Oil Company Woes: This is What Energy Depletion Looks Like

Here in Whatcom County, WA our local paper has an article today indicating the dismay being expressed by the local council over the fact that the two largest corporate taxpayers are challenging their property tax assessments.  These would be BP Cherry Point refinery and the Phillips 66 refinery in Ferndale.

The Bellingham Herald article by John Stark tells us that BP is challenging the most recent property tax assessment of $975 million, which they say is at least $275 million too high. BP is the number 1 taxpayer in Whatcom County, and number 2 is Phillips 66, which got an assessed value of $459 million for 2014 taxes and is also contesting its assessment, seeking a reduction of $35 million.

Council member Pete Kremen said he thought BP was asking for far too big a tax cut. “It is a huge, audacious ask, in my opinion,” Kremen said. “I think it is absurd. … It’s one of the richest corporations in the history of civilization.”

Kremen went on to joke that BP needs the money to pay for the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico that resulted from the explosion of their Deepwater Horizon oil rig.

I would argue that we need to connect the dots to a more systemic problem the oil industry as a whole is facing.  Ironically, these “richest corporations in the history of civilization” actually are facing some serious cash flow difficulties.  The problem was spelled out in painful detail recently in a presentation by Steven Kopits at Columbia University.  You can view the hour long presentation or download the pdf here. Or you can get an overview from Gail Tverberg over at the excellent Our Finite World blog. She titled her post Beginning of the End? Oil Companies Cut Back on Spending. It boils down to this:

Steve Kopits recently gave a presentation explaining our current predicament: the cost of oil extraction has been rising rapidly (10.9% per year) but oil prices have been flat. Major oil companies are finding their profits squeezed, and have recently announced plans to sell off part of their assets in order to have funds to pay their dividends. Such an approach is likely to lead to an eventual drop in oil production…

Kopits presents data showing how badly the big, publicly traded oil companies are doing. He looks at two pieces of information:

  • “Capex” – “Capital expenditures” – How much companies are spending on things like exploration, drilling, and making of new offshore oil platforms
  • “Crude oil production” –

A person would normally expect that crude oil production would rise as Capex rises, but Kopits shows that in fact since 2006, Capex has continued to rise, but crude oil production has fallen…According to Koptis, the cost of oil extraction has in recent years been rising at 10.9% per year since 1999. (CAGR means “compound annual growth rate”)…Kopits explains that the industry needs prices of over $100 barrel…

…companies have found themselves coming up short: they find that after they have paid capital expenditures and other expenditures such as taxes, they don’t have enough money left to pay dividends, unless they borrow money or sell off assets. Oil companies need to pay dividends because pension plans and other buyers of oil company stocks expect to receive regular dividends in payment for their equity investment. The dividends are important to pension plans. In the last bullet point on the slide, Kopits is telling us that on this basis, most US oil companies need a price of $130 barrel or more.

…Kopits reports that all of the major oil companies are reporting divestment programs. Does selling assets really solve the oil companies’ problems? What the oil companies would really like to do is raise their prices, but they can’t do that, because they don’t set prices, the market does–and the prices aren’t high enough. And the oil companies really can’t cut costs. So instead, they sell assets to pay dividends, or perhaps just to get out of the business.

So what is the problem? Evidence continues to support the notion that, as many of us “peak oilers” have been saying for many years,  conventional oil production peaked in 2005.  Since that time the industry has had to increasingly rely on unconventional oil – the expensive, dirty, hard to get “oil” found in the ultra-deep waters of the ocean, from tar sands, from the Bakken shale, etc. The problem is not that those resources do not exist, the problem is that they are not cheap, they are not easy, and the energy returned on the energy invested continues to shrink.

Part 2 of the problem is that the oil companies can’t charge $130 a barrel, because that would crash the economy, and when the economy tanks, so do the oil prices, at which point the amount of oil they extract and process will have to shrink as well.

Continuing on this theme, I recommend the recent discussion between Chris Martenson and Richard Heinberg, which is a bit easier to follow that the above referenced presentations by Kopits and Tverberg.  Martenson says The Oil Revolution Story is Dead Wrong.

