Wednesday, August 29, 2007

People Disagree on Clean-up Efforts to Date at Hanford


I know Hanford is a hot-button issue for a lot of people. But I thought others might be interested in the comments left on a listserv I belong to talking about the subject. Here is one person's opinion of how clean-up efforts are going at Hanford:



Sir, I would take exception to the statement, "The federal government has
made scant progress in cleaning up nuclear waste left-over from decades of
dumping at Hanford."


There has been major progress in the cleanup. We would not
be anywhere near where we are now had it not been for the efforts of hundreds
and thousands of individuals and several agencies. Major buildings have been
removed, hundreds of contaminated sites have been removed or cleaned and years
of planning, permit writing and budgeting have been accomplished.


The work ahead is huge, more than 60 more years. For anyone to think that it can be cleaned up in a couple years is terribly miss informed. We will go through more that ten Presidential administrations, twenty Governors and countless representatives in congress all during the period to clean this up. Cleanup should not be a political process, however getting money for the cleanup is.


The foundation for the cleanup was formed with the Tri Party Agreement more than 15 years ago. We have representatives from EPA, State of Washington, State of Oregon, Tribes, Department of Health, City Governments and citizens that will comment, scrutinize and offer advice on how to protect the people and environment.


Respectfully, Rob Davis

However, others are not convinced.

I would like to offer another perspective. 18 years of cleanup $ 25 billion spent and yes there is progress but hardly where would should be by now.


We have had virtually no cleanup of the groundwater, We are leaving large quantities of waste in the deepervadoze zone that will further contaminate the groundwater. We have no milestones for when the groundwaterwill be cleaned up. We have the Tri-Parties switching the intent and legal requirement for cleanup along the River Corridor from unrestricted to a surface cleanup that is only protective for surface use. We havethe most contaminated part of Hanford the 200 Area/Central Plateau now in its beginning of cleanup where444 billion gallons of
liquid waste was dumped and no hard plans to cleanup the soil and more than likely no plansto deal with the deep soil contamination. We have an admitted 1 million gallons of tank waste that has leaked, more thanlikely a lot more has leaked. The 177 high level waste tanks most all of them have exceeded their design life and now USDOE is delaying the start of the vit plant to deal with the 53 million gallons of high level waste until 2019. This is a blue print fordisaster. Pretty Scary!


Yes we can say we have made progress, a lot of muck and truck hauling and tearing down. K-Basins have been a great success with several delays. A lot of surface cleanup has taken place but now the hard part
begins 18 years later.We have an agency USDOE that has proven time and time again that it can not meet any hard milestones that delays after delays will happen. USDOE has constantly tried ways to do less cleanup, like trying to leave Pre-70 transuranic waste buried, like not dealingwith the deep soil contamination and the list goes on.The people of the NW and the laws demand a more protective cleanup. Surface use cleanup is not acceptable and is not legal.The aquifer needs to be cleaned up, the deep soil contamination needs to be stabilized, or removed, treated and disposed.The River Corridor needs to be cleaned up to an unrestricted use level in order to meet the Trust Responsibility to the Tribesand future generations.The vit plant needs to operate now and not later.The vadoze zone in the Central Plateau needs to be fully characterized to understand how deep the contamination is,what are the volumes and how fast is it moving.The waste under the tanks needs to be cleaned up.We need a credible comprehensive cumulative RIver Corridor Risk Assessment not this so called Baseline Risk Assessmentthat is a joke.


Remember the Baseline Risk Assessment was supposed to be done at the start of cleanup, 18 years ago and it is supposed to look at the current risk and estimate future risk.One thing we have learned in 18 years and 25 billion USDOE is an expert at delaying the real hard issues.It is time for all of to ask is it not perhaps time to rethink who is in charge of cleanup. USDOE has proven to all of us including Congress that it can spend $25 billion and you still not deal with the real issues that threaten
the Columbia River and the people of the NW.


