Sunday, February 8, 2009

Outrage Exhaustion

I think Dunc used the phrase "Outrage Exhaustion" a few weeks back in the comments to describe the nature of the comments. He just had an entry on Pegasus that there were only 200+ comments over here. I guess I think that's a little funny; I don't know of any local blogs that get that many, but c'est la vie.

But that's probably how this thing will end, especially locally. With a whimper, not a scream.

People will just slowly mentally succumb to this thing. All the Merenda replacing will have failed. The hottest spot in the hottest town in the West will just be laughable. That Subway will probably hold on by it's fingernails, maybe. But the hoity-toity stuff will all go down hard, and finally no one will step up to replace it.

I even think the Old Mill will suffer a long-term erosion. Some big anchors will close. The Money Losing Trophy Property (MoLo TroPro) concept will die a certain death, and that's much of what's there. I can't see REI staying. Greg's Grill gone. Yumm Cafe, Alisons Kitchen, Community Flatbread... all gone.

And there are no jobs here. The nationwide unemployment rate came out this week at 7.6%. As recently as September, we were at 6.0% nationwide, and it appeared things were stabilizing.

No more. This is a statistic that hardly moves one way or another more than .2% in any given month. It's gone up an average of .5% for the last 3 months. Doesn't sound like much, but I haven't seen any similar period in modern history where unemployment has moved so much, up or down.

And here's a graph of recent unemployment figures for the USA, Oregon, and Bend. You don't have to be Kreskin to see where Bend is going.
Unemployment for USA, Oregon, and Bend; Jul 2008 to present.

I mean, look at that; you tell me where you think it's going. The top of that graph is 14%, and if Oregon stays in it's ways of outpacing the nation by almost double, and Bend outpaces Oregon by 50%, it seems like a slam Dunc that we'll hit 15% for this month. 13% for January seems also within reason.

Towns with 15-20% unemployment are just not vital hubs of commerce. Towns like that are usually in long term decline. Those are your little towns out 30-40 miles SW of Missoula or somewhere (ie Burns), that are just in a secular decline. Outdoor mecca? Beautiful? Nice to visit? Oh yeah, all that. But in long term decline nonetheless.

I saw many towns like this on my last vacation. Beautiful spots. Outdoor activities out the ying yang. I had a great time there too. But get on the outskirts, and it was all decay, rot, malaise, and abandoned malls. You could see it on people's faces, they were in existence mode, just surviving day to day.

Not dying, mind you. There was just this perceptible resignation to a fate that had no chance of any "upside". No excitement, no challenges. People had stopped that, because the remnants of failure were all around them.

I think Dunc had it right: The "excitement" of the decline will be replaced by a real sort of despair that things aren't EVER going to bounce right back. We will become like so many other places in the West: Beautiful, activity-rich, but caught in a molasses-like, moribund economic spiral downward.

And I'm not trying to "drag people down" to my way of thinking, or some such bullshit. I'm trying to talk people out of economic suicide. On the slopes of Everest, when Common Sense Caution is not heeded, people die. It's not so dramatic here. Well, except for the people who have died. My point is, the signs are all around us: STOP THE CLIMB.

Many are still not heeding the advice of the environment around them. Everything points to white-out, 100 below, killer conditions; but still people start to climb.

Why is Merenda II even being considered? Why? Because what killed the last guy, won't kill me. I'm better than him. I'll make it. This. Is. Bend.

It's really incredible. Pahlisch Homes has watched as their subdiv's have imploded (from BendBB):
Just noticed today that all Pahlisch signage has been removed from the Fieldstone Crossing development in Redmond. Looks like their model has been shut down completely. Their is no reference to Fieldstone Crossing on the Pahlisch website.

And yet Pahlish announced they have started building The Bridges At Shadow Glen this week.

Ahhh... the power of LLC's. Failure is not an option.

Even our public servants have jumped on the Bubble Bandwagon.

Bend police captain on leave amid FBI probe

Bend Police Capt. Kevin Sawyer has been placed on administrative leave as the FBI investigates one or more businesses Sawyer and wife Tami have been operating, the police chief confirmed Friday. "I am aware of an investigation going on by the FBI into the finances of a business or businesses that Captain Sawyer is associated with,"said Police Chief Sandi Baxter.

And so it goes. Everyday, we seem to find someone with their twig & berries exposed as the tide rushes out. First Summit, now this guy, and there are, like an iceberg, many others that we aren't even hearing about.

The relentlessness of the pain, the disbelief of the corruption, the resignation that we can't beat The Powers That Be, will finally be the nail in Bend's coffin. There won't be anymore excitement, no more challenges. People's outrage will succumb to despondency. We'll all just give up on this place.

Outrage Exhaustion. Great description. Because the vast majority of people in this town will realize at some point that there is an existing "Aristocracy" of sorts (GOB Network), and if you are not part of it, and you have Big Dreams for your life, that you will Not Make It In Bend. This is Not a meritocracy. Things are NOT done "for the People". They are done for a small inbred cadre of well-defined beneficiaries who rig every election.

That's how it is in Bend, Oregon.

Not real people. Not real children. Spending NOT real money, from not real jobs, in a not real place.

OK, enough bitching about that. I just have a teeny-tiny outrage against my own kind.

And I have to preface this with the idea that what is trying to be accomplished and the means by which so many think it will be acconomplished, is just sheer folly.

And it is the passage of The Bailout. It's not a bank bailout. Nor autos. Nor any other particular thing. It's a bailout of this country. We are falling into the Abyss.

And strangely enough there is an unassailable mentality that a BAILOUT will save us. OK, governements can produce nothing. Except money, which they can produce in unlimited quantities. And governments many times think the printing of it can cure all ills. Of course, that's ridiculous.

Our problems will not be undone, until housing hits bottom. The bailout, and many other government measures are doing everything possible to avoid that. Forebearance on loans, delaying foreclosures, loan renegotiations. All these are failed ideas, and simply prolong the pain.

And prolonging the pain, is just what the RePug's intend to do. These hypocritical, lying, thieving, conniving fuckers are as much to blame as the Lib's for this thing.

But what's just classic, is that BOTH parties agree that the bailout is our only salvation (ridiculous, of course, it will only make things worse). But even in their idiotic agreement, they have put partisan politics FIRST, and the perceived needs of the American people a distant second.

BOTH parties have done this. Yes hbm, BOTH.

This is indicative of a country in decline. The elected aristocracy could give a fuck about the rank-and-file. Even when they are implementeing the most ass-backwards stupid plans imaginable, partisan wrangling is far more important than saving their own civilization.

The most depressing part of this implosion will NOT be the dire & near-catastrophic economic consequences, it will be the loss of will, the loss of drive, the loss of cause-and-effect thinking that people have, where if they struggle, work hard, and strive against the odds, that they can make something of themselves in this country.

That is what we are losing. We are rewarding FAILURE, EXCESS and EXTRAVAGANCE, and punishing prudence, thrift, and spending within your means. We're sending a message here with this bailout: Graft, corruption, and theft will be rewarded.

We are a nation in decline.