Chris Martenson: So I want to start here. The Party’s Over, the book that did get me started on peak oil, written in 2003. And very clearly articulated, oil is a finite substance, and we built this whole giant growing economic model around it and that is a problem, it is a predicament. Here we are, eleven years later in 2014, and the party is still continuing. What is going on?
Richard Heinberg: Well, you know, I recently went back and reread the first edition of The Party’s Overbecause it was the tenth year anniversary. And I was actually a little surprised to see what it really says. My forecasts in The Party’s Over were really based on the work of two veteran petroleum geologists—Colin Campbell and Jean Laherrère. So they were saying back before 2003, because it published in 2003, so it was actually written in 2001 and 2002. So they were saying back in 2000 and 2001 that we would see a peak in conventional oil around 2005—check—that that would cause oil prices to bump higher—check—which would cause a slowdown in economic growth—check. But it would also incentivize production of unconventional oil in various forms—check—which would then peak around 2015, which is basically almost where we are right now and all the signs are suggesting that that is going to be a check-off, too. So amazing enough, these two guys got it perfectly correct fifteen years ago.
Chris Martenson: Well, it is an amazing part of the story is that at a price, there is always more oil, right? If it was a trillion dollars a drop, I assume we would find ways to actually flip North Dakota over and scrape the source rock out. And so the price and availability and supply of oil is always a big deal. I see that a lot when people are talking about the resources of natural gas that exist but fail to tell me at what price those exist, right? To get the resource is always possible but the price is important.
And yet, we look at the economic sphere and we discover that the economy also has a price for oil but it’s what it can afford to pay.
Richard Heinberg: That is exactly right.
Chris Martenson: And as I look across the last three years, we have roughly been averaging $100 a barrel on the international landscape. And what do we see? We see Ukraine suddenly dissolving, we see Southern Europe with 50% unemployment rates—all things that I think were predicted by almost anybody who was really looking at the peak oil story a long time ago. It is all really coming true and yet the story today is not really connecting those two pieces together, except for people like you and myself and a number of others, but really a handful.
Richard Heinberg: Right. Yeah, the big news right now is that the industry needs prices higher than the economy will allow, as you just outlined. So we are seeing the major oil companies cutting back on capital expenditure in upstream projects, which will undoubtedly have an impact a year or two down the line in terms of lower oil production. That is why I think that Campbell and Laherrère were right on in saying 2015, 2016 maybe, we will also start to see the rapid increase of production from the Bakken and the Eagle Ford here in the US start to flatten out. And probably within a year or two after that, we will see a commencement of a rapid decline…
Is peak oil a myth? Tell that to our local refineries who are experiencing the downslope of formerly abundant oil flowing through the  Alaska pipeline, and now must instead turn to the more expensive and problematic oil coming via trains from North Dakota.
The era of easy oil is over, and the prospect of oil trains, coal trains, and less tax revenue from oil companies are all signs that things are changing, and changing fast. This is what the first stages of energy depletion look like.

Post-Election Reflection: “The Public” Is Way Deeper Than “Public Opinion”

It’s the day after the big vote here in Whatcom County, where many of us are breathing a sigh of relief that the 4 candidates for County Council most likely to Not support a coal export terminal, most likely to get our County back into compliance with state laws on growth management, and most likely to reverse a new policy on slaughterhouses…have apparently won.

However, I was not entirely pleased with some of the negative campaigning that occurred in the last couple of weeks from both sides.  I’m also not entirely pleased that these supposedly non-partisan races have become so clearly partisan, and it appears that voters tended to either vote for all of the Democrat endorsed candidates or all of the Republican endorsed candidates.

I hope we can move past the negative and divisive campaign season, and work together for the benefit of all.  It is important to remember that elected candidates are expected to work for all of their constituents, not just the ones who voted for them. If not, we could see a dramatic swing back the other way in the next election cycle.

It is in this spirit that I recommend the following article by David King, and posted at Tom Atlee’s blog, Random Communications from the Evolutionary Edge.

“The Public” is way deeper than “public opinion” 

One of the realities that bedevils voting is that, in an adversarial and two-party system, partisan messages and media comments suggest very limited (bi-polar) choices. People who see nuances, or prefer collaboration, or are seeking a ‘third way’, or reject confrontation are actively discouraged from voting. In an adversarial and two-party system, the only (apparently) valid reasons for voting are: (1) to elect the good guy; or, (2) to make sure the bad guy doesn’t win. Anything else is described as a wasted vote or worse, an undermining of the ‘strategic’ (blocking) vote.