And to top it off USDOE is now proposing to ship more waste and make Hanford the defacto Nations DUMP. I suggest that we who track Hanford have a responsibility to the taxpayers and future generations to change the cleanupparadigm, we have to much proof that USDOE does not intend to do what is legally and morally right. We need to create a NW Cleanup Commission for the cleanup of Hanford and not sacrifice the future using an agency like USDOE thatsimply is failing to do a comprehensive cleanup.If you want to disagree with this suggestion than I ask you to tell me why you trust that USDOE will start up the vit plantin 2019, what basis you have for this.


Please remember in your response that the original vit plant was supposed to startin 2007. Also remember that cleanup for the River Corridor was supposed to be 2018 and that was supposed to a level that allowed unrestricted use. Not just surface use.


Respectfully Greg deBruler




Hanford

In the summer of 2006, a little over a year ago, some of you know I visited Hanford, obtaining a "seat on the bus" of one of Department of Energy's bus tours.

It was eye-opening in many ways. I'd read a lot about the facility but hadn't appreciated how incredibly huge it was, in terms of acreage. It takes a couple of hours to drive from one end to the other. But the other thing that was apparent was the amount of money spent by the federal government to clean up that place, and not much has been done for those billions of dollars.

This year, Department of Energy has announced that Hanford is one of the sites where they're considering dumping new hazardous wastes from nuclear activities elsewhere.

Last Monday was a public meeting in Oregon about this proposed reclassification of Hanford's mission. As reported in a Tri-Counties newspaper, Oregon's public officials (and many citizens)are opposed to this. Citizens around Hanford, however, continue to be enamored with the amount of money they get from the federal government and seem not to be concerned about this. I attach a Tri-Counties news article about the Portland meeting. It was contentious.

Crowd says no to more waste at Hanford

Published Tuesday, August 28th, 2007

ANNETTE CARY HERALD STAFF WRITER TROUTDALE, Ore. -- A standing-room-only crowd near Portland had a clear message for the Department of Energy on Monday night: Send no more radioactive waste to the Hanford nuclear reservation. It's different than the usual "not in my backyard," said Ken Niles, assistant director of the Oregon Department of Energy. "We're saying no more in our backyard because it is so horribly contaminated already," he said.

DOE is looking at Hanford as one option for disposing of an estimated 7,280 cubic yards of radioactive waste generated through 2062.It's a relatively small volume of
waste compared with the vast amount of waste already planned to be disposed of
at Hanford. But the amount of radiation it contains is significant. It has an
estimated 130 million curies of radioactivity. That compares to the 190 million
curies of radioactivity in the millions of gallons of waste held in underground
tanks from the past production of plutonium for the nation's nuclear weapons
program, much of which DOE plans to dispose of off Hanford.

DOE officials faced a crowd of about 80 people Monday who ranged from skeptical to hostile. "I'm outraged. It's a lie. Isn't it?" demanded Gerald Pollet, executive director of Heart of America Northwest, when a DOE official identified a pictured waste
container that was apparently abandoned as one that was being used. Similar
waste vaults are being considered for disposal at Hanford, eight other sites or
undetermined commercial facilities.

"We're being massaged with a lot of statistics," said Ruth Currie of Portland, who also said she didn't think DOE knows what it is doing. Problems at Hanford and other DOE sites were a recurring theme, with public comment hitting on delays in construction at the Hanford vitrification plant, last month's spill of high level radioactive waste at the Hanford tank farms and doubts that DOE would ever open the Yucca Mountain repository in Nevada. Given DOE's long history of waste and cleanup mismanagement, a proposal to bring more waste to Hanford is essentially a plan to turn Hanford into a permanent national sacrifice zone, according to comments by Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Oregon, read into the meeting record by a congressional
staffer.

"Hanford should be cleaned up, not dumped on," according to Wyden. Some
of the waste proposed to be sent to Hanford is extremely long-lived and must be
isolated for eternity, said Bill Mead, director of the Public Safety Resources
Agency in Portland. The meeting was an early step in determining what to do with
radioactive waste that includes activated metals from decommissioning nuclear
power plants and high-activity radioactive materials used for medical diagnosis
and treatment.