OK, finally I want to do a little re-print of an MSN article. It's got good info, but I suppose the big shocker is that mainstream press is starting to use The D Word. There is actually starting to be an open debate about whether a modern-ear Depression is possible. Maybe you & I are getting a tin-ear to this, because I have been banging this drum for 2 years.

But you could NEVER find mainstream press even discussing it. NEVER. Until now.

THAT is how BAD it is. All the hopeful sentiment that we are about to bottom imminently, has been replaced by How Low Can We Go? I think the past 60 days have been a wakeup call.

Too late to avoid a depression?

Policymakers are quickly running out of time and room for error. And even a brilliant plan -- which we haven't seen yet -- could fail without some good luck.
By Jon Markman

Over the past week, the world's intellectual, business, government and philanthropic elite emerged from World Economic Forum meetings in Davos, Switzerland, with grim faces and warnings of financial doom.

You'd almost think they'd met to plot a suicide pact rather than global trade, as the headlines were so gory they could have been mulched into meals for vampires.
Are things really that bad? Maybe not.

Your contrarian antennae really have to go up in the face of consensus from a cohort of eggheads, politicos and jet-setters not exactly known for clairvoyance. Their big idea last year: that emerging markets' domestic economies had become so strong that a decline in U.S. and European growth would not derail them. Oops.


Credible economic analysts now say there is still a narrow window of time in which policymakers in the United States, Europe and Asia can avoid a meltdown over the next year by immediately coordinating the injection of real financial adrenaline to banks, companies, households and local governments -- not just rhetoric and indiscriminate spending.

Yet that window is closing fast, and if the right steps are not taken soon it may be shut for years.
But governments don't know which steps work because economic theory breaks down at the level of human psychology.

Given a set of stimuli -- ranging from tax cuts and longer unemployment benefits to new construction jobs and wider broadband access -- economists try to mathematically determine the choices citizens are likely to make, then use the results to recommend a policy mix to legislators.


The problem is that the models often fail to accurately forecast human behavior, and politicians regularly screw it all up by ignoring the data and diverting funds to pet projects.

History is rife with successful financial episodes, such as the New Deal, in which luck and coincidence are later misinterpreted as results of prescient planning.
Slim hopes of an end-zone dance To prove the Davos set wrong, in short, congressional leaders must make the right choices at warp speed under pressure from special interests.

It's a public-policy version of the Steelers' final drive Sunday with time running out in the Super Bowl. Pittsburgh quarterback Ben Roethlisberger, scrambling to elude a rush, had one good shot at throwing the football at an oblique angle to a receiver leaping among three defenders in the corner of the end zone.

In times like these, the result set is stark and binary: hero or goat in football, recovery or disaster in the economy.
The Davos pessimists' case for a severe economic dislocation over the next year -- let's go out to the extreme and call it a potential depression -- is easily made, as four key ingredients are in place.

Their recipe calls for a blend of cyclical recession, severe deleveraging, a shift of demographics favoring savings over consumption, and inappropriate fiscal and monetary responses by policymakers.
The first three are well under way, so the last one is the decider.

Looking back at the Great Depression of the 1930s and Japan's depression of the 1990s, it's clear that government leaders in each case failed to respond quickly enough, then overcorrected, and in general took steps that at the time were considered best economic practices but actually worsened the problems.

Our leaders will likewise now try to do the right thing based on currently popular theories, but we cannot confidently say whether they will turn out to be appropriate.

You just never know.


The only certainty is that measures must be taken immediately, and every day lost on minutiae such as bank executives' pay or Cabinet nominees' tax follies dampens the likelihood of success. Speed is of the essence, like putting up sandbags to stop a levee break, as we can see in daily headlines now that the darkness of Davos is descending.


The incredible shrinking economies
Layoff announcements over the past three months averaged 50,000 a week until they jumped to more than 100,000 last week. In an attempt to outrun revenue shortfalls, businesses are also cutting back on wages, travel and equipment purchases.

But it's a losing battle. ISI Group analysts figure that U.S. corporate profits will decline from their 2007 peak to a 2010 trough by a record 30%, though a 50% fall is not out of the question. They're already down 20%.
Customers are disappearing as wages and jobs falter and families raid their emergency funds. U.S. home equity decline has accelerated to a 30% annual rate, which combined with the stock market plunge, has slashed consumers' net worth by $12 trillion.

The pervasiveness of the plunge in demand that animates doomsayers is breathtaking. Reis, a real-estate research firm, this week said rents nationwide fell in 43% of buildings of all types in the fourth quarter, up from an average of 25% in the first nine months of the year. In New York, where financial layoffs are surging, rents fell in 75% of apartment buildings last quarter. This puts securitized loans on U.S. commercial and apartment buildings on track for a default rate of 6% this year, up from 1.1% at the end of 2008.

"We haven't seen this speed of decline before," one Reis analyst told Bloomberg.
In Asia, the momentum of deterioration and thus the need for policy speed is even more dramatic. Japan's industrial production is falling at a stunning 63% annual rate; in South Korea, it's falling at a 43% rate.

In China, real gross domestic production was unchanged in the fourth quarter, and ISI analysts expect it to be unchanged in this quarter, which would smash the GDP growth down to just 4% year over year, a stunning comedown for an economy that was growing at better than 10% last year and was once believed to be invulnerable.


In contrast, government leaders appear to be moving in slow motion. The Federal Reserve last week said it was "prepared" to buy Treasurys to push down interest-rate costs even though 10-year-note yields are up a lot in the past two months.

The Obama administration, meanwhile, has dawdled on plans to try to recapitalize the banking system or buy soured assets, and the fiscal stimulus package winding its way through Congress appears by independent estimates to be too small, insufficiently focused on real job creation and overly weighted on fiscal 2010 rather than 2009.

Meanwhile, the head of the European Central Bank is dragging his feet, stating that he would not back an interest-rate cut.
I would love to see the smug Davos crowd proved wrong, but the forces at work may have gone too far to be stopped. The nation may be on track now to spend $4 trillion -- more than on anything short of war -- to prevent the credit hole from getting so big we can't climb out.

It's especially worrisome to see so much money used to shore up the worst-managed banks, a misallocation of resources that could haunt us for decades.
In summary, total ruin can be averted and the Davos prophecy squelched if lawmakers seize the moment, aim true and get lucky.

Even if the result is low growth amid a newly chastened business and social culture, re-ranking of national priorities to celebrate saving over consumption and acceptance of a lower stature in the world, it's superior to depression and chaos.

Cross your fingers.


Oh right, I did want to let you guys in on a little secret: I was one of the attending physicians when Thomas Beatie gave birth to the first goat-human. There's been quite a bit of consternation about how someone could possibly push a goat out through their cock. I am here to tell you that after I, and assisting physician Neil Patrick Harris (aka Doogie Howser, MD) crammed a giant metal spear into that bastards cock, the end result was not pretty:
Asshole: The Other Pussy

I also want to address the delicate topic of where a man holds a baby goat. It's not in the belly, it's quite a bit lower. Here is a never-before-seen picture of Beatie posing completely naked, just prior to birth:
"Hi, I'm Thomas Beatie and there's a mother fuckin' goat in my nutsack! I'm calling Oprah!"