In terms of citizen engagement, we have a problem in that the sense of “the public” is very weak and is being undermined, constantly. The public is not merely an aggregation of individuals, nor is it a temporary or specific or instrumental phenomenon, nor is it detached from its surroundings, nor is it a contractual relationship. The public is greater than the sum of its parts. Something transcendent transforms an aggregation of individuals into “the public” in a time and place. The public is enduring, organic, and embedded in its ecology. The public is relational: it is covenantal (for better or for worse, through sickness and in health, until death do us part).

I would argue that both politicians and conventional media have reasons for wanting to dissolve “the public” and replace it with “public opinion”, which is temporary, specific and instrumental, and detached from its surroundings…

Read More

Related: Election Results – November 2013 at Northwest Citizen

Voting Suggestions for Whatcom County, Part 2

In the previous post, we looked at Voting Suggestions for Whatcom County Council.  We’ll have a brief review here as well, but let’s also consider the rest of the ballot for Bellingham and Whatcom County voters.

For those that consider themselves progressives, there are a few resources to look to for more information and endorsements. One is the Fuse Progressive Voters Guide.  Another source is Whatcom Conservation Voters. They are a a non-partisan grassroots political organization that works in Whatcom County on environmental issues.  They advocate for responsible growth, clean water, habitat conservation and many environmental causes.  Washington Conservation Voters endorsements can be found here.

One more is The Political Junkie’s Voters Guide, by fellow blogger Riley Sweeney.  With few exceptions, all of these guides named are supporting the same candidates and the same initiatives.  It is Riley’s endorsements that I’ll review here in abbreviated form.  All quotes below are from Riley Sweeney, unless otherwise noted (example: Whatcom Democrats). I agree with all of his choices, except for the last two.

Stuck on your ballot? Let Riley help!
Stuck on your ballot? Let Riley help!

State-Wide Measures

I-517: Vote No. “This is Tim Eyman’s latest initiative and as usual, it is a mediocre idea wrapped in a whole bucket of bad ideas…”

I-522: Vote Yes. “This would require most grocery items to display whether or not they had been genetically modified. Currently, Monsanto is spending $4.2 million in Washington state to block this measure.”

Advisory Votes: Riley published a whole article about this earlier in the week, so check it out for the details but the end result is the same. Vote “maintained” for all of these measures.

Whatcom County Council (Redux)

(See previous post for more detail on County Council)

“If you care deeply about stopping the coal terminal, this decision is easy. Do not vote for anyone who has taken money from the Coal industry.”

My comments: Check out Riley’s reporting on coal industry money coming to Council candidates in the link above, and check out the Herald article about even more coal industry money coming to the Save Whatcom PAC. Whatcom Democrats are urging citizens to contact the Attorney General and demand an investigation. They claim that disclosure laws were violated – that the donated money from SSA Marine, Cloud Peak Energy, Global Coal Sales, and others were deliberately hidden. A statement on the Whatcom Democrats website:

“With critical races in the balance, community leaders in Whatcom County are calling on the Washington State Attorney General to step in and make Saving Whatcom PAC and their big coal donors comply with the laws of Washington.

Washington state law requires the five largest donors to an advertisement to be printed on a piece of mail or television advertisement.  They have set up two committees and transferred money between them, in an attempt to hide donor names from the public.”
– Whatcom Democrats

Vote for the candidates who have not accepted money from big coal: Buchanan, Browne, Mann, and Weimer.

Port of Bellingham

Commissioner District 1: Renata Kowalczyk.  “She brings an outsider’s perspective which is desperately needed at the port, yet shares our values for what the port’s role is in our community. Her opponent, Dan Robbins, has done little this campaign other than repeat weird communist smears from the anonymous writers at the Whatcom Excavator and tout his failed businesses. The choice is clear, Vote Kowalczyk.”

Commissioner District 2: Mike McAuley.For the last four years, Mike has been the lone voice of sanity on the Port Commission.”

Bellingham City Council

Council Ward 4: Pinky Vargas. “She is smart, an effective communicator but more importantly, would bring some vital self-awareness to the city council.”