More than half would be from DOE nondefense work, with much of
that coming from a West Valley, N.Y., project. DOE is considering sending the
waste to a geological repository deep underground, such as Yucca Mountain, or
burying it at a site such as Hanford in a deep bore hole or waste containers
closer to the surface of the ground. The international nuclear community has
settled on deep bore hole disposal as the preferred option for similar waste,
said Christine Gelles, director of DOE's environmental management office of
disposal operations. Keeping the waste on site where it is generated and adding
protection to keep it safe from terrorists is a better option, said Angela
Crowley-Koch, executive director of the Oregon Chapter of Physicians for Social
Responsibility. Keith Harding of Hood River had another suggestion for where to
store the waste -- a certain ranch in Texas, he said, alluding to President
Bush's home.

Another public meeting will be held at 6 p.m. today at the Red Lion Hotel, 2525 N. 20th Ave., Pasco.

Monday, August 27, 2007

Portland Oregon Closed for Construction


This morning, on the way to work, I stopped at a downtown Safeway to get coffee and milk for the office. A construction worker yelled at me that I couldn't park next to Safeway. "Why?" I asked, perplexed. The answer is that all parking places downtown are now for construction crews, construction vehicles or construction materials. Please people! Don't get in their way! If you're trying to run a business in Portland, don't. You're just getting in the construction people's way!


Don't drive through, by or around downtown Portland right now. It is a mess. We have closed our city for the duration.

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Floods in Midwest Threaten Great Wall of Hammond

Probably not, but I can speculate....

For up-to-date weather for our friends in Hammond, go here

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

News Flash!

The sign of early dementia in women is.....[drum roll please]......

WEIGHT LOSS!

Read about it here

This is a huge relief to me as there is no way I am developing dementia.

Monday, August 20, 2007

...and here's some poetry for ya...

Child Development

As sure as prehistoric fish grew legs
and sauntered off the beaches into forests
working up some irregular verbs for their
first conversation, so three-year-old children
enter the phase of name-calling.

Every day a new one arrives and is added
to the repertoire. You Dumb Goopyhead,
You Big Sewerface, You Poop-on-the-Floor
(a kind of Navaho ring to that one)
they yell from knee level, their little mugs
flushed with challenge.
Nothing Samuel Johnson would bother tossing out
in a pub, but then the toddlers are not trying
to devastate some fatuous Enlightenment hack.

They are just tormenting their fellow squirts
or going after the attention of the giants
way up there with their cocktails and bad breath
talking baritone nonsense to other giants,
waiting to call them names after thanking
them for the lovely party and hearing the door close.

The mature save their hothead invective
for things: an errant hammer, tire chains,
or receding trains missed by seconds,
though they know in their adult hearts,
even as they threaten to banish Timmy to bed
for his appalling behavior,
that their bosses are Big Fatty Stupids,
their wives are Dopey Dopeheads
and that they themselves are Mr. Sillypants.

Billy Collins

Being a Writer

I belong to a writing group called "SpiritFish." I don't know why it's called that. Lately, I've wanted to write something to read to the group, because I have to, because our next meeting is coming up and we're all expected to perform like trained seals, but I haven't had any va-va-voom necessary to sit my a$$ in the chair and write. So tonight, while it rains outside, and my fingers feel the uncomfortable stiffness of cold (that's right: cold. In August.) I am looking for inspiration. I remember my favorite short story writer: Lorrie Moore. And her great essay on being a writer....here it is....for you....and for me. Find it at this link, if you don't want to read it here.

March 3, 1985

How to Become a Writer Or, Have You Earned This Cliche?

By LORRIE MOORE

First, try to be something, anything, else. A movie star/astronaut. A movie star/ missionary. A movie star/kindergarten teacher. President of the World. Fail miserably. It is best if you fail at an early age - say, 14. Early, critical disillusionment is necessary so that at 15 you can write long haiku sequences about thwarted desire. It is a pond, a cherry blossom, a wind brushing against sparrow wing leaving for mountain. Count the syllables. Show it to your mom. She is tough and practical. She has a son in Vietnam and a husband who may be having an affair. She believes in wearing brown because it hides spots. She'll look briefly at your writing then back up at you with a face blank as a doughnut. She'll say: ''How about emptying the dishwasher?'' Look away. Shove the forks in the fork drawer. Accidentally break one of the freebie gas station glasses. This is the required pain and suffering. This is only for starters.