OK, I'll wrap it up by throwing Dunc a Betty Boop Pinup bone'r two here:
Please Dunc, don't hurt me!Dunc, I'm hankerin' for some spankerin'!
And squat, and thrust, and in and out!I wish someone would go apeshit on me right about now...
I wish there was a big strong Comic book retailer here to help me pet my pussy...

I'll give you this Dunc, She Hot. If I was born during the Civil War, I'd also find this 1930's style porno pretty hot. There ain't many chicks that look bad in a ball gag.

611 comments:

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St Paddy said...

My guess with the Sawyer investigation is all about the 11th hour will changing debacle with their lil' buddy who spent his dying days at their house.

The family probably didn't want anything to do with the old goat until he was dead and here comes miss positivity (sawyer) willing to take care of the bastard, and conveniently convinces him to change the will to fuck over the dead beat family that didn't give a shit while the guy was alive. The money went to help "The Sawyer Fucked 5" float their sinking ship a little longer.

It would be interesting to look the guy up and see what he owned and see how much of it is being transfered to Miss Tami.

What was the guys name? I'll waste some time on the case to entertain you fukkers.




SP






SP

Bewert said...

Thomas S. Middleton

Anonymous said...

Wow -- it's finally happening to Dubai. Anyone who follows Dubai knows that it's been soaring like no other place in the world . . . Maybe for the wrong reasons?


February 12, 2009

Laid-Off Foreigners Flee as Dubai Spirals Down

By ROBERT F. WORTH

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Sofia, a 34-year-old Frenchwoman, moved here a year ago to take a job in advertising, so confident about Dubai’s fast-growing economy that she bought an apartment for almost $300,000 with a 15-year mortgage.

Now, like many of the foreign workers who make up 90 percent of the population here, she has been laid off and faces the prospect of being forced to leave this Persian Gulf city — or worse.

“I’m really scared of what could happen, because I bought property here,” said Sofia, who asked that her last name be withheld because she is still hunting for a new job. “If I can’t pay it off, I was told I could end up in debtors’ prison.”

With Dubai’s economy in free fall, newspapers have reported that more than 3,000 cars sit abandoned in the parking lot at the Dubai Airport, left by fleeing, debt-ridden foreigners (who could in fact be imprisoned if they failed to pay their bills). Some are said to have maxed-out credit cards inside and notes of apology taped to the windshield.

The government says the real number is much lower. But the stories contain at least a grain of truth: jobless people here lose their work visas and then must leave the country within a month. That in turn reduces spending, creates housing vacancies and lowers real estate prices, in a downward spiral that has left parts of Dubai — once hailed as the economic superpower of the Middle East — looking like a ghost town.

No one knows how bad things have become, though it is clear that tens of thousands have left, real estate prices have crashed and scores of Dubai’s major construction projects have been suspended or canceled. But with the government unwilling to provide data, rumors are bound to flourish, damaging confidence and further undermining the economy.

Instead of moving toward greater transparency, the emirates seem to be moving in the other direction. A new draft media law would make it a crime to damage the country’s reputation or economy, punishable by fines of up to $272,000. Some say it is already having a chilling effect on reporting about the crisis.

Last month, local newspapers reported that Dubai was canceling 1,500 work visas every day, citing unnamed government officials. Asked about the number, Humaid bin Dimas, a spokesman for Dubai’s Labor Ministry, said he would not confirm or deny it and refused to comment further. Some say the true figure is much higher.

“At the moment there is a readiness to believe the worst,” said Simon Williams, HSBC bank’s chief economist in Dubai. “And the limits on data make it difficult to counter the rumors.”

Some things are clear: real estate prices, which rose dramatically during Dubai’s six-year boom, have dropped 30 percent or more over the past two or three months in some parts of the city. Last week, Moody’s Investor’s Service announced that it might downgrade its ratings on six of Dubai’s most prominent state-owned companies, citing a deterioration in the economic outlook. So many used luxury cars are for sale , they are sometimes sold for 40 percent less than the asking price two months ago, car dealers say. Dubai’s roads, usually thick with traffic at this time of year, are now mostly clear.

Some analysts say the crisis is likely to have long-lasting effects on the seven-member emirates federation, where Dubai has long played rebellious younger brother to oil-rich and more conservative Abu Dhabi. Dubai officials, swallowing their pride, have made clear that they would be open to a bailout, but so far Abu Dhabi has offered assistance only to its own banks.

“Why is Abu Dhabi allowing its neighbor to have its international reputation trashed, when it could bail out Dubai’s banks and restore confidence?” said Christopher M. Davidson, who predicted the current crisis in “Dubai: The Vulnerability of Success,” a book published last year. “Perhaps the plan is to centralize the U.A.E.” under Abu Dhabi’s control, he mused, in a move that would sharply curtail Dubai’s independence and perhaps change its signature freewheeling style.

For many foreigners, Dubai had seemed at first to be a refuge, relatively insulated from the panic that began hitting the rest of the world last autumn. The Persian Gulf is cushioned by vast oil and gas wealth, and some who lost jobs in New York and London began applying here.

But Dubai, unlike Abu Dhabi or nearby Qatar and Saudi Arabia, does not have its own oil, and had built its reputation on real estate, finance and tourism.
Now, many expatriates here talk about Dubai as though it were a con game all along.


Lurid rumors spread quickly: the Palm Jumeira, an artificial island that is one of this city’s trademark developments, is said to be sinking, and when you turn the faucets in the hotels built atop it, only cockroaches come out.

“Is it going to get better? They tell you that, but I don’t know what to believe anymore,” said Sofia, who still hopes to find a job before her time runs out. “People are really panicking quickly.”

Hamza Thiab, a 27-year-old Iraqi who moved here from Baghdad in 2005, lost his job with an engineering firm six weeks ago. He has until the end of February to find a job, or he must leave. “I’ve been looking for a new job for three months, and I’ve only had two interviews,” he said. “Before, you used to open up the papers here and see dozens of jobs. The minimum for a civil engineer with four years’ experience used to be 15,000 dirhams a month. Now, the maximum you’ll get is 8,000,” or about $2,000.

Mr. Thiab was sitting in a Costa Coffee Shop in the Ibn Battuta mall, where most of the customers seemed to be single men sitting alone, dolefully drinking coffee at midday. If he fails to find a job, he will have to go to Jordan, where he has family members — Iraq is still too dangerous, he says — though the situation is no better there. Before that, he will have to borrow money from his father to pay off the more than $12,000 he still owes on a bank loan for his Honda Civic. Iraqi friends bought fancier cars and are now, with no job, struggling to sell them.

“Before, so many of us were living a good life here,” Mr. Thiab said. “Now we cannot pay our loans. We are all just sleeping, smoking, drinking coffee and having headaches because of the situation.”

A New York Times employee in Dubai contributed reporting.

Anonymous said...

