed away. Are not today’s progressives gentle and
benevolent and totally approachable?
Horowitz answers this linking question. His 1960s,
Vietnam War busting, Che Guevarra and Castro loving generation broke a
progessive rule. They refused to deceive. They openly spit on the returning
soldiers. They openly spilled blood on
American streets. They openly called themselves communists.
The young left despised the double standard their Jewish New York parents had lived. The parents
claimed to be “Jeffersonian Democrats”, yet collaborated secretly with Moscow’s
KGB handlers. The children rebelled against their parent’s cautions, sowing open,
violent, bloody revolution, and it failed. America ignored them, and they had
to abandon revolution for jobs.
Hence, Alinsky’s Rules for Radicals. Put on suits and
heels. Penetrate American institutions. Slowly, steadily create the largest
army of tactic proxies possible, winning America’s next generations to
socialism through the public schools and universities.
Alinsky and his core group have succeeded beyond their
wildest dreams. Two generations of Americans have become progressive light, are
proud of it, and gladly move the progressive dream “forward”.
Are you a progressive? Give yourself a test. Evaluate the idea of a water rights exchange
trust using the following grid, adapted from historical
American values of freedom.
Free People:
- Do water rights exchange trusts protect individual liberty?
- Do water rights exchange trusts promote personal responsibility?
Free Markets:
- Do water rights exchange trusts protect property rights?
- Do water rights exchange trusts promote free markets?
Good Governance:
- Do water rights exchange trusts maintain limited government?
- Do water rights exchange trusts protect local powers from state or federal over reach?
- Do water rights exchange trusts promote fiscal responsibility?
- Do water rights exchange trusts provide equal protections for all under the rule of law?
If my guess is right, the above issues seem strange or
irrelevant or bothersome to you, don’t they. If so, you are likely “progressive
light.” If you have a multiple reasons why the above nine values are moral
faults to absolutely obliterate, you are more than progressive light.
Frankly, in spite of my “conservative” education, I have
had to bend my mind to think about the above issues in the last several years.
Why is that?
Probably the
greatest tool for transforming Americans from being a free, motivated, sharing
nation into a stagflated two tier model of progressive socialism (elites and
masses) has been easy money. Loans, and grants.
Why would I say that? Do we not need an active WIT,
Whatcom Integration Team, pulling in the maximum in outside grants as an
approved “local integrating organization”? (WIT was rebuked sharply by County Council
a number of months ago for classifying rural values that did not represent a
majority of Whatcom County citizens.)
Good financial management is uncommon. Financial failure,
in business and government and NGO/church groups is the norm. Easy loans and
grants make freefall unnoticeable and turn shattering landings into an
irrelevant dream that disappears in summer mornings of ease.
What better way to use an enemy’s strengths against him.
Make economic hyperwarp growth the norm, turn the debt load and grant streams
into a dagger, and the traditional American Judeo Christian moralist will fall
to his knees, begging to drink this pure water at the progressive fountain.
Let me relate this to the forum on water rights exchange
trusts.
Why must a WRIA
region with too much water talk about a trust to transfer “scarce” water
rights?
When is there
scarcity of water? Answer: July and August, as relates to certain salmon
spawning cycles.
Why would a
majority of people need a trust to exchange a minority portion of water rights?
Answer: because unusual favor has been granted to a
minority people to sue and win the majority portion.
Who decided this?
Why?
Answer One: The progressives. Innocents must be set free
from debilitating institutions. And, the most innocent “environment” is the
“original, natural one”, where there were no roads, no planes, no farms, no
sawmills… …just wild animals roaming free, and first nations foraging and
hunting.
Answer Two: The
progressives. Rich oppressors must be forced
to share, being moved from consumptive suburban lifestyles and homes to high density urban enclaves, using only
public transit, not owning property, but sharing only what local cooperative
soviets determine is good for one and all equally.
Answer Three: The
progressives. Fathers and mothers saw
the nice homes and cars and vacations and chose the mortgage and the second
job. Public schools, being well funded, well staffed models of American decorum,
could be trusted with the children. Now,
sixty years later, generation x rocks to a progressive beat, and progressive teachers
wink and smile as the core American values lie bound and gagged on an altar
built to salmon, cycling viewsheds, organic chocolate and boundless sex.
Who is the
progressive in the mirror?
It is me. My generation. My parents generation. The
public servants I have delegated my citizen responsibilities to so I need not
be stressed. Tell me, does Whatcom still
work?
Should I resist the
public policy of whoever I call a progressive?
Maybe. Maybe not. There are the far left progressives that want me
to burn out fighting their nasty machine. Then, there are the ‘progressive
lights” who are just doing the job they are being paid to do, watching to see
if I can eat humble pie, make the leader of the day successful, and carry a
load wherever possible.
How does one make
worthy local leaders successful, regardless of conservative or progressive
orientation?
America still requires its citizens to choose their
leaders. Are you concerned about public policy abuse? In the next few months
you may have a chance to get involved up
close in shining the lights. Stay tuned.
And, thank you, facilitators of this water rights
exchange forum for putting on a very informative afternoon, and… … for not spending the whole $20,000.00 on we
who attended.
Time will tell if a water rights exchange trust is a good
idea. It may very well be a next step in re-engaging true civic service and
public policy awareness.
JK – Whatcom Works
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