Council At-Large: Roxanne Murphy.While I appreciate Bob Burr’s activist spirit and desire to push complacent politicos out of their comfort zone, the City Council needs a steady hand and they will have one in Roxanne Murphy.”

Bellingham School District

Proposition 1:  “Our schools are criminally underfunded. Walk into an school and you will see employees working two or three jobs to cover the budget cuts, improvements being delayed, technology that is decades old. We should be investing in our schools and this bond is a good start. Vote approved.

Director Position 4: Steven Smith.Wait a minute Riley, you endorsed John Blethen in the primary? What happened? Well, I met with Steven Smith and was blown away. This Western business professor moonlighting as school board member brings the right mix of compassion and technical skill to the school board. We talked at length about the need for, and challenges of, measuring emotional growth as part of a child’s educational experience. Quantifying our schools beyond SATs and dropout rates to see what is really happening with each cohort of learners. Smith is using his position on the board to build the tools so future board members can assess the progress we have made and where we need to grow.

While I respect Blethen a great deal, and encourage people to vote for him based on his long record of involvement, I am voting for Smith.”

My comments: I have quoted the entirety of Riley’s School District choices above, because these are the two items on the ballot that I disagree with, though I think Riley has made a good case for his decision.  In my view of an integral permaculture future, we can’t expect business as usual to continue – honestly considered, we don’t have the money to spend on all the projects we’d like, and we have to start making some hard decisions.  Schools are underfunded, but can we really afford to rebuild Sehome High School (my alma mater) at this time? And is closing Larrabee school the right choice, forcing more resources to go toward transporting students longer distances?

A statement taken from the Facebook page of the Coalition to Save Larrabee:

Not one dollar of the 220 million dollar school bond ($160 million principal + interest) will be spent to reduce classroom sizes, hire or adequately pay even one more teacher, fund enrichment programs, environmental learning, support neighborhood schools, STEM education, or the arts. As Democrats, when we are asked to support education we ask, “where do I sign?” But this time around we have to pay attention even if it is politically uncomfortable. Closing Larrabee Elementary School is the canary in the coal mind. The first sign that the Superintendent has a vision that is counter to our community’s vision. The Superintendent is marching us away from small classroom sizes, away from walkable neighborhood schools, and towards 10 million dollar district offices, bloated top administration budgets, and policies that reflect a belief that student learning will increase if teachers just work harder, accept less pay and benefits, volunteer more of their time, and sacrifice…
– Coalition to Save Larrabee

See also David Marshak’s article opposing Proposition 1 in the Oct. 8th Cascadia Weekly, reprinted here: “Rebuilding Sehome High School” Makes No Sense.

Please read John Blethen’s opinion piece at the Bellingham Herald: John Blethen Propose More Public Input; Attention to Bellingham Neighborhood Schools.

Research supports that small neighborhood schools are more effective academically and socially, especially for children living in low-income households, and encourage parent involvement. Neighborhood schools are essential for community building. It is imperative that the Bellingham School District aligns their school facilities planning process with the city of Bellingham to be in step with the Bellingham Comprehensive Plan, with public schools retained and new neighborhood schools located consistent with the city’s commitment to progressive urban smart-growth principles.
– John Blethen

My recommendation: Vote No on Proposition 1, and vote for John Blethen, Director Position 4.

Confession: I Still Cannot Yet Skin A Deer

Back in 2005, when I was still fairly new to the idea of ‘peak oil’ and ‘culture change,’ I read an article that I remember well even now.  Written from the perspective of a big city dweller – San Fransisco’s Mark Morford. Quite humorous, and a little irreverant, Morford laments that his many urban survival skills may not be of any help “when the devolution comes and oil is $200 a barrel and we are at war with China and the dollar is worth about three cents on the euro.”  The article is called I Cannot Yet Skin A Deer.

Fortunately, we here in Whatcom County have an opportunity to do a weekend reskilling crash course at the Whatcom Skillshare Faire at Hovander Park Homestead Sept. 21 and 22, 2013.

When I read the list of skills being offered, my only response is “WOW!” An $8 ticket gets you in to all of this! And you know it’s gotta be good when Peak Moment TV has made it a priority to be there for filming future episodes of their ongoing series of practical hands-on resilience building interviews on “Locally Reliant Living in Challenging Times.”