Tom Tomorrow nails it again, as usual: http://www.credoaction.com/comics/2009/02/theres_that_melody_again.html

That guy is the most brilliant political cartoonist in the US, IMO.

Anonymous said...

Hey, I just noticed that Wanda (the female newscaster in the Tom Tomorrow strip) has the same 'do as Tami Sawyer.

Bewert said...

http://dailybail.com/ has been pretty fucking funny lately.

Bank Bailout Congressional Video Part 3: Failed Bank CEOs Discuss Compensation. Pandit Thinks He's Special
Date Thursday, February 12, 2009 at 10:53AM

Note to Vikram Pandit: taxpayers appreciate that you've reduced your compensation for this year, but drawing attention to the matter invites scrutiny. Thanks for the invitation.

You made almost $200 million in 2006 selling Old Lane Partners to Citi. That was a crap sammich. Citi paid $800 million for Old Lane which it closed down completely 18 months later. The entire $800 million was taken as a loss. Taxpayers then bailed out Citi. Transitively, you owe us some cash, Vikram, about $165 million. Next time, think before you raise your hand to impress teacher.

Anonymous said...

My boyfriend told me that was the place in Bend to find dailyKos?? Is this true.

- from Craigs

Anonymous said...

Middleton Thomas S Jr et al. v Sawyer Tamara L et al. B

1/28/09 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON
FOR DESCHUTES COUNTY
JUDGE HENRY - COURTROOM "B"
January 29, 2009 - THURSDAY
Time Case Title Relationship Room Disposition
Case# Matter Attorney Judge
8:30 AM
Circuit Court
P:Smiley David W
08PB0152MA Middleton Thomas S Jr et al. v Sawyer Tamara L et al. B
Hearing D:Mohill Matthew L B: COURTROOM B
RE: TEMPORARY RESTRAINING
ORDER - TO BE HEARD
BY JUDGE JUDY HENRY
Est length: 1 Hour(s)
..........................................................................................................................
9:29 AM
Circuit Court
P:Chappell Steven
03DS0073MS Hanslovan Kelly Ann et al. v Hanslovan Alan Wayne B
Hearing P:Southey Joanne L B: COURTROOM B
PUT SETTLEMENT ON RECORD D:Emerson Philip
PARTIES TO APPEAR BY PHONE
Est length: 15 Minute(s)
..........................................................................................................................
9:30 AM
Circuit Court
P:Mcbride Lillah
08DS0776MS Condel Kara Nichol v Condel Jason Daniel B
Trial Court
B: COURTROOM B
1 DAY
Est length: 7 Hour(s)
..........................................................................................................................
1:15 PM
Circuit Court
P:Bryant Steven D
08DS0633MS Dean Marykay H v Dean Larry Damon B
Hearing Pre-trial Conference
B: COURTROOM B
..........................................................................................................................
Page 1
Page 2
1/28/09 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON
FOR DESCHUTES COUNTY
JUDGE HENRY - COURTROOM "B"
January 29, 2009 - THURSDAY
Time Case Title Relationship Room Disposition
Case# Matter Attorney Judge
Circuit Court
08DS0805MS Childers Kristina v Childers Nathan B

Anonymous said...

Whoa, NODs are taking off

1/1-2/12/08 128

1/1-2/12/09 373

Bewert said...

BEM makes you register to post on his board now...

I was going to post the NODs data, but WTF. All I need is another username and password. And I don't even worry about anonymity.

That board is going to get real quiet. Unfortunately.

Bewert said...

Bend's Defaults Triple From Last Years Record

I would post this on BEM's board.

Bewert said...

But I won't register.

Duncan McGeary said...

"I was going to post the NODs data, but WTF. All I need is another username and password. And I don't even worry about anonymity."

I agree.

LavaBear said...

"I was going to post the NODs data, but WTF. All I need is another username and password. And I don't even worry about anonymity."

Fuck that....just because I can't say Fuck that is why I don't post. This is another nail in that coffin.

IHateToBurstYourBubble said...

BEM makes you register to post on his board now...

BEM or BendBB?

Bewert said...

Re: BEM or BendBB?

###

Who knows. They are all anonymouses.

Like you.

Bewert said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Bewert said...

Sorry-if you have economic interests that preclude any "outing", then I suppose that is an excuse. You are living here as well.

I just don't understand the hide and bitch paradigm. It does absolutely nothing to fix our local problems. It is easily ignored. Just like me ignoring Buster, who is just another loudmouthed anonymouse.

I mean who fucking cares what anyone thinks who refuses to stand behind his words?

Certainly not Oran and the rest of the Good Old Boys. You don't actually stand up to that shit, and they can safely ignore you.

I wish I had the genes to sit back and be an anonymouse, but I simply don't. Such is life.

Anonymous said...

I mean who fucking cares what anyone thinks who refuses to stand behind his words?

###

WHO fucking cares what you think BP?

Anonymous said...

BEM makes you register to post on his board now...

I was going to post the NODs data, but WTF. All I need is another username and password. And I don't even worry about anonymity.

*

The way the larvae eater's site work's , e.g. informe.com aka BEBBB is that anonymous, he can't see your IP, or even 'guest', but as soon you login on or post, and associated with all posts is your IP, which for idiots is like a phone-number, and once you have that number its east to do a reverse-directory.

Not that any of this matters, cuz only a BP equiv would ever registers at BEBB? RIGHT?

So why does homers still even keep BEBB on this mast-head? Who cares.

Let's get back to talking about HBM's ugly fucking forehead, I think we're all tired of being obsessed by BP's 'black-hole'.

Anonymous said...

I guess tonight is it, so say's the trailer park.

This is the last night at BEBB's trailer, if you haven't been there its way cool, just a few blocks above 14th on the right side of town, near simpson that safeway, just up and off 14th setting towards the sun on 14th ya'll see trailer 'court', there be BEBB world, drive on in a come to the club house, all the boyz will be tonight, as always BENDBB will be wearing is Mrs NO pasty's, and g-strings. What to bring? Bendbb & BP are providing the ever-clear, homer is bringing the kool-aide.

Just bring towels, KY-Jelly, and lots of handi-wipes, and it never hurts to bring a little extra Viagra or equiv.

Tonight 10pm-4am - BENDBB's trailer after 4am , ... YES!!!

Anonymous said...

This really PISSES ME off I wrote about this issue today, now these ASSHOLES on CRAIGS-LIST are saying that the FBI/SAWYER is ONLY about renters getting booted for land-lords NOT paying the MTG, BULLSHIT FBI doesn't care about CIVIL shit, ...


But here it is in the BEND media, a crisis where none exists NOW FUCKING EXISTS NOW its going to get FUN I can tell you where this is all GOING ...

High foreclosure rate hurts C. Oregon renters

KDRV Staff

February 12, 2009

BEND, Ore. -- Central Oregon has seen a growing problem of renters forced out of homes because their landlord is facing foreclosure.

In Deschutes County there have been 355 notices of default so far this year.

Legal aides say tenants do have some options. If they keep paying, they'll have at least 30 days from the sale of the home before having to move.

