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Other pressNews from housing protests in New OrleansFollow the news of the housing protests in New Orleans on the following sites: http://neworleans.indymedia.org/news/ Guerrilla news video of 12/18/07 action: Ice Storm Raises Issues For State LeadersReposted, with permission, from Okie Funk. It has been a tough week here for sure. Tragically, 23 deaths have been blamed on the ice storm that stunned Oklahoma this past week. At one point, more than 600,000 homes and businesses were without power, and thousands still remain in the dark. Some Oklahomans shivered through the storm with blankets and candles while others headed to shelters. The damage to the local tree population here is incalculable. Once the thaw is complete, we will know more, but it appears the state has lost thousands of trees. Meanwhile, the state’s college students trudged through finals week under some of the worst weather conditions possible. Overall, it appears the state’s emergency systems once again worked well during the storm, and no one can fault the utility companies in their immediate efforts to restore power. Crews came in from other states. These crews worked long hours in biting cold weather to get the job done. But the ice storm raises at least three major issues for Oklahoma’s leaders, and the severity of this storm demand new initiatives and open-minded, intelligent thinking. Will there be discussion and action or will this recent storm quickly recede into Oklahoma weather lore? Here are those issues: 500+ show support for Jena 6 at OK capitolOKLAHOMA CITY - Hundreds, including state legislators, gathered on the steps of the state Capitol Thursday, in solidarity with thousands in Jena, La. and around the country to show support for the "Jena 6". ( categories: )
Edmond Sun publisher calls for Iraq pulloutThe publisher of The Edmond Sun would describe himself and his paper as conservative. But last Sunday, Rick Barnes added his voice to that of many a liberal (and a growing number of his fellow conservatives) regarding the US military presence in Iraq: "Enough is enough — let’s pull out"
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Oil Companies Are Using a Simple Trick to Bilk Consumers out of BillionsBy Brian Beutler, Media Consortium. Posted August 14, 2007. Oil companies know that gasoline expands at higher temperatures and has less volume at lower ones, but they've refused to upgrade gas stations with a simple tool that would adjust the price of gas according to its temperature. It's probably intuitive to most people that the gasoline in their fuel tank expands in the heat -- just like doorframes and cookware and everything else on the planet. What's probably less intuitive is that, in the United States, this physical phenomenon pumps a nearly $2 billion annual windfall out of consumers' pockets and into oil company coffers, according to numerous calculations, including a recent House of Representatives study. The North Carolina-based company Gilbarco Veeder-Root manufactures a device -- a temperature-sensitive chamber for fuel -- that, if affixed to gasoline pumps across the country, would return that money to consumers and help relieve some of our storied gas-price pressures. The device -- and others like it -- is simple, functional and, in fact, already in widespread use at gas stations all across Canada. Last month, Democratic presidential hopeful and Ohio Rep. Dennis Kucinich, chair of the Domestic Policy Subcommittee, held the second in a series of hearings to investigate why the technology has never made it into the American market. [...] the idea of correcting price for temperature has deep roots in the industry: oil companies have done so for gasoline wholesalers for nearly a century. The only ones in the North American energy chain who pay by volume rather than by energy value are U.S. consumers. [Emphasis added. Continue reading from other press] ( categories: )
Group wants to limit terms of state officialsby Ron Jenkins OKLAHOMA CITY – An Oklahoma City attorney filed an initiative petition on Thursday that seeks to amend the Oklahoma Constitution to impose term limits on some statewide elected officials. James Dunn, chairman of the “Yes on Term Limits” organization, proposes a limit of two four-year terms for the offices of lieutenant governor, auditor and inspector, attorney general, treasurer, labor commissioner and superintendent of public instruction. The group will have 90 days to collect 138,970 valid signatures on initiative petitions, representing 15 percent of the total votes cast for governor in the last general election in 2006. [continue reading from Journal Record story] ( categories: )
Deficient major bridges in OklahomaMSNBC - Updated: 11:24 p.m. CT Aug 2, 2007 The following state bridges carry at least 10,000 vehicles a day and have been rated as either structurally deficient or functionally obsolete by inspectors, according to an MSNBC.com analysis of the National Bridge Inventory. A structurally deficient bridge is closed or restricted to light vehicles because of its deteriorated structural components. While not necessarily unsafe, these bridges must have limits for speed and weight. A functionally obsolete bridge has older design features and, while it is not unsafe for all vehicles, it cannot safely accommodate current traffic volumes, and vehicle sizes and weights. See chart: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20099119 ( categories: )
Business leaders concerned about Central Oklahoma air qualityFrom the Oklahoma City Chamber of Commerce web site:
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Oklahoman: Another editorial on state's ballot access lawsThe Oklahoman continues to beat the drum for ballot access reform in the state, and this times gives Ricard Winger, a hardworking activist who produces a national newsletter and website on the issue, a nice plug. That the state's biggest newspaper, usually no friend of grassroots causes, has taken up this issue, is a welcome surprise to the state's small and struggling third parties.
Oklahoma guest editorial: War isn't back-page eventToday's (6/2/07) Daily Oklahoman includes a guest editorial by Col. Katherine Scheirman, USAF (Ret.), identified as retired in 2006 after a 20-year career in the Air Force. Her experienced and forceful statement is an important addition to the growing voices in Oklahoma against the war/occupation in Iraq. Excerpt:
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