Weekly Volcano Blogs: Walkie Talkie Blog

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April 27, 2009 at 2:34pm

Planting time

PAUL SCHRAG: SHITTY ECONOMY BODES WELL FOR FARMLAND PRESERVATION >>>

Terry's Berries For local farmers, there’s a bit of silver lining to this economic crisis. It’s an opening of sorts, and a chance to plant a seed. For years, Pierce County has struggled with preserving farmland, trying to balance the need for good soil with the need for soil to pave and build upon. We haven’t done a very good job of preserving farmland, says Dick Carkner, one half of the team composing Terry’s Berries, which lies at the edge of Tacoma in the Puyallup River Valley. Terry, his wife, is the other half. Of the Terry’s Berries team.

Carkner knows this struggle well, as a farmer and as eight-year chair of Pierce County’s farm advisory commission. In the past, public policy has deferred to developers, which means a great deal of fertile soil that could have been used to grow healthy local produce and agricultural jobs has been lost. A lot of it. But the drying up finance markets and sudden halting of development plans opens a window to look at how we use land, and how we can preserve some of it for farmers, says Carkner. Now is the time to start building public and political will to preserve farm land.

“There’s a lot of local interest in local food, and farmers markets are all very busy,” says Carkner. “But we need to find a way to convert that into political support for preserving farmland. The economy is weak, and destruction of farmland isn’t on the front burner right now. No one can get financing to buy land. But once things crank up again, I’m not sure what the attitude will be in regards to protecting agriculture.”

In the past, Pierce County has lagged behind other counties in preserving farmland, and has allowed developers to pave over some of the best soil available for growing food. The sad fact is that we don’t have as much land to protect because we’ve paved over so much of it. But Pierce County has stepped its game up in recent years, creating a farming advisory board and hiring an ombudsman to help find ways to preserve what’s left, among other things. Carkner said he was pleased to see that the recent round of county budget cuts didn’t eliminate support for farmers. But there’s more work to do if we want to maintain local farmlands.

The state Office of Farmland Preservation recently released a group of recommendations about how to do just that.

Thirty-eight farmers, ranchers, and agriculture leaders from Washington and Oregon gathered to discuss concerns and barriers and to suggest ideas and solutions that would make it possible for various incentive programs to work successfully for farmers. The conversations revealed a number of issues. Farmers expressed a need for fair payments for goods and land, insurance against liability, flexibility in crops, and a reliable marketplace. Interestingly, participants said they would like to see more cooperation between farmers and environmental groups.

In the meantime, Carkner says he has more demand than he knows what to do with. There are a lot of people interested in eating healthy, locally-produced goods, he says. Now is the time to manifest public support and political will to make sure we have enough farmland to keep going.

“If we’re going to make progress in saving farmland, we need to have some public funds to do it,” he says. “There needs to be some public will. There needs to be some political will.”

PHOTO: Flickr/Tacomamama- www.tacomamama.com

April 27, 2009 at 8:23am

Morning Spew

NEWS TEAM: GOOD MORNING SOUTH SOUND >>>

Tacoma pirates win this one: energy bill killed

All gone to the bloody pigs: Pierce County hospitals say they are ready. Swine Flu Central here. CNN has answers.

Traffic cameras: Nose pickers seem safe for now.

G.M. stands for General Mayhem: Automaker will shed 21,000 factory jobs by next year.

Urban planning: The incredible shrinking city!

The crisis hasn't hit everywhere: 10 states weathering the economic storm.

Minnesota sucks: Coleman-Franken race has yet to be settled.

Go Bulls!

April 22, 2009 at 12:34pm

Wine and Infinite Soups coming to Sanford & Son

JAKE DE PAUL: FOOD AND WINE NEWS >>>

Wine and food will find a home at Sanford & Son in downtown Tacoma. First, wine shop will be opening up the first week in May. Titled Abbys on Broadway, owners Abby and Greg Valleton will join the rest of the shop on Sanford’s middle floor.  Next, Infinite Soups will set up a second location in Sanford’s Library Room beginning the second week of May. Open 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., Monday-Friday, the spot will accommodate lunchtime reading and slurping.

Sanford & Son is at 743 Broadway.

Filed under: Business, Food & Drink, Tacoma,

April 22, 2009 at 8:39am

Morning Spew

April 20, 2009 at 8:55am

Morning Spew

April 16, 2009 at 9:01am

Morning Spew

NEWS TEAM: GOOD MORNING SOUTH SOUND >>>

Thousands fill the streets for the tax protests. The streets that tax built.

Saving our region isn’t going to happen fast.

In case you missed it: Same-sex partners rights law headed for Gov. Gregoire’s desk.

Death of the Mallrats?: One of the largest mall operators in the country files for bankruptcy.

John Madden telestrates his retirement.

Britain's got talent.

April 16, 2009 at 2:39am

Weekly Volcano cover story

OWEN TAYLOR: MYTHS OF DOWNTOWN OLYMPIA >>>

Volcano-cover-column-4_16 So I am on the couch in my office, staring out the window at a neon Olympia Beer sign and reminiscing. In front of me sits the sidewalk and four open 90-minute parking spaces. Across the street is the empty Diamond parking lot next to the hollow shell of our old friend, The Reef. (RIP, homey.) Adjacent to that is the boarded-up storefront that was formerly Audio Northwest, recently relocated to the greener pastures of Lacey. Behind that, another parking lot, endowed with both metered and un-metered spots, most unoccupied. Half a block up, across the street from Caffe Vita in the central core of downtown at Fourth and Washington, a pair of construction trucks, both idling with the drivers chuckling at what is surely a manly conversation, occupy the Diamond lot operated at U.S. Bank.

Nobody is parked in front of the darkened windows formerly known as Otto’s Bagels. Vita closed early.

Does Olympia have a parking problem?  Read my full report on the Weekly Volcano Web site.

April 15, 2009 at 8:50am

Morning Spew

NEWS TEAM: GOOD MORNING SOUTH SOUND >>>

People will be leaving Russell Investments carrying boxes.

Pierce jobless rate up to 10.6 percent.

Our weather is wack.

The tea parties are AstroTurf â€" fake-grassroots.

Not good: U.S. industrial production in March dropped more than forecast.

Milking that cash cow: AT&T wants to keep iPhone exclusivity.

April 13, 2009 at 10:45pm

Dummies don't lie

MICHAEL SWAN: TINY CARS ARE DUMB >>>

New York Times says:

Consumers who buy minicars to economize on fuel are making a big tradeoff when it comes to safety in collisions, according to an insurance group that slammed three minimodels into midsize ones in tests.

The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety said that crash dummies in all three models tested â€" the Honda Fit, the Toyota Yaris and the Smart Fortwo â€" fared poorly in the collisions.


Duh.

Filed under: Business, Transportation,

April 13, 2009 at 8:43am

Morning Spew

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News and entertainment from Joint Base Lewis-McChord’s most awesome weekly newspapers - The Ranger, Northwest Airlifter and Weekly Volcano.

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