"They can negotiate with the new landlord, which may end up being a bank. And, you know, banks are sometimes pretty amenable to, if there's a tenant in there, and they're paying rent, it's better than a vacant house," says Leigh Dickey with Legal Aid Services of Oregon.

However, deposits can be a completely separate issue. Legal aides say to start early and negotiate with the owner before the property is sold into foreclosure.

Anonymous said...

THE HONEY MOON IS OVER GIRLZ...

This is BIG shit, JUDD is walking cuz he found out the OREO is a fucking idiot, sock-puppet owned by GEITHNER&Co, and the JUDD knows this shit is going DOWN....

Good NOTE, the OREO now goes on defensive, he no longer a 'magic' negro, now he only a negro.


...

FEBRUARY 13, 2009

Commerce Nominee Bows Out
GOP's Gregg Quits Over 'Irresolvable Conflicts' With Obama on Stimulus, Census

* Article
* Interactive Graphics
* Comments

more in Politics »
By LAURA MECKLER, GREG HITT and JONATHAN WEISMAN

WASHINGTON -- New Hampshire Republican Sen. Judd Gregg withdrew from consideration as Commerce secretary Thursday, saying his differences with the Democratic White House ran too deep.

The announcement was a fresh embarrassment for an administration rocked by a number of setbacks. While his recent predecessors each lost one or two early cabinet nominees, Mr. Obama has lost three less than a month into his term. And Mr. Gregg's withdrawal comes two days after a bank rescue plan was widely panned by financial markets and lawmakers from both parties, partly because of its lack of detail.

Mr. Obama was able to celebrate this week a victory with a congressional agreement over his economic-stimulus plan, but his goal of attracting widespread bipartisan support has faltered, and the Gregg move means his cabinet can no longer claim a trio of Republicans.

View Interactive
Obama's Advisers

See some of the people in President Obama's cabinet.

"It's better we discovered it now than later," said White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel, in a meeting with a dozen reporters. "If I said it wasn't a disappointment, that would lack credibility." Mr. Obama told reporters aboard his plane late Thursday that he was glad Mr. Gregg had "searched his heart" before he had officially joined the cabinet.

The surprise announcement followed days of an intensifying public campaign by fellow Republican lawmakers highlighting the differences between Messrs. Obama and Gregg, and showed how quickly Mr. Obama's pledge to bridge party lines has gotten bogged down in classic arguing across the aisle.

Mr. Gregg said he and the administration "did not adequately focus" on policy disputes, citing the handling of the census and the stimulus package. But in his news conference, he said he considered the blame for the short-lived nomination to be largely his. "The bottom line is this was simply a bridge too far for me," he told reporters. "The president asked me to do it. I said yes. That was my mistake, not his." He added: "I should have focused sooner...on the implications of being in the cabinet."

Mr. Gregg was Mr. Obama's second choice for Commerce secretary; earlier, Democratic New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson pulled out following word of a grand-jury investigation into contracting practices in his office.

Mr. Gregg, 61 years old, said he will remain in the Senate until his third term expires but won't run for re-election in 2010.

When his choice was announced on Feb. 3, the White House hailed the naming of a third Republican to the cabinet as a sign of commitment to bipartisanship. But on Monday, Mr. Gregg called Mr. Emanuel to ask for a meeting with the president, hinting at second thoughts, Mr. Emanuel said. On Wednesday, Mr. Gregg expressed his growing concerns to the president at the White House, though Mr. Obama said he wasn't aware of the decision until Thursday.

In his statement, Mr. Gregg cited "irresolvable conflicts," including the stimulus package, which most Republicans have deemed bloated. Still, its outlines were well known when Mr. Gregg accepted the nomination.

View Full Image
Judd Gregg
Reuters

Sen. Judd Gregg pauses as he announces he is withdrawing as President Barack Obama's commerce secretary nominee.
Judd Gregg
Judd Gregg

Mr. Gregg also cited issues involving the Census Bureau. That appeared to be a reference to reports that the White House, responding to concerns from black and Hispanic lawmakers, would be highly involved in the political decisions surrounding the decennial count. The parties have battled for years over how to carry out the survey, with Democrats tending to favor methods that would increase the number of minorities, giving them greater clout in redrawing the congressional map. Mr. Gregg has been critical of those approaches.

White House officials blamed the messy personnel drama on Mr. Gregg, with Mr. Obama and aides saying it was the senator's idea initially to join the administration -- an assertion Mr. Gregg rejected at his news conference.

A White House official said the senator approached Majority Leader Harry Reid to express his interest in the post, and Mr. Reid passed that on. The official said the agreement was that Mr. Gregg would have a seat at the table to share his views, but once a policy decision was final, he would support it.

Mr. Gregg, at his news conference, gave a different version, saying an "intermediary" had sought him out to see if he was interested in the job.

Mr. Gregg came under some pressure to reconsider from other Republicans, who argued the job wasn't a good fit for the straight-backed New Englander with an independent streak. Mr. Gregg, a fiscal hawk, has wide expertise on financial and budget issues and was an effective advocate of conservative causes on the floor.

Mr. Gregg himself grew uncomfortable with the handling the stimulus package, said Republican officials and strategists. Mr. Gregg declined to comment on the stimulus bill or whether he would ultimately vote against it when it came to the Senate floor this week. He chose not to vote when the bill first came to the Senate earlier this week.

Mr. Gregg announced his withdrawal in a dramatic fashion, in a blast email just minutes before the president took the stage in Peoria, Ill., to discuss the stimulus package.

It was the second time in two weeks Mr. Obama found himself scrambling to find a new cabinet nominee. Last week, former South Dakota Democratic Sen. Tom Daschle withdrew his nomination as Health and Human Services secretary amid tax problems.

Mr. Gregg emphasized that nothing in the vetting process had derailed his prospects for confirmation.

From the beginning, his nomination created discomfort among rank-and-file Democrats, especially in the House, who focused on his past votes on the Census Bureau and what they said was insufficient commitment to ensuring that hard-to-reach minority populations are properly counted. Minority lawmakers complained, and Obama aides assured them White House officials would be directly involved in sensitive decision making around the census.

Republicans interpreted that as a power grab and some turned it into a political issue, trying to drive a wedge between Mr. Obama and his GOP appointee.

Minority politicians praised the departure, citing the potential for census disputes. "We feel his decision to withdraw is in the best interest of all parties," said California Democratic Rep. Barbara Lee, chairwoman of the Congressional Black Caucus.

Asked about the census issue, Mr. Gregg said the issue was so insignificant that he would not even address it, though he had highlighted the matter in an earlier statement. He had warm words for Mr. Obama, saying he expected to help him move future legislation through the Senate.

Last fall, Mr. Gregg played a key role in the struggle to enact the $700 billion bank bailout plan, helping in negotiations that brought together Republican and Democratic leaders behind the Bush initiative. He was perceived as a fair broker, and the Obama White House hoped he would help build bridges to Republicans in Congress, especially on economic policy.

A number of Republicans praised Mr. Gregg for deciding in the end not to join Mr. Obama, including Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R., Ky.), who said: "Sen. Gregg made a principled decision to return and we're glad to have him."

