Showing posts with label GPT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GPT. Show all posts

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Report: Tea Party “GPT Bulk Handling Terminal”—“Coal Train Debate”

Town hall style meetings can be a lot of fun! When grass roots people speak their minds, there is a clarity and freshness often missing in “canned” newspaper reports and mono cultured college lectures. Last night’s Tea Party “debate” on Cherry Point issues was no exception.

A high point was the impromptu stand in of Bill Hinely, retired professor and strong supporter of climate change theories. After a half hour of town hall style questioning of Craig Cole, Mr. Hinely put up his hand and offered to present some alternate views. He was given the floor for ten minutes to say anything he wanted to.

What followed was a free ranging view from the street of what he felt was the issue—worldview! Bill concisely said the issue was much bigger than coal at Cherry Point. Claiming the support of overwhelming scientific consensus that the earth has been and continues to be damaged severely, to the point of being uninhabitable in fifty to one hundred years if we continue on the same track, Bill then pointed to a solution. People need to give up all dearly held assumptions and practices, and using neighborhood consensus, regroup, rethink, and let the chips fall where they may.

Real issues. Real people.  And real questions followed.

Delaine Clizbe: (paraphrased) “I worked in commercial fishing, an environmentally touchy subject. Would you tell me that I should not have had a job?”

Bill Hinely: (paraphrased) “You have to get below the question. Groups of people need look at things together. We need to let go of individualism and get better solutions from group thinking. We need to question all traditional wisdom and practices, and make group decisions that leave no one out.

Elliott Fine: (paraphrased) “Have you ever heard of Saul Alinsky? If you really want a group think society, you should move to Russia”.

Maybe the absence of Terry Wechsler was not such a loss. Better theatre. More clarity. And, a great deal of civility in the process. (And who says the Marxist / Hegelian dialectic is dead at Western or other universities?)

Another sardonic question by Jeff McKay, after discussing the unprecedented EIS scoping goals / intervention of the Washington State DOE:  (paraphrased)  “If the Washington State Department of Ecology is going to examine the world wide impact of burning coal, will they examine the worldwide impact of wheat shipping , of American wheat gluten on leaky gut syndrome in various world nations?

You get the picture. Maybe the bureaucrats and professors of somewhere need to look in the mirror of the street and see if the “emperor’s new clothes” really fit all that well.

Report submitted by John Kirk.

Monday, September 16, 2013

Whatcom Water Rights Rip Tides

Sandy Point Water Lawsuit And Mediation Skewed By Washington State "Sensitivity Protocols". Lummi Simple Fee Land Titles Cannot Be Tribal Trust Lands.

In trying to come up with a title for my talk today, I had a reason to call it the “Grand Deception.”  To my way of thinking, the efforts by government personnel and  governmental officials at all levels, to deceive or evade accountability with our native American neighbors, surpasses “anything” that is currently holding the attention of our media by way of Benghazi or the IRS scandals.

Read more here.


Whatcom Democrats Find Seven "Sensitivities" (Reasons) To Ignore Tribal Land Title Law And Bludgeon Cherry Point Industrial Businesses.

WHEREAS The Whatcom County Democrats Central Committee affirms and promotes the inherent worth and dignity of all people.

WHEREAS – We recognize the Lummi Nation as the descendants of one of several original First Nation communities inhabiting, for many, many generations, the land and waters of this area, now known as the Salish Sea; and...


Read more here. 


Kansas City/Seattle group profiles Whatcom citizens observing discussion of first nations reservation dealings with neighbors.

 April 6, 2013. As blue sky peeked through the clouds of an overcast Northwest morning, a group of mostly indigenous people gathered near the Lakeway Inn Best Western in Bellingham, Washington. Drumming and singing pulsed as those present held signs reading, “Honor the Treaties” and “We are All the People.” Event organizers, Idle No More Bellingham, had called community members together to protest two organizations “who are holding a conference to discuss opposition to the existence of tribes as separate and sovereign entities.”

Read more here. 


Gateway Pacific Terminal Powerpoint Rebuts Inflammatory Accusations

Saturday, September 7, 2013

Whatcom Works Has Legs.


We have readers, and are getting affirming feedback. Thank you! It looks like this local “Drudge Page” has value. In conjunction with the theme of value added dairy, we want to say hello.