In your high school English class look at Mr. Killian's face. Decide faces are important. Write a villanelle about pores. Struggle. Write a sonnet. Count the syllables: 9, 10, 11, 13. Decide to experiment with fiction. Here you don't have to count syllables. Write a short story about an elderly man and woman who accidentally shoot each other in the head, the result of an inexplicable malfunction of a shotgun which appears mysteriously in their living room one night. Give it to Mr. Killian as your final project. When you get it back, he has written on it: ''Some of your images are quite nice, but you have no sense of plot.'' When you are home, in the privacy of your own room, faintly scrawl in pencil beneath his black- inked comments: ''Plots are for dead people, pore- face.''

Take all the baby-sitting jobs you can get. You are great with kids. They love you. You tell them stories about old people who die idiot deaths. You sing them songs like ''Blue Bells of Scotland,'' which is their favorite. And when they are in their pajamas and have finally stopped pinching each other, when they are fast asleep, you read every sex manual in the house, and wonder how on earth anyone could ever do those things with someone they truly loved. Fall asleep in a chair reading Mr. McMurphy's Playboy. When the McMurphys come home, they will tap you on the shoulder, look at the magazine in your lap and grin. You will want to die. They will ask you if Tracey took her medicine all right. Explain, yes, she did, that you promised her a story if she would take it like a big girl and that seemed to work out just fine. ''Oh, marvelous,'' they will exclaim.

Try to smile proudly.

Apply to college as a child psychology major.

As a child psychology major, you have some electives. You've always liked birds. Sign up for something called ''The Ornithological Field Trip.'' It meets Tuesdays and Thursdays at 2. When you arrive at Room 134 on the first day of class, everyone is sitting around a seminar table talking about metaphors. You've heard of these. After a short, excruciating while, raise your hand and say diffidently, ''Excuse me, isn't this Bird-Watching 101?'' The class stops and turns to look at you. They seem to all have one face - giant and blank as a vandalized clock. Someone with a beard booms out, ''No, this is Creative Writing.'' Say: ''Oh - right,'' as if perhaps you knew all along. Look down at your schedule. Wonder how the hell you ended up here. The computer, apparently, has made an error. You start to get up to leave and then don't.

The lines at the registrar this week are huge. Perhaps you should stick with this mistake. Perhaps your creative writing isn't all that bad. Perhaps it is fate. Perhaps this is what your dad meant when he said, ''It's the age of computers, Francie, it's the age of computers.''
Decide that you like college life. In your dorm you meet many nice people. Some are smarter than you. And some, you notice, are dumber than you. You will continue, unfortunately, to view the world in exactly these terms for the rest of your life.

The assignment this week in creative writing is to narrate a violent happening. Turn in a story about driving with your Uncle Gordon and another one about two old people who are accidentally electrocuted when they go to turn on a badly wired desk lamp. The teacher will hand them back to you with comments: ''Much of your writing is smooth and energetic. You have, however, a ludicrous notion of plot.'' Write another story about a man and a woman who, in the very first paragraph, have their lower torsos accidentally blitzed away by dynamite. In the second paragraph, with the insurance money, they buy a frozen yogurt stand together. There are six more paragraphs. You read the whole thing out loud in class. No one likes it. They say your sense of plot is outrageous and incompetent. After class someone asks you if you are crazy.

Decide that perhaps you should stick to comedies. Start dating someone who is funny, someone who has what in high school you called a ''really great sense of humor'' and what now your creative writing class calls ''self-contempt giving rise to comic form.'' Write down all of his jokes, but don't tell him you are doing this. Make up anagrams of his old girlfriend's name and name all of your socially handicapped characters with them. Tell him his old girlfriend is in all of your stories and then watch how funny he can be, see what a really great sense of humor he can have. Your child psychology adviser tells you you are neglecting courses in your major. What you spend the most time on should be what you're majoring in. Say yes, you understand.
In creative writing seminars over the next two years, everyone continues to smoke cigarettes and ask the same things: ''But does it work?'' ''Why should we care about this character?'' ''Have you earned this cliche?'' These seem like important questions.

