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Doctor Groups Flex Muscle In Capitol: $2.3 Million in Campaign Cash to Influence Health-Care Reform

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Nonsense Knows No State Boundary: Washington Legislators Get Bogus Job Claims on CRC

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Occupy Arrestees Win Their Right to Full Trials—Even Though They May Not Need It

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Feb 9, 2012 01:24 pm by HANNAH HOFFMAN  | Comments 4
 
 
 
Home · Articles · News · Murmurs · Candidates aren’t the only thing going wild
April 23rd, 2008 WW Editorial Staff | Murmurs
 

Candidates aren’t the only thing going wild

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TOM POTTER

• A major Port of Portland tenant has agreed to pay a fine for illegal ocean dumping uncovered nearly five years ago by retired Portland dockworker Jerry Cressa (“Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea,” WW, Aug. 15, 2007). Houston-based pipeline giant Kinder Morgan Energy Partners LP will pay a $175,000 fine and give $65,000 to a state environmental fund rather than face a federal felony charge. Cressa pushed the feds to prosecute Kinder Morgan for allegedly bribing a ship captain in Portland with $1,100 to dump 159 tons of contaminated potash into the Pacific Ocean in 2003. The deal doesn’t thrill Cressa, who says it “shows that the integrity of our government and society can be bought for a few pieces of silver.”

Handshakes, banquets and riot cops: On Sunday, April 27, Mayor Tom Potter returns from an oddly timed eight-day trip to China, given international protest of the Beijing Olympics over China’s record in Tibet and Darfur. Potter spokesman John Doussard says that backdrop came up in discussing the trip to Suzhou, one of Portland’s nine sister cities. “This was the 20th anniversary of the sister city relationship. That couldn’t be moved,” Doussard says. “There’s never a good time for the mayor to travel...you can pick a time, and there will be something going on in the world.” Potter traveled with 11 other Portlanders, including his wife, Karin Hansen, and the city’s director of international affairs, Mila Greisen. They’ll also visit an industrial park in Shanghai. Picking up the tab for the trip is the Portland-Suzhou Sister City Association.

• Portland’s sports talk radio may soon get more crowded. Currently, sports geeks can listen ’round the clock to KFXX (1080-AM) or on KXL (750-AM) weekday evenings to Oregonian sports columnist John Canzano’s show. The chatter among radio types, however, is that KXL and Jammin’ 95.5 general manager Tim McNamara will flip Jammin’ to at least a partially sports format and will hire KATU (Channel 2) sports anchor Katy Brown and former KFXX host and (Vancouver) Columbian sportswriter Ken Vance to do a daily local show. Neither would confirm they’re doing the new show, but neither denied it. “KATU is the only place I’m employed right now,” Brown says. Vance, now a reporter at The Reflector in Battle Ground, Wash., referred Murmurs to McNamara, who didn’t return a call.

• Four-term Beaverton Mayor Rob Drake is under the gun in his re-election bid: The Oregonian, Nike and the Beaverton Police Association, among others, have endorsed Drake’s opponent, City Councilor Dennis Doyle. But the Beaverton cops, known for their zealous use of photo radar, might want to tread carefully around their anointed candidate. Records show that Doyle, 59, racked up a DUI in 2002 in Lincoln County, after blowing a blood-alcohol level of .12 percent. He completed a diversion program in 2003. Doyle says he “made a mistake” he deeply regrets when he had to rush his wife to the hospital for a broken arm. To read his entire statement, click here to download a PDF version.

Sisters of the Road has surpassed its goal of registering 300 people (see “Vote by Shelter,” WW, March 26, 2008) by the April 29 deadline for the May primary. Patrick Nolen, a community organizer for the Old Town nonprofit service provider to the homeless, says they’re at about 320 new voters and counting. “We’re aiming for people who are homeless,” Nolen says, “[But] if anybody shows up and they’re not registered, we’re going to register them.”

 
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04.25.2008 at 05:36 Reply

This week Kinder Morgan agreed to plead guilty to felonious ocean

dumping 5 years ago by paying a $240,000 fine to the USDOJ. But the

settlement contained no exposure of the attempts to cover up essential

elements that would incriminate others who were involved in the case.

The agreement between Kinder Morgan and the government pins the felony

on one unidentified KM employee, which strains credulity when

considering the number of longshoremen, river pilots, tugboat operators,

and other terminal employees who facilitated this load of potash to be

shipped downriver and out to sea. As the whistleblower who brought this

to the EPA's attention, I can attest to the fact that everyone

remained silent for months. The corporate, government and union

officials involved actively tried to cover it up for 5 years. And its

final conclusion is just more of the same, when a fine can buy silence,

not true exposure to correct not only corporate practices but also union

and government practices as well. This case shows that it will remain

business as usual on the waterfront, and the integrity at our ports can

be bought with a fat checkbook. For more information about this case

please contact Senator Wyden's office in Washington, D.C.

http://www.oregonlive.com/business/oregonian/index.ssf?/base/business/1208917515292290.xml&coll=7

http://wweek.com/columns/murmurs/#34.24

http://wweek.com/editorial/3340/9395/

http://portlandtribune.com/news/story.php?story_id=23011

http://www.oregon-health.org/assets/PH/PH10405.htm

 

 
 

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