Whatcom Works  is produced by members of the John Kirk family. We live near Sumas, Washington, where we raise dairy sheep. Dad works a full time day job, and we are not being funded by any outside entity. We want to speak to multiple issues in local elections and public policy. Whatcom County has more needs than getting or denying a coal terminal.

We believe in the value of hard work, admire writers of well thought out works, and think that many Whatcom County traditional values work well.

We are publishing/editing with an eye to what we perceive as a intentional denial by local radio and news print outlets of local news and commentary that highlights and challenges recent local socialist initiatives and public policies that have failed so obviously in other parts of the world.

As a working family, we want to draw others into working for a happy life, with a focus on being net givers, not net takers. Thank you for your interest in our local “news”.

Dairy! Anyone who milks domesticated animals knows work. Anyone who leaves the urban refuge and acquires milking stock has several learning curves going simultaneously—a lot of home work.

After living with livestock since 1996, we think we understand the value of family members working with each other.

I remember attending a Sustainable Connections Seminar on local farm to institution food marketing opportunities several years ago. It was a great chance to network and find out how others were doing.

I came away with a sense of having met four distinct groups of people. There were the starry eyed 40 to 50 year olds, early retirees, having dropped a large portion of their assets into small farm acreages. They were so eager to get going with vegetables and “save the planet”.

There were the veterans of market gardening, more or less well beaten up, not wanting to ooze too much grimness, but having a hard time fantasizing with the newbies.

There were the local value added dairy farmers, some with big marketing bruises, some doing quite well, but for the most part making their dreams work.

Finally, there were the “operatives”. College types who smiled and ran the event, but were not farming. More like community organizers, shepherding “children” and setting up larger goals only marginally related to food, farming or sustainable land use.

Farm labor is expensive. In my discussions with other grow local/eat local value added food producers, there is a common haze of fatigue over trying to do as much as possible one’s self to make financial ends meet.

Some quit. Some finance. Some join co-ops. Some super specialize. Some take every grant that comes down the road. We all grapple with work loads.

A major benefit for our family has been an improved quality of life in food products. We really like the superior ice cream, yogurt, cheddar/manchego, cream cheese, feta—you name it. We also grow various fruits and have a good sized vegetable garden.

And, because we share the work load, life is good! However, for us, after a decade of learning and working, we still are not WSDA certified. We do not sell milk, or cheese to the public, or anyone. That may come very soon.

Our experience with local government officials has been mixed. The local WSDA dairy inspector has been very helpful. The Whatcom County planning and development department had a staff retraining program that almost took us out. We appealed and together found a solution.

Everyone wants to bring a good value to their community. In the debate of sustainable living and rural vision at the local level, I do not first question motives. However, I do usually keep an eye on local activists knowledge, experience and character.

Attending County Council Meetings over the last two years has made me a lot more cynical. There are deeper currents and quicksands than I thought possible.

Money and grants is a huge issue. Not just for farmers, but even more for the local integrating organizations and elected/appointed officials who manage them.

Wise use of grants is very good. But when grants and LIO institutions create dependency, innovation is stifled, prudent management of land and water is constricted, and timely farm to market adjustments are put off. 

Do socialism and market interventions really help? Can pencil oriented college type “stewards” and “baykeepers” really be trusted to keep their hands off the grant monies? When does a huge flow of grants cut off the legs of elected overseers and put unelected adventurers in the public policy driver’s seat.

Thank you for reading articles we recommend. Building a good local community takes constant education. Inattention to local public policy issues is deadly.

Read on! Share articles! Take heart! Take time! Take action!

John Kirk, Whatcom Works.

Thursday, September 5, 2013

Lummi Tribe Declares War on Cherry Point Industrial Zone

In a letter to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Lummi Nation Chairman Tim Ballew says the tribe "has unconditional and unequivocal opposition" to the Gateway Pacific Terminal coal export pier that SSA Marine hopes to build at Cherry Point.

Read more here.

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Council Candidates Shun Tax Funded Environmental Litigant Forum

There has been a lot of media focus on a cancelled candidate forum for this evening, which was to be hosted by Futurewise of Whatcom County.  Apparently the so-called conservative candidates had declined to participate in the forum.  The reasons given for that decision were based on the ongoing litigation between Futurewise and RE Sources for a Sustainable Community, and the potential conflict that would likely occur at a forum sponsored by these litigants:...

To read more, go here. 