Download Saturday’s Schedule in pdf format: Click Here
Download Sunday’s Schedule in pdf format: Click Here

Ongoing demonstrations:

  • Appropriate Use of Hand Tools – Brian Kerkvleit of Inspiration Farm
  • Archery for All Ages – Laurel Baptist Church
  • Art at Home: pastels, watercolors, drawing, clay – Whatcom Women
  • Backyard Chickens and building a Chicken Tractor – WSU Ag Extension
  • Basic Home Electrical Repair, Outlets, Switches and more – Kelly McClurg
  • Beans and Grains for the Pacific Northwest – Krista Rome
  • Beekeeping – Mount Baker Beekeeper’s Association
  • Building and Using a Rocket Stove – Peter Holcomb
  • Building and Using Sundials – Sasch Stephens
  • Championship Llamas, shearing and spinning – Jeff and Niki Kuklenski
  • Combing and Spinning Wool – Yvonne Madsen
  • Cooperative Economies – Fourth Corner Exchange
  • Coping with Chronic Pain – Meggan Sheble
  • Dry Stone Walling – Derek Duffy
  • Electric Car Conversion – Jack McKee
  • Felting Soap Balls – Jamie Jedinak
  • Fermentation of Raw Crackers – Suki Aufhauser
  • Growing a Year Round Food Supply – Krista Rome
  • Growing Blueberries and Black Currants – Travis Linds
  • Gestalt as a Way of Life – Cindy Sheldon
  • Hand Spinning – Carol Osterman
  • Herbal Medicine Making and Distillation Demo – Victoria Reddick
  • Home brewing Demonstration – Bellingham Beer League
  • Homemade Firestarters – Kelly McClurg
  • Horse Whispering – Ginger Kennell
  • How to Run a Kickstarter/Crowdfunding Campaign
  • Kaleidoscope Community Yoga – Lo Nathamundi
  • Keep Your Bike in Shape – Josh Hardesty
  • Knots for Everyday Use – Mark Richardson
  • Learning to Sew – Karen Kucker
  • Livestock Information – WSU
  • Make an Electric Sewing Machine into a Hand Crank – Karen Kucker
  • Making Goat Cheese – Nina Dent
  • Making Kombucha – Kombucha Town
  • Making Rag Rugs with Crochet – Janice Shepherd
  • Making Sour Dough – Gary Sparrow
  • Making Wooden Utensils – Jeff Fisher
  • Natural Birth – W.I.S.E. Birth Doula Collective
  • Northwest Wildllife Rehab Center – Alex Gomes
  • Pasture and grazing management – Carol Osterman
  • Preparing for an Emergency – Whatcom County Preppers
  • Primitive Skills Medley – Earthways Nature School
  • Raising Natural Fibers, spinning, weaving and knitting – Carol Boswell (Spindrifters)
  • Raising Sheep – Russell Boggs
  • Save a Life with CPR – Robin Long
  • Seed Saving – Celt Schira and Brian Kerkvleit
  • Solar, Wind, and Hydro Energy – Home Energy Solutions/Jeffrey Utter
  • Sock Darning – Erma
  • Weaving – Nina Dent
  • Whatcom Folk School – Information booth – Josh Hardesty
  • Wild Honey Elixir Fermentations – Heather Katahdan and Terri Wilde

Scheduled SkillShares

Saturday, Sept. 21

10:30 AM

  • How to butcher a turkey – Transition Goshen

11 AM

  • Fire by Friction – Wolf College
  • Brew Your Own Beer for Taste and Awesomeness  – Bellingham Beer League Co-op – Josh Smith
  • CPR – learn to save a life  Robin Long, RN
  • Herbal Alternatives to Antibiotics – Michelle Sanger
  • Making an Electric Sewing Machine into a Hand Crank – Karen Krucker
  • Renewable Energy Basics – Jeffrey Utter of Home and Energy Solutions
  • Sewing for Everyone – Whatcom Women

11:30 AM

  • Basic Sour Dough – Gary Sparrow
  • Nature Based Games for Kids of All Ages – Earthways Nature School