Anonymous said...

BP's Trudy says:
""You fucking care enough to go to meetings and talk and post about this stuff, yet no one else does. They don't even care enough to step up and publically bitch with their own names.

This is like fucking Pottersville, where everyone is too scared to talk about anything.

I fucking hate this (place).""

====

BP,

What was reported in the Bulletin today about the email exchanges that led to the Council hiring Teater is clearly illegal. The email's are public record, that is how the Bulletin got them.

But that is not the illegal part. What is illegal is that by virtue of setting up an email "conversation" among the various councilors, they created a de facto "electronic meeting" (not unlike a phone conference call) in violation of the Public Meeting laws.

Think about it... Could they just set up a gathering of all councilors via a teleconference, unannounced and without the press present? No!!

All Public Meeting lawyers will tell you that an electronic email conversation consists of sending a question X out via email #1 from Councilor A; then getting 4-5 replies from Councilors B, C and D discussing question X and other questions Y & Z.

Electronic email conversations are de facto public meetings. If the Councilor did what is reported in the Bulletin article (see online in todays article about Teater), then he violated the Oregon Public Meeting laws since he did not serve advance notice, and did not invite the press.

If you need more tutoring, you can email me at the.real.hank@gmail.com for more info, but you can stop pretending that you will actually file a complaint. We both know that ain't gonna happen.

And Trudy is correct. You are wasting your time at those meetings.

Anonymous said...

From the Bully:
"Just after 6 a.m. on Friday, Councilor Mark Capell sent out an e-mail to the entire council, indicating his concerns about the stalemate between the three councilors supporting Don Leonard and the three councilors backing Cliff Walkey for the open seat. Mayor Kathie Eckman and councilors Jeff Eager and Tom Greene had voted for Leonard, while Capell, along with councilors Jodie Barram and Jim Clinton, had voted for Walkey.

In the e-mail, Capell asked if the council would be willing to try to again decide between Leonard and Walkey — even if it meant by luck of the draw.

“Can we just get together, flip a coin, and move on?” he wrote.

Later in the day, Barram and Clinton wrote back that they’d meet for a coin toss. Eckman, Eager and Greene wrote that they’d also be willing to meet — but wouldn’t agree to a coin toss."
======

A clear case violation of the Oregon Public Meeting laws.

Bewert said...

Was going over notes about the millions we are planning to spend at Juniper Ridge, and got pissed of last night. Still pissed.

The Good Old Boys talk about how much they care about Bend, how they've been here through everything, how they know how the city works and can step right in.

Yet they are the ones who have got us into this mess where I see new for rent and for sale signs sprouting like weeds every day. Where I look at the budget, at our laughable reserves, at our spending plans, and just shake my head in wonder.

It's sad. Buster would say "learn how the world works". To that I say "I come from a virtually identical town: 65K-70K, started out as a mill town on river (the confluence of two rivers, actually) that was used to float logs to the mills. And that town has 1/3rd the unemployment rate we have here.

It is the regional hub, the largest little city in the area with a real college, medical facilities, manufacturing, retail, and a few restaurants. It's not an Aspen-wanna be, it's a town that gets things done. With an unwieldy City Council of about 14 people elected from physical districts within the city."

And I see the God of the good old boys, Oran, sitting on the City Council, the Juniper Ridge Management Board, and the COCC Board, and I wonder about the congruence of someone sitting on the town college board that also sits on the JR board where the plan is for the limited higher educational resources we have will soon be diverted. Out to the dusty plain between Bend and Redmond. A $100,000,000 boondoggle taking funds away from what little higher ed we have. A school that was recently referred to as "land rich and cash poor" in our pitiful excuse of a newspaper.

I guess I'm going to have to simply ask him what he sees as the long term plan. Maybe an interview for the blog or something.

Butter, I don't get exhausted, I just get more pissed off. But I know there are too many in our little city that are barely holding on, that are far more concerned with feeding their kids than they are about what Good Old Boy is rotating into City Hall this month.

I'm not in that position, so I can actually try to do something. Otherwise it's just time to move on to a place that tries to be something useful, something more that a dusty, potholed town with fancy restaurants.

Bewert said...

Hank, I would love to file a complaint. But the only thing the Ethics Board will hear regarding the pubic meeting laws is about Executive Sessions. To wit:

From: Bruce Ewert [mailto:bewert@gmail.com]

Sent: Monday, February 09, 2009 11:26 AM

To: MAIL OGEC

Subject: Question on public notice of emergency meeting

Dear Sirs,

Here in Bend we had a rather extraordinary event last Friday evening--three new and one old member of the City Council called a last minute emergency meeting and voted on adding the last member to the City Council. It was another old timer in Bend who had served on the Council before 2004.

Notice was so short that one dissenting member of the council was called to the meeting 40 minutes before it started and was refused any information on what the agenda of the meeting was to be.

Who now enforces ORS 192.640?

FYI http://kohd.com/news/local/87601

Thank you,

Bruce Ewert

///

Reply

Good morning Mr. Ewert,

Thank you for your recent inquiry regarding the jurisdiction of the Oregon Government Ethics Commission (Commission).

The jurisdiction of the Commission is limited to three specific areas, one of which relates to matters involving Oregon Public Meetings law pursuant to ORS 192.660 specific to the Executive session provisions of public meetings law. ORS 192.660 authorizes specific, limited reasons for which a public body may meet in a closed session.

The Oregon Government Ethics Commission (Commission) has jurisdiction over the executive session provisions of Oregon Public Meetings laws. I cannot advise you on matters relating to the requirements of public notice under the Public Meetings laws as that it not under the Commission’s jurisdiction.

Please feel free to contact me directly if you have any additional questions.

Tammy R. Hedrick
Program Analyst/Trainer

Oregon Government Ethics Commission
3218 Pringle Rd. SE, Suite 220
Salem, OR 97302
(503) 378-6802
(503) 373-1456


###

What you are referring to is:

ORS 192.670 Meetings by means of telephonic or electronic communication. (1) Any meeting, including an executive session, of a governing body of a public body which is held through the use of telephone or other electronic communication shall be conducted in accordance with ORS 192.610 to 192.690.

(2) When telephone or other electronic means of communication is used and the meeting is not an executive session, the governing body of the public body shall make available to the public at least one place where the public can listen to the communication at the time it occurs by means of speakers or other devices. The place provided may be a place where no member of the governing body of the public body is present. [1973 c.172 §7; 1979 c.361 §1]


Unfortunately the Ethics Commission cannot enforce that part of the law.

The only legal recourse is in circuit court:

192.680 Enforcement of ORS 192.610 to 192.690; effect of violation on validity of decision of governing body; liability of members. (1) A decision made by a governing body of a public body in violation of ORS 192.610 to 192.690 shall be voidable. The decision shall not be voided if the governing body of the public body reinstates the decision while in compliance with ORS 192.610 to 192.690. A decision that is reinstated is effective from the date of its initial adoption.