Saturday, August 24, 2013

Gateway Pacific Terminal Myths & Facts








SSA Marine Lawsuit Settlement Refills Coffers of ReSources and Puget Sound Environmentalists

Pacific International Terminals, the SSA Marine subsidiary pursuing the Gateway Pacific coal export terminal at Cherry Point, has agreed to pay $1.65 million to settle a lawsuit stemming from the company's unauthorized land-clearing work on the property in 2011.

Read more here: http://www.bellinghamherald.com/2013/07/31/3122404/ssa-marine-pays-165-million-to.html

Herald: John Stark: Big Win for Environmental Opponents of Gateway Pacific Terminal

Whatcom County and its regulatory state and federal partners have announced they will conduct a sweeping review of Gateway Pacific Terminal’s environmental impacts — an apparent victory for the coal terminal's opponents.

Read More: at the Bellingham Herald

Read more here: http://www.bellinghamherald.com/2013/07/31/3121522/ecology-will-study-impact-of-coal.html#storylink=cpy
Read

Senator Doug Erickson Website Link: Environmentally Driven Ruling Thwarts International Resource Trade

Today the Washington State Department of Ecology and Whatcom County announced their decision on the EIS scope for the proposed Gateway Pacific Terminal, located at Cherry Point, Washington. With this announcement, Washington state has set a new precedent that could potentially interfere with international commerce laws protecting rail and trade and discourage new business investment in the state.

 Read More:http://view.s4.exacttarget.com/?j=febe127271600d75&m=fe8d1570726c027571&ls=fe2b16797165037a741673&l=ff64167676&s=fe5b1376756c01797314&jb=ffcd16&ju=fe6c1570706500797417&r=0

Resolution To Honor The Lummi Nation's Sacred Lands And Waters Of Cherry Point


WHEREAS The Whatcom County Democrats Central Committee affirms and promotes the inherent worth and dignity of all people.

WHEREAS – We recognize the Lummi Nation as the descendants of one of several original First Nation communities inhabiting, for many, many generations, the land and waters of this area, now known as the Salish Sea; and

WHEREAS That the First Nations’ cultural tenets include the preserving, protecting and promoting their way of life and how that means protecting the land, waters, plant life, air and animals who share it and upon which they depend; and

WHEREAS – The First Nations’ right to reserve the use and protection of those lands, fresh water, the ocean nearby, and the natural products and resources which may be derived from those places is a right that is guaranteed by conscience, treaty and law; and

WHEREAS – We recognize how vulnerable these gifts of natural resources are and how easily they can become exploited, severely harmed and depleted by forces who do not share First Nations’ worldview; and

WHEREAS – That urban and industrial occupation and use of those historical lands and waters, will destroy the natural remains of those tribal histories, and cause unrecoverable losses; and

WHEREAS – We further recognize the Lummi Nation know the lands and waters of Xwe’chi’eXen (known to us as Cherry Point) to be sacred lands and waters associated with their Creation Story, known to them as “the home of the ancient ones,” are the ancestral burial grounds for their People and they have a promise and duty to protect and preserve these sacred spaces; and

WHEREAS – The Lummi Nation have a history of opposing development of their cultural, historic and spiritual lands and waters, known to them as Xwe’chi’eXen, Cherry Point.

NOW THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED THAT The Whatcom County Democrats Central Committee, pledges its support to the Lummi Nation in protecting their sacred lands and water.

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED THAT We propose and support the rejection of all industrial, commercial and residential uses of the remaining natural lands and waters on and adjacent to Cherry Point; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED THAT – We will encourage members to request that the current legislative bodies with jurisdiction over all industrial, commercial and residential uses of the remaining natural lands on or adjacent to Cherry Point, rule that such uses are not and shall not be permitted; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED THAT We will encourage members to request that the current legislative bodies with jurisdiction over all industrial, commercial and residential uses of the remaining and connecting waters near Cherry Point, including the rivers and creeks, the nearshore and the offshore waters, rule that such uses are not and shall not be permitted, except for the use of potable water for consumption by the people, on and near such waters, so long as such use does not harm or threaten the existing natural community’s reliance on the same resources; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED THAT We will actively encourage our membership to engage in activities and events, supported by the Lummi Nation, that could prevent or assist in deterring significant damage to these sacred lands and waters on and adjacent to Cherry Point; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED THAT We will actively encourage our membership to engage in activities and events, supported by the Lummi Nation, that will work to educate the surrounding community as to the importance of preserving and restoring the lands and waters on and adjacent to Cherry Point.