12 NOON

  • Jewelry making – Oasis beads – Karen Murphy
  • Best Field Guides for Homesteading, Permaculture, Plants, Birds, Insects, etc. – Wolf College
  • Kaleidoscope Yoga – Lo Nathamundi
  • Making Kombucha – Kombucha Town – Chris McCoy
  • Making rag rugs – Laura Sellens
  • Water Witching – Colby Styles
  • Brew Your Own Beer (cont’d) – Bellingham Beer League Co-op
  • Solar Energy – Jeffrey Utter of Home and Energy Solutions

1PM

  • Process and tanning Hides for Leather and Parfleche – Wolf College near
  • Gardening in the PNW – David Pike
  • Hoof trimming for Goats – Cheri McKay
  • Wine Making at Home – Kelly McClurg
  • Water conservation and sustainable living – Scott Durkee of Transition Vashon
  • Jewelry making – Oasis beads – Karen Murphy
  • Storytelling for parents, grandparents and families – Doug Banner
  • Scything and other sharp ideas  (2 hrs)– Brian Kerkvleit, Inspiration Farm
  • “EM” at home – culturing effective micro organisms – Colby Styles
  • Brew Your Own Beer (contd.) – Bellingham Beer League Co-op
  • Making Biochar from Charcoal – Larry Williams
  • Wind, Hydro, and Solar Energy – Jeffrey Utter of Home and Energy Solutions

1:30 PM

  • Making Milk Kefir at Home – Randy Card
  • Fire by Friction – Cody Beebe of Earthways Nature School

2PM

  • Herbal and Critter Forage for Healthy Chickens – Wolf College
  • Making rag rugs – Laura Sellens
  • Bow Making – Steve Sahlin
  • Wild Honey Elixir Fermentations – Heather Katahdan and Terri Wilde
  • Irish Music Workshop – Cayley Schmid and Clea Taylor
  • Water conservation and sustainable living – Scott Durkee of Transition Vashon
  • Edible, Medicinal and Useful Plant Walk – Kim Bauer, ND, LM
  • Yoga for posture, pain and performance – Kathleen Grimbly
  • Water Witching – Coulby Styles
  • Biochar from Charcoal (cont.) – Larry Williams
  • Brew Your Own Beer – Bellingham Beer League Co-op
  • Making Traditional Bows and Arrows – Wolf College

3PM

  • Biochar from Charcoal (cont.) – Larry Williams
  • Brew Your Own Beer (cont.) – Bellingham Beer League Co-op
  • Beans and Grains for the PNW – Krista Rome
  • Jewelry making – Oasis beads – Karen Murphy
  • Hoof trimming for Goats – Cheri McKay
  • Compost teas for Your Plants – Alison Kutz
  • Juice Cleanse for Health – Rhys Faler
  • Gardening in the PNW – David Pike
  • Juice Cleanse for Health – Rhys Fahler

3:30 pm

  • Outdoor Worm Bins – Alicia Wills
  • Nature Based Games for  Kids of All Ages – Earthways Nature School

4PM

  • Cooking Wild Edibles – Cattails, Crickets and More – Wolf College
  • Meditation Practices, Bhakti Yoga – Lori Erbs
  • Jewelry making – Oasis beads – Karen Murphy
  • Edible, Medicinal and Useful Plant Walk – Terri Wilde
  • Splicing Double Braid Rope – Canh Khong from Samson Rope
  • Water Witching – Colby Styles
  • Processing Nettles, Willow and other fibers for rope, baskets, and sitting mats – Wolf College

5PM

  • Bodhran Drumming – Derek Duffy
  • How to run a Kickstarter/Crowdfunding campaign – Matthew Brouwer
  • Qi Gong – Ronaye Carmen
  • Water Witching – Colby Styles

Sunday, Sept 22

10 AM

  • Basic Sour Dough – Gary Sparrow

11am

  • Home funerals and greening the end of life – Raven DuBois and Nora Cedarwind  (2 hours)
  • CPR – learn to save a life – Robin Long
  • QiGong  – Ronaye Carmen
  • Edible, Medicinal and Useful Plant Walk – Shana Lewis
  • Worm bins and compost tea – Alicia Wils

12 noon

  • Kaleidoscope yoga – Lo Nathamundi
  • Making rag rugs – Laura Sellens
  • Jewelry making – Oasis beads – Karen Murphy
  • Making Mead – Mary Tully
  • Water Witching – Coulby Styles
  • Biochar from Charcoal w/ a little garlic – Larry Williams