On days when it is your turn, you look at the class hopefully as they scour your mimeographs for a plot. They look back up at you, drag deeply and then smile in a sweet sort of way.
You spend too much time slouched and demoralized. Your boyfriend suggests bicycling. Your roommate suggests a new boyfriend. You are said to be self-mutilating and losing weight, but you continue writing. The only happiness you have is writing something new, in the middle of the night, armpits damp, heart pounding, something no one has yet seen. You have only those brief, fragile, untested moments of exhilaration when you know: you are a genius. Understand what you must do. Switch majors. The kids in your nursery project will be disappointed, but you have a calling, an urge, a delusion, an unfortunate habit. You have, as your mother would say, fallen in with a bad crowd.

Why write? Where does writing come from? These are questions to ask yourself. They are like:
Where does dust come from? Or: Why is there war? Or: If there's a God, then why is my brother now a cripple?

These are questions that you keep in your wallet, like calling cards. These are questions, your creative writing teacher says, that are good to address in your journals but rarely in your fiction.
The writing professor this fall is stressing the Power of the Imagination. Which means he doesn't want long descriptive stories about your camping trip last July. He wants you to start in a realistic context but then to alter it. Like recombinant DNA. He wants you to let your imagination sail, to let it grow big-bellied in the wind. This is a quote from Shakespeare.
ell your roommate your great idea, your great exercise of imaginative power: a transformation of Melville to contemporary life. It will be about monomania and the fish-eat-fish world of life insurance in Rochester, N.Y. The first line will be ''Call me Fishmeal,'' and it will feature a menopausal suburban husband named Richard, who because he is so depressed all the time is called ''Mopey Dick'' by his witty wife Elaine. Say to your roommate: ''Mopey Dick, get it?'' Your roommate looks at you, her face blank as a large Kleenex. She comes up to you, like a buddy, and puts an arm around your burdened shoulders. ''Listen, Francie,'' she says, slow as speech therapy. ''Let's go out and get a big beer.''

The seminar doesn't like this one either. You suspect they are beginning to feel sorry for you. They say: ''You have to think about what is happening. Where is the story here?''

The next semester the writing professor is obsessed with writing from personal experience. You must write from what you know, from what has happened to you. He wants deaths, he wants camping trips. Think about what has happened to you. In three years there have been three things: you lost your virginity; your parents got divorced; and your brother came home from a forest 10 miles from the Cambodian border with only half a thigh, a permanent smirk nestled into one corner of his mouth.

About the first you write: ''It created a new space, which hurt and cried in a voice that wasn't mine, 'I'm not the same anymore, but I'll be O.K.' ''

About the second you write an elaborate story of an old married couple who stumble upon an unknown land mine in their kitchen and accidentally blow themselves up. You call it: ''For Better or for Liverwurst.''

About the last you write nothing. There are no words for this. Your typewriter hums. You can find no words.

At undergraduate cocktail parties, people say, ''Oh, you write? What do you write about?'' Your roommate, who has consumed too much wine, too little cheese and no crackers at all, blurts: ''Oh, my god, she always writes about her dumb boyfriend.''

Later on in life you will learn that writers are merely open, helpless texts with no real understanding of what they have written and therefore must half-believe anything and everything that is said of them. You, however, have not yet reached this stage of literary criticism. You stiffen and say, ''I do not,'' the same way you said it when someone in the fourth grade accused you of really liking oboe lessons and your parents really weren't just making you take them.

Insist you are not very interested in any one subject at all, that you are interested in the music of language, that you are interested in - in - syllables, because they are the atoms of poetry, the cells of the mind, the breath of the soul. Begin to feel woozy. Stare into your plastic wine cup.
''Syllables?'' you will hear someone ask, voice trailing off, as they glide slowly toward the reassuring white of the dip.

Begin to wonder what you do write about. Or if you have anything to say. Or if there even is such a thing as a thing to say. Limit these thoughts to no more than 10 minutes a day, like sit- ups, they can make you thin.

You will read somewhere that all writing has to do with one's genitals. Don't dwell on this. It will make you nervous.