(2) Any person affected by a decision of a governing body of a public body may commence a suit in the circuit court for the county in which the governing body ordinarily meets, for the purpose of requiring compliance with, or the prevention of violations of ORS 192.610 to 192.690, by members of the governing body, or to determine the applicability of ORS 192.610 to 192.690 to matters or decisions of the governing body.


That clause goes on to state that even if you sue and win, the Council can simply meet again legally and reinstate their original vote.

All because of this clause limiting the purview of Ethics Commission:

192.685 Additional enforcement of alleged violations of ORS 192.660. (1) Notwithstanding ORS 192.680, complaints of violations of ORS 192.660 alleged to have been committed by public officials may be made to the Oregon Government Ethics Commission for review and investigation as provided by ORS 244.260 and for possible imposition of civil penalties as provided by ORS 244.350.

What is ORS 192.660?

192.660 Executive sessions permitted on certain matters; procedures; news media representatives’ attendance; limits.

Last Friday's farce was commenced as an "emergency meeting", and no Executive Session was held. The Bully Four did all the communicating they needed to do via phone and email, and included Oran in their communications. Unfortunately, they didn't include their colleagues on the council Clinton and Barram. This has created some bad blood, but with five votes they can do anything they want. So I'm sure they don't give a shit what Clinton and Barram think.

Unless a concerned citizen or three actually files a lawsuit, there is nothing we can do about that joke of an "emergency meeting".

I am working on the complaints, as you have to do a separate one for each individual (plus multiple copies of each individual complaint), but it is limited to the notice given of Executive Sessions and the fact that the council will discuss in private and come out and vote in public. Much more limited than it started out.

Anything else the Council pulls, the only recourse we have is a lawsuit. Which in the end will be made a joke of in the local media and will be overturned by a "legal" meeting of the Council even if we prevail in court.

Hell, even the BULL's article contained statements that I know were wrong, like the part that stated Clinton knew about Oran and was told of the meeting 90 minutes before it was held. I have emails from Clinton directly refuting this.

As Clinton stated to me in an email earlier this week, "And you thought the last council was bad!"

Rather frustrating, to say the least.

Bewert said...

Re: And Trudy is correct. You are wasting your time at those meetings.

###

Yeah, sometimes I agree with that. But then I realize it is less of a waste of time than this is...

Hell, no media attends the JRMB meetings, yet they are making plans to spend tens of millions of city dollars that will simply be rubberstamped by the Council. You would think someone other than those directly involved should pay attention.

Bewert said...

One other note--I was told that KPOV is filing a lawsuit on the notice issue. They were not notified of the emergency meeting, and their local reporter Tristan Reisfar was reduced to beating on the locked doors of City Hall to get access.

Funny thing is that according to the email Patti sent me, even Pamela Hulse was notified...actually, a whole slew of media were "notified", including Tristan. Funny how only three actually made it through the door locks into the meeting. The same three allowed into the Executive Sessions...

Hi Bruce.

The release was sent at 5:25 p.m.on Friday, February 6th to the following news outlets:

aweston@horizonbroadcasting.com
Barney Lerten
Bend Bulletin - General News
Bend Bulletin News
Bend Weekly
courtney@bendchamber.org
Cascade Business News
dave@bendbroadband.com
editor@tsweekly.com
egolden@bendbulletin.com
gvaagen@horizonbroadcasting.com
Glen Vaagen
Justin Finestone/Bend
KATU NEWS DESK
KBND Radio Group
KFXO - 39 News
Kim Meyers
KLCC News
KNLR
KOHD-News
Kristi Miller
Mike Van Meter
news@horizonbroadcasting.com
news@kbnd.com
News Channel 21
Newsroom Norcal News
NWCN KGW-News
pamela@cascadebusnews.com
Patty Stell/Bend
RL Garrigus
The Source
Tom Hamilton
KPOV - Tristan Reisfar

Patricia S. Stell
City Recorder
City of Bend
710 NW Wall St
Bend, Oregon 97701
541-388-5517

Anonymous said...

BB2 ALL Bruce-Puss, all the time, 24/7 365 days a year.

"We love Bruce"

Bend COVA today approved a $498k sign package that includes "We love Bruce" billboards all over Bend.

Anonymous said...

Reading anything marked 'Bewert' has always been a waste of time.

Most people leaving Bend say the #1 for leaving is too many 'Bewerts' in Bend.

What is a Bewert? It's the Jeff&Ray Show, Bend in its good times seems to have attracted hundreds of political gadfly grifters who see themselves as special, or uniquely qualified to lead Bend out of the desert.

Anonymous said...

What is illegal is that by virtue of setting up an email "conversation" among the various councilors, they created a de facto "electronic meeting" (not unlike a phone conference call) in violation of the Public Meeting laws.

I agree. This could be an interesting test case. Maybe all the media in Bend could pool their financial resources and bring an action.

IHateToBurstYourBubble said...

CBBO & CACB are in a race to UNDER $1/SHARE! WHO WILL WIN? THESE ARE FIERCE COMPETITORS FOLKS!

IHateToBurstYourBubble said...

The Bully Four did all the communicating they needed to do via phone and email, and included Oran in their communications. Unfortunately, they didn't include their colleagues on the council Clinton and Barram. This has created some bad blood, but with five votes they can do anything they want. So I'm sure they don't give a shit what Clinton and Barram think.

So Cappell is on "The Bully Four"?

I knew it. That guy is a sellout cock. He's FIRMLY on the side of RE Boss Hogg's.

Wolf in sheeps clothing. That guy SOLD OUT.

IHateToBurstYourBubble said...

Rather frustrating, to say the least.

Keep it up Brucey.

Despite the non-stop relentless ribbing you get here, you're the only one doing ANYTHING.

IHateToBurstYourBubble said...

This has created some bad blood, but with five votes they can do anything they want.

This equals END OF DAYS in Bend. These people will destroy this town.

It's be great if the other 2 resigned. They are worthless.

IHateToBurstYourBubble said...

CACB: $1.41/sh DOWN 16% TODAY.

Anonymous said...

Wolf in sheeps clothing. That guy SOLD OUT.

*

He's really not homer, he's only related to Knife-River by marriage. He's not on the payroll like Moss, where there really is a conflict of interest.

Capell's father owned a lot of real estate downtown, and old family here in Bend, and Capell is the ONLY fucker on city-council that can sit and listen to people week end and week out.

Teater has been around forever, and came back in after JEFF&RAY got aber-pussy to do the JR deal, Teater has put an END to the WHOLE jeff&ray show.

For the BPussy's of Bend having Eckman,Capell,&Teater running the show ( all good ol bozy ), means that NEWBIES like BP don't have a chance in hell to accomplish their goals.

Homer, why don't you get off your lazy fucking fat ass and go to the meetings and you yourself see who has a brain, and who is an idiot?? The BP is an idiot, please don't let his view of Bend fuck with your brain.

Lastly, regarding 'hanks' assertion that the city-council goofed by sending email, then why doesn't the fucking 'hank' file a complaint, this shit happens all the time with city-council all over Orygun. If either the BPussy or the Hpussy think something is illegal, then file a fucking complaint.

