[CRNMC] yes there will be an item on the May 20 Board of Supes mtg
edward Oberweiser
edoberweiser at gmail.com
Sat May 17 08:48:40 PDT 2014
Thanks Tim for your thoughtful discourse. I have been thinking on these
lines for some time now. I am the chair of the Ocean Protection Coalition.
We were the ones who started the sups thinking along the lines of a
moratorium last year. We just wanted to get a moratorium in place before
fracking becomes legal in California. Then Dan Gjerde decided he wanted to
fold it into existing county regs about oil drilling off the coast. So I
just learned yesterday that it would be on the agenda May 20.
On Fri, May 16, 2014 at 2:45 PM, Tim Rice <tim at multitalents.net> wrote:
> On Thu, 15 May 2014, edward Oberweiser wrote:
>
> > Hi everyone,
> >
> > I just heard from Supervisor Dan Gjerde about an anti fracking ordinance
> on
> > the May 20 meeting agenda (see below).
>
> This brings up some interesting questions in relation to our effort.
>
> I would guess that those that think our ordinance was developed to
> "ban fracking" might get excited that the Sups may do an "anti fracking
> ordinance" too.
>
> Some of us (hopefully most) joined this effort to get a "community rights"
> ordinance on the ballot. We chose fracking as its "single issue" in the
> hopes that it will have the least push back in the county. Understanding
> that the concept of "community rights" has been forgotten in this country
> for about 150 years and so might require some education to get it passed.
> Once the idea that a community has the right to make decisions on matters
> that effect the community takes hold (again), there are more "issues" to
> be looked at.
>
> So what effect might the Sups ordinance have on our effort?
> Like so many things, the answer is, it depends.
>
> We could end up with a county ordinance on the books at election time.
> Then if the voter knew about it, they might look at our ordinance and
> say "Why do we need another one?"
>
> We could end up with 2 ordinances on the ballot causing enough confusion
> to cause both to fail.
>
> The Sups could decide to just put our ordinance on the ballot. Would
> that be a good thing? Maybe, maybe not. It would depend on if
> that would enhance or detract from our "community rights" education.
> We can't change our world without changing our thinking. Our community
> rights ordinance is part of changing our thinking.
>
> I'm sure there are numerous scenarios. Some more likely, some less.
>
> I guess I'll just hold the vision of shortly being able to ask just
> about anybody in the county "Who Decides?", and they'll answer
> "We the people".
>
> Nothing happens unless we dream it first.
>
> > Ed Oberweiser
> > OPC Chair
> >
> > Dan Gjerde
> > 8:34 AM (1 hour ago)
> >
> >
> > Ed,
> >
> > We have a very simple agenda item. It's direction to staff, showing
> support
> > For an anti fracking ordinance.
> >
> > If at least three board members vote in favor, staff will bring back a
> > complete ordinance for adoption at a later meeting.
> >
> > A show of support by audience attendance.
> >
> > Sent from my iPad
> >
>
> --
> Tim Rice Multitalents (707) 456-1146
> tim at multitalents.net
>
>
>
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> crn at lists.mcn.org
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>
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