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February 15th, 2006 NIGEL JAQUISS | News
 

Spin Cycle

A reality check on candidate Ginny Burdick's claims

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With a school-tax measure apparently off the May city ballot and a proposed repeal of publicly financed elections in danger of not qualifying, state Sen. Ginny Burdick's challenge to City Commissioner Erik Sten looks increasingly like Portland's marquee matchup.

Burdick has already launched her City Council bid, with a new website (www.ginnyburdickforportland.com) and campaign mailings to Portlanders. Befitting a longtime politico and PR consultant with Gard & Gerber, Burdick's communication is slick. To answer the question of whether it's accurate, here's a comparison of what she says and what she's done:

The SpinThe Truth
A self-styled outsider, Burdick refers on her website to Sten as a "10-year incumbent" and says she'll run a "grass roots campaign."Burdick, 58, is also a 10-year incumbent, representing Southwest Portland and part of northeast Washington County in the Oregon Senate since 1996. Her insider status began a decade earlier when she was the spokeswoman for Neil Goldschmidt's 1986 gubernatorial campaign. After Goldschmidt won, he appointed her to the powerful Land Conservation and Development Commission. Burdick's campaign manager, Ed Grosswiler, nevertheless insists that the 38-year-old Sten is the career pol, having worked full-time at City Hall as an aide and commissioner for 16 years.
Burdick touts herself as just as progressive as Sten, a longtime advocate for publicly owned utilities. In her kickoff speech last November, Burdick said, "Public power is a worthy goal, and I wish Oregon were a public-power state like Washington.''In the past three years, PacifiCorp and Portland General Electric have spent more than $4 million to crush local public-power campaigns. The firm hired to run those opposition campaigns? Gard & Gerber. Grosswiler acknowledges the role of Burdick's employer but notes she voted last year for a Senate bill (ultimately vetoed by the governor) that would have allowed state ownership of PGE. "Ginny's concern with city ownership," he says, "is that Portland made no provision for the other 51 cities in PGE's service territory."
3. Promising to bring fiscal sanity to City Hall, Burdick bashes Sten for wasting millions on the Water Bureau's billing system and pursuing the city's purchase of PGE. She promises to use voters' money "wisely and appropriately—and not to spend it on new ventures unless we get their permission first."Although Burdick says she's unhappy about voters getting shut out of big decisions, she has advocated at Gard & Gerber for Oregon Health & Science University, the prime beneficiary of the now-$55 million aerial tram (nearly quadruple the initial cost estimates). The council decision to OK the tram never went before voters. Grosswiler says Burdick does not expect every city issue to come before voters. Burdick also served on the city's Fire and Police Disability and Retirement Fund board from 2001 to 2004. A recent City Club report slammed the 11-member pension board as rife with conflicts of interest. Grosswiler says Burdick did her best on the board but the challenges are beyond one person's ability to make changes.
Again donning the fiscal conservative's mantle, Burdick has endorsed repeal of publicly financed city elections (a.k.a. "voter-owned elections"), which she says will divert "even more money from vital city services into City Council campaigns."In 2000, Burdick supported Measure 6, a statewide ballot initiative that would have provided public campaign financing for all statewide and legislative races. Measure 6 included a formula for statewide public financing virtually identical to the one City Council approved last May. Grosswiler says Burdick's backing of Measure 6 was different because it was presented to state voters, who rejected it. "It's her view that voters should get a chance to speak on the issue," Grosswiler says.
 
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02.15.2006 at 10:00 Reply
Ginny Burdick Challenges Sten's History of Hiding Data And Concentrating Public Housing ClientsGinny Burdick is challenging Erik Sten's adamant refusal to allow Portland voters access to public housing data by neighborhood. For years Sten has covertly lead the effort to keep a tight lid on any information which would expose his so-called leadership on public housing issues as really a coverup for concentrating public housing clients into just of select few of Multnomah county's 117 neighborhoods. Mayor Potter's behavior during 13 months in office demonstrates that he knows and cares little for public housing policy. It is highly probable that Erik Sten is responsible for persuading Potter to inexplicably and embarrassingly reverse himself in demanding accountability from his subordinates at HAP.Ginny Burdick - candidate for Portland city council, Jeff Cogen - candidate for Multnomah county commission, Jim Robison - candidate for House Rep.#44 joined Sam Adams - Portland city commissioner in asking Housing Authority of Portland Chair Kandis Nunn to send them the following:An authentic, accurate, complete and timely record for every HAP public housing client in the form of a tab delimited text file with the following four fields: neighborhood, median income range (0-30,31-50,51-80%), age and gender.Ginny Burdick, Jeff Cogen, Jim Robison and Sam Adams have demonstrated the kind of thinking and action we want in our elected public officials.Richard Ellmyer3-6-9 Resolution author and project championPresident, MacSolutions Inc. - A Macintosh computer consulting business providing web hosting for artists and very small businesses.Writer/Publisher - HAP Watcher commentary - Published on the Internet and distributed to 4000 readers interested in public housing policy in Multnomah County.Portsmouth - formerly the 18%, currently the 8% and rising solution neighborhood, North Portlandhttp://www.goodgrowthnw.org—Richard Ellmyer

 

08.29.2011 at 11:26

I've contacted everyone I can think of, trying to get a copy of her poster, "When you are not rich, you either buy clothes or you buy art".....do you know where I can get one?  Thanks so much! 

 

02.17.2006 at 10:00 Reply
Spin CycleHeaven forbid any political candidate should over-exaggerate or outright lie about their achievements in their campaign literature.We all know that civil politics is a noble institution and no electoral hopeful as EVER perjured themselves in order to gain the public trust in the history of our great state.—Gimme a break.

 

02.18.2006 at 10:00 Reply
Spin CycleBurdick is a prime example of mis-speak and a conniver. Gun Grabbing Burdick has used every possible lie and deception to gain support for her feel good campaign promises. Her trail of Goldschmidt politics should scare off any voter for this loonie tunie candidate. Burdick is the reason for "Term Limits". Sten ain't much but she is worse.—KISS

 

 
 

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