1 pm

  • Water conservation and sustainable living – Scott Durkee of Transition Vashon
  • Edible, Medicinal and Useful Plant Walk – Terri Wilde
  • “EM” at home – culturing effective micro organisms – Colby Styles
  • Bow Making – Steve Sahlin
  • Jewelry making – Oasis beads – Karen Murphy

2pm

  • Yoga for posture, pain and performance – Kathleen Grimbly
  • Growing a Year Round Food Supply – Krista Rome
  • Making rag rugs – Laura Sellens
  • Jewelry making – Oasis beads – Karen Murphy
  • Biochar from Charcoal (cont.) – Larry Williams
  • How to Run a Kickstarter/Crowdfunding Campaign – Matthew  Brouwer
  • Making Mead – Mary Tully

3pm

  • Edible, Medicinal and Useful Plant Walk – Shana Lewis
  • CPR – learn to save a life – Home Central
  • Juice Cleanse for Health – Rhys Faler
  • Jewelry making – Oasis beads – Karen Murphy

4pm

  • Meditation Practices Bhakti Yoga – Lori Erbs
  • Bodhran Drumming – Derek Duffy

Performance Schedule

Saturday, Sept 21

11:00 Storytelling with Rebecca Mabanglo-Mayor
12:00 Giant’s Causeway
12:45 Storytelling with Kelvin Saxton
1:00 Echo Mill
1:45 Storytelling with Doug Banner
2:00 Bellow Wing
3:00 Kaleidoscope Yoga with Bellingham Bhajans
3:30 Dana Lyons
4:00 Coulby Styles
5:00 Misty Flowers
5:45 Storytelling with Kelvin Saxton
6:00 Square Dance with the Gravel Grinders & Lisa MacAvoy calling
7:00 Swil Kanim
7:30 The Devilly Brothers
9:00 Swil Kanim
9:30 Hot Damn Scandal

Sunday, Sept 22

12:00 Quickdraw Stringband
1:00 Lindsay Street
2:30 Tap Dance
3:00 Kuungana
4:00 Mike Marker
4:30 Daddy Treetops
5:00 Mike Marker, Daddy Treetops, & Bill Sterling
5:30 Critical Mass Marching Band

In between sets Saturday/Sunday:

Bellingham Storyteller’s Guild
Eric Schmitz
Matthew Brouwer

 

 

Why You Should Care About the Growth Management Act if You Live in Whatcom County

I know, it sounds like a subject best left to professional planners, politicians, and policy wonks. But it turns out to be a really important piece that is shaping the character and landscape of Whatcom County. Perhaps more importantly it plays a role in our ability to become more resilient by preserving fertile farmland for the purpose of feeding our community with locally grown food.

In 1990, the state of Washington passed The Growth Management Act (GMA), which basically requires local governments to do land use planning, and to demonstrate how they’re going to accommodate expected population growth. Since that time Whatcom County has had what Get Whatcom Planning calls a “sordid history…of compliance with that state law.”

You can expect that County compliance with the GMA will be a big topic at the upcoming Growth and Environment Election Forum mentioned in the previous post (Aug. 1st).  So it’s a good idea to get up to speed on the topic before the forum.  I’m not an expert by any means on this topic, so I’m mostly going to be referring to other articles and blog posts.

A great way to ease into this topic is Riley Sweeney’s blog post, “Why is the County Breaking the Law?”  Riley shares an admittedly over-simplified analogy of a school child refusing to turn in his or her homework.

Riley explains the purpose of the GMA:

The idea was that if you made the counties do their homework, they would avoid sprawling strip malls and giant condos next to what should have been rural areas. Unplanned growth leads to expensive infrastructure adjustments by the county.

For various reasons, the County has adopted plans that various Hearings Boards and courts have found to be invalid, and the County has continued to resist the findings by spending our taxpayer money ($50,000 per year – they just decided to re-up for another $40,000) on litigation…and they continue to lose.

I’ll have more articles to share next time, but until then you should pop over to the Sweeney Politics blog and take a few minutes to read that aforementioned post. It’s actually an entertaining read.

Let's talk about this "GMA" business

“Let’s talk about this “GMA” business”