Your mother will come visit you. She will look at the circles under your eyes and hand you a brown book with a brown briefcase on the cover. It is entitled: ''How to Become a Business Executive.'' She has also brought the ''Names for Baby'' encyclopedia you asked for; one of your characters, the aging clown-schoolteacher, needs a new name. Your mother will shake her head and say: ''Francie, Francie, remember when you were going to be a child psychology major?''
Say: ''Mom, I like to write.''

She'll say: ''Sure you like to write. Of course. Sure you like to write.''

Write a story about a confused music student and title it: ''Schubert Was the One with the Glasses, Right?'' It's not a big hit, although your roommate likes the part where the two violinists accidentally blow themselves up in a recital room. ''I went out with a violinist once,'' she says, snapping her gum.

Thank god you are taking other courses. You can find sanctuary in 19th-century ontological snags and invertebrate courting rituals. Certain globular mollusks have what is called ''Sex by the Arm.'' The male octopus, for instance, loses the end of one arm when placing it inside the female body during intercourse. Marine biologists call it ''Seven Heaven.'' Be glad you know these things. Be glad you are not just a writer. Apply to law school.

From here on in, many things can happen. But the main one will be this: You decide not to go to law school after all, and, instead, you spend a good, big chunk of your adult life telling people how you decided not to go to law school after all. Somehow you end up writing again. Perhaps you go to graduate school. Perhaps you work odd jobs and take writing courses at night. Perhaps you are working and writing down all the clever remarks and intimate personal confessions you hear during the day. Perhaps you are losing your pals, your acquaintances, your balance.
You have broken up with your boyfriend. You now go out with men who, instead of whispering ''I love you,'' shout: ''Do it to me, baby.'' This is good for your writing.

Sooner or later you have a finished manuscript more or less. People look at it in a vaguely troubled sort of way and say, ''I'll bet becoming a writer was always a fantasy of yours, wasn't it?'' Your lips dry to salt. Say that of all the fantasies possible in the world, you can't imagine being a writer even making the top 20. Tell them you were going to be a child psychology major. ''I bet,'' they always sigh, ''you'd be great with kids.'' Scowl fiercely. Tell them you're a walking blade.

Quit classes. Quit jobs. Cash in old savings bonds. Now you have time like warts on your hands.

Slowly copy all of your friends' addresses into a new address book.

Vacuum. Chew cough drops. Keep a folder full of fragments.

An eyelid darkening sideways.

World as conspiracy.

Possible plot? A woman gets on a bus.

Suppose you threw a love affair and nobody came.

At home drink a lot of coffee. At Howard Johnson's order the cole slaw. Consider how it looks like the soggy confetti of a map: where you've been, where you're going - ''You Are Here,'' says the red star on the back of the menu.

Occasionally a date with a face blank as a sheet of paper asks you whether writers often become discouraged. Say that sometimes they do and sometimes they do. Say it's a lot like having polio.
''Interesting,'' smiles your date, and then he looks down at his arm hairs and starts to smooth them, all, always, in the same direction.

From ''Self-Help,'' a collection of short stories by Lorrie Moore

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Cat Doctor

We have the best veterinarian - and she loves our cat. (Even the dead one) Best of all, her office is less than six blocks from our house.

So when Lucy started throwing up her food every time we fed her, we of course became concerned and immediately took her to see Dr. Rebecca. She was great - she thinks she's reacting to something she's eating. So we have new food for her tonight that shouldn't upset Lucy's tummy so. Lucy needed some shots as well, so David had her done while there. Lucy didn't like the shots much, David reports. I said, worried, "did she bite the vet?" and David assured me that Lucy just gave her a sincere snarl.

But most impressive, Dr. Rebecca kept saying to David (who had the vet duty today) "you two have done a great job of taking care of this cat, bringing her back to health." Rebecca hadn't seen Lucy since we brought her home from the Humane Society, where she was five pounds and really sick.


Three months later, Lucy has gained 3 pounds (she's now an 8 pound cat) and is as feisty as ever. Rebecca says she can't gain much more weight and that 8 pounds is it. So, Lucy is on a maintenance diet and has all her shots. She has resumed her post, as usual, above David's head. Sometimes she reaches down and pats his bald spot. It's heart-warming.

Sunday, August 12, 2007

Bookcases, part deux

I have spent the better part of the last two weeks working off and on with my bookcase project.

I have learned a lot in the last two weeks. Here's a recap:

1. Buy your lumber from a reputable place, not Home Depot or Lowe's. In Portland this place would be called "Mr. Plywood" and is now my mecca for carpentry projects.

2. Don't wear sandals when ripping or chopping your materials.

3. Do wear eye protection when using saws.

4. Remember to add in the blade dimension when cutting wood to a particular dimension.

5. Give yourself a break: your first set of shelves won't be your prettiest, so put these shelves in the basement and practice on them there.

6. You can always heed your friend's husband's warnings about do-it-yourself shelving projects: if you really don't want to spend the time doing carpentry, go to IKEA and buy them there.

7. Remember the power of paint.

8. But also remember that a painted pig is still a pig.

Anyway, I'm off to do a Sunday's worth of projects, including painting the pig in my basement. Pictures later, when it's finished.

Saturday, August 11, 2007

Bridge O'Death

Imagine David's surprise (and eventually mine) when we heard that the bridge in our neighborhood was worse than the one in Minneapolis! That it could fall at any minute!



Well, you know what David and I did immediately: that's right. We drove over it, twice, today and cheated death for fun!


(Not this bridge - this is the St John's Bridge, it's not going to fall anytime soon, but it is kind of pretty)

Friday, August 10, 2007

Medicare for David!

David will be 65 years old this year.... !!!


He is being bombarded with Medicare supplemental plans, and parenthetically so am I as they figure we must be the same age. Which, when David pointed that out, made me feel really old.


Last night I was harvesting produce from our garden and preparing a delicious dinner, but David didn't come home. It was 8:00 and still NO DAVID. So I called him on his cell phone, but he didn't pick up. Then our home phone rang and there he was. He said, "Liz, don't panic, I'm at Portland Adventist Hospital," and immediately I panicked.


"Everything's fine!" he insisted. He explained that he had been at a meeting of some insurance company to explain Medicare to new enrollees. He had mentioned he was going to do this once and I poo-pooed it, telling him that he would just be subject to a bunch of marketing. So, he was reluctant to mention it to me again.


He came home with this information: because he is still employed (and hopes to remain that way a little longer, thank you very much!) he will accept Part A of Medicare (Doctor) but respectfully decline Parts B & D (Hospital and Prescription Meds) because he has his employer-sponsored insurance. He didn't buy anything from the sales people last night, but I expect he will at some point. These marketing guys, as I know from work, are really good at what they do.


Anyway, this is boring, I'm sure. At least Lucy thought so. She slept through the entire episode.


Thursday, August 9, 2007

ah, summer produce...

The corn we harvested was delicious....David and I devoured two ears for dinner this evening. My gosh, we'll never get corn that good again.....Also harvested some Japanese eggplant, which I sliced and baked in the oven with lots of olive oil and parmesan cheese. Oh, it's good to be a farmer. Farmer Liz

From my Alaskan friend...

In a local Alaskan newspaper:

"Engagements: McCarthy-Terry.

Julia McCarthy and Jamez Terry will be married on Aug. 7 in Fairbanks. They will be joined by friends and family from Alaska and beyond.

Julia has most recently been employed at Abused Women's Aid in Crisis in Anchorage. She was formerly a ballerina and has done lots of other things in between. She is fond of pie.

Jamez has been a dog handler, a physical education teacher, and a zine librarian. He hopes to become an itinerant minister.

Following the wedding the couple will roadtrip to Maine, where they will make babies, do crossword puzzles, and throw stones in the ocean."



Ah, L'Amour....

Wednesday, August 8, 2007

I'm a farmer...


....and here is my produce from my garden so far this year!

(Don't miss the japanese eggplant underneath the corn)....

Work...

"Oh, you hate your job? Why didn't you say so? There's a support group for that. It's called EVERYBODY, and they meet at the bar."--Drew Carey

I don't hate my job, but parts of it are irritating. I work, generally, at OHSU, but I am not a clinician (obviously) and I am reminded nearly daily that I'm not a researcher, either. Well, not an evidence-based researcher, anyway. I have an MPH degree, but at best I am a policy analyst.

But what's good about my job? I get to watch the smartest medical educators in the country create unbiased curriculum to teach doctors how to prescribe medications WITHOUT influence from the pharmaceutical companies. It's so cool to watch these smart people take on the challenge, and overcome obstacles (and there's a lot of them), with such grace.

What do I do? Make sure they're paid on time. Encourage them to keep going. Keep them up-to-date with the latest information from the pharmaceutical world, the FDA, and any other group working on the same stuff. Like the Canadians or Europeans or WHO who are very interested in what this program is doing.

Tuesday, August 7, 2007

Movies, Living Room Theaters, Hip & Groovy Portland

David and I have discovered the Living Room Theaters on Stark Street in downtown (about a block away from Powell's). We've seen two movies there so far, "Unconscious" (ENTHUSIASTIC THUMBS UP) and "Broken English" (we're agnostic on this one, to put it politely). The deal with this theater is that you sit in posh chairs and they bring you food and drink, if you like. The theaters are small, the movies are mostly subtitled and obscure, but that's just the kind of thing we need now and then to get out of our own heads.

But this is what I wanted to mention: sometimes when I go downtown in Portland I forget what city I'm in. Really. I don't recognize NW Portland (Pearl District) at all and easily get lost in all the pearl, pink, mauve glitzerati, poodle-walking, loft-living urban center that Portland has become. Who are these people? Who am I? Do I even belong here? More and more David and I have commented to each other that we are an anachronism in our own town.

More pool party pictures....



So here's more pictures of that pool party day back in June where Carolyn, her Mom Marianne, Alberto and the kids came for a swim and dinner.


Carolyn's Going Home to Italia....

I drove Carolyn to SeaTac airport this morning to catch her flight back to Europe. She stayed an extra 10 days to take care of Marianne while she recuperated from her emergency surgery. Carolyn's brother Chris arrived yesterday from Texas to take over caretaker duties from Carolyn, and so we sped off in the wee hours this morning so she could catch her flight.

It was great to have Carolyn visit this summer, and for an unexpected longer time than at first anticipated. It gave us some extra time to catch up. I found these pictures of her kids on David's computer from the year 2000 (on the left), swimming in our pool. I'd forgotten how little Antonio and Camilla were when they first came to visit us.

Now, the little buggers are quite a bit bigger. They came for a pool party in June (right), soon after arriving here for their summer vacation this year. Even though it was cloudy that day and looked like it could rain any moment, they still dove right on in and had a wonderful time.




Thursday, August 2, 2007

Updates on all activities...

No pictures this morning - just a quick update on my activities: bookcases. Well, we're still measuring carefully on that project. I've been practicing using a level and a square. I am also becoming acquainted with bandages. Just a few knicks here and there, nothing to worry about.

Carolyn's Mom (Marianne): She is out of the hospital and doing great. She doesn't want to eat much, but she's doing really wonderful. I had dinner last night with Carolyn, Marianne and Peter Newell (from down the street) at a Cuban restaurant called Pambiche (a bastardization of the name Palm Beach) which was really wonderful.

Peter hangs wallpaper and paints. He's a fair carpenter, as well. We talked shop and I got some good tips from Peter on these bookcases. He's promised to come over and give me a hand if I get stuck.

The problem with the bookcase project is that I don't have the time to do them for any extended period of time; and I don't have a shop area, so I have to work on them outside. It's very dependent on time of day (light) for this project. More later. I've learned a lot about mathematics and precision.

Carolyn is going to Sutherlin this weekend to help her Dad pack things and move to Corvallis, where he is going to be living next door to Carolyn's brother Steve and Steve's family. It will be good for him to have family close by. I'm taking Carolyn back to SeaTac on August 7 (Tuesday) so she can catch her flight home. Alberto and the kids went home last week, so I'm sure Carolyn misses them.

OK - off to work; more later, especially pictures!

Tree Planting - November 14, 2009 - Omaha Street Parkway