IHateToBurstYourBubble said...

Unfortunately, they didn't include their colleagues on the council Clinton and Barram.

I knew it didn't smell right with that 3 to 3 split. I KNEW Capell was going to switch sides.

Folks, that lying FUCKER got elected with more COBA/COAR money than ANYONE! Capell is a lying Dark Horse Benedict Arnold skeezey fucking slimeball.

Anonymous said...

This equals END OF DAYS in Bend. These people will destroy this town.


*

It's better to have 2nd, 3rd gen folk trying to fix this town, than this 99% flock of cowards here who will be Bend gone.

Even the dunc KUNT has never closed a comic-book long enough in his life to get involved in city government.

The problems of BEND 2002->2007 were largely MOSS&HOLLERN & COVA/CORA/COBA running the show.

Teater, and Capell DO NOT fucking represent the above list.

Bend will BK, and there is NOBODY in Bend that I can see with a better temperament to put the city back together than Teater&Capell, hbm would probably add bob-woodward to return, I agree that Eckman offers nothing, but she does bring power, as her hubby's money means a lot in a town where most pol's don't use their own nickel.

IHateToBurstYourBubble said...

He's really not homer, he's only related to Knife-River by marriage.

Hey, Capell is like Roger Lee: Met 'em both, nice guys. But when the rubber meets the road, they are out for their own best interests.

Capell voted in Teater, right? He's "Bully 4", right? He's a fucking skeeze.

Don't mean he ain't a nice guy. Don't mean I wouldn't like him if I talked to him again. But he's a fucking rule-skirting SKEEZE.

Anonymous said...

Folks, that lying FUCKER got elected with more COBA/COAR money than ANYONE!

*

I hear you homer, but understand there is NOTHING left to steal.

The city is pegged & capped now on its ability to get into more debt.

But even marge would tell you that Bend is a conservative pug real estate town, and some would say going back to the 1970's.

Given that Capell's estate is downtown RE, sure he has a vested interest that BEND RE not become worthless, but ALL you dumb fucking BB2 renters, what you care??

See somebody has to care about this town, and we already know that the loser-renters ( bp,homer,tt,... ) aren't even staying let alone buying.

IHateToBurstYourBubble said...

Capell used a LOT OF RE PAC MONEY to get on CC. They cornered the market with him & that useless fucking Clint "Dick" Chick.

FUCKING SKEEZE.

Anonymous said...

Oran represents good old boyz Bend Chamber Pot of Commerce, ...

When JEFF&RAY took over BEND in 2005/2006 the CPC went out of their minds, they were too fucking busy making MONEY during the gold-rush, and they let aber-pussy run Bend into the fucking ground.

Now here we are 2009, and the CPC ( chamber-pot-of-commerce ) is taking back the city, and going to fix shit, like it or not homer, its politics, and good old white boyz rule amerkiKKKa. Don't like it homer? Then go back to africa.

Anonymous said...

Capell was elected by the people of Bend, like it or not he won his election, and he is well like by the community.

If the BPussy ran for office he would get two votes, his wife, and himself.

I'm certainly playing devils advocate, but BELIEVE HOMER, Capell is NOT the fucking problem, the problem is MOSS/HOLLERN, S1031, and all these fucking CHRISTIAN Churches in Bend that have robbed this town. Note the jeebus goes full circle back to Moss.

Moss is going down and hard, and this town is collapsing.

So name it HOMER, sometimes your more fucking DUMB than the PUSSY.

The BEND ship is sinking, it was robbed blind by HOLLERN & MOSS, & CO.

Who is better in BEND to put the fucking BEND back together again that Capell&Teater,&CPC??

WHO? Jeff&RAY? Aberpussy? ( ran away ), ... PALIN/Eckman ( idiot ), ... There aren't many people in BEND that have the termperment and connections to FIX Bend.

This is the essence of the ARG, Capell&TEATER will fix BEND, they love Bend and have family here.

Homer doesn't WANT Bend to be fixed, he wants it to be destroyed, levelled to the ground.

I have always wanted Bend to be fixed, and so does BEM, but NOT homer.

BP just wants to sell cap-stone buttplugs to city hall and be loved.

Dunc just wants to sell comic-books.

I want to FIX BEND, name anybody else in this FUCKING town that can fix the fucking MESS??

With regards to CORA/COBA, get over it HOMER they own the fucking town, and when they finally go broke and they will, then they'll lose their power, but until then CORA/COBA is the most powerful lobby in the city.

Anonymous said...

This equals END OF DAYS in Bend. These people will destroy this town.

It's be great if the other 2 resigned. They are worthless.

*

The essence of your ARG is that you want to see Bend destroyed, you want buffoon's like BP to run the city, you want clowns like jeff&ray to pray on dumbfucks like aberpussy.

I don't, I want competence, and in a sea of incompetence, Capell&Teater is all we got.

Open your fucking eyes homer, and quit praying for the demise of BEND, and start exerting some effort to fix this shit-hole.

IHateToBurstYourBubble said...

Given that Capell's estate is downtown RE, sure he has a vested interest that BEND RE not become worthless, but ALL you dumb fucking BB2 renters, what you care??

See somebody has to care about this town, and we already know that the loser-renters ( bp,homer,tt,... ) aren't even staying let alone buying.


Ummm. no. Your implied assertion that "Renter = Equals No Vested Interst In Bend" is of course a logical fallacy.

I WAS an OWNER here, until the Bubble prices got me in selling mode.

I WOULD NEVER BUY ANYTHING IN THIS TOWN FOR THE NEXT 10-20 YEARS, NOT BECAUSE I DON'T CARE, but because I do NOT want to lose my ass buying a fucking stupid house.

Dude, of the many logical fallacies you post, this is the most overused & transparently false.

IHateToBurstYourBubble said...

The essence of your ARG is that you want to see Bend destroyed, you want buffoon's like BP to run the city, you want clowns like jeff&ray to pray on dumbfucks like aberpussy.


Again, wrong. In fact, so off base I can't follow what the fuck you're even talking about.

IHateToBurstYourBubble said...


I don't, I want competence, and in a sea of incompetence, Capell&Teater is all we got.


Then we are well & truly FUCKED.

IHateToBurstYourBubble said...


Open your fucking eyes homer, and quit praying for the demise of BEND, and start exerting some effort to fix this shit-hole.


Tilting at windmills, Dude.

Funny that you would say I expend energy to "fix this shit-hole"... Why?

Why would anyone expend energy to fix a SHITHOLE?

Anonymous said...

then why doesn't the fucking 'hank' file a complaint, this shit happens all the time with city-council all over Orygun.

*

Maybe because he isn't really 'hank', and he don't want you to know who he really is?

Besides, 'butter is correct:
"Keep it up Brucey.

Despite the non-stop relentless ribbing you get here, you're the only one doing ANYTHING.


*

BP is doing this shit. And he has done his homework... he knows what is what, and how far you can bend the rules before people squawk. And once you squawk, then they just re-do the violation under the proper rules, and the do-over sticks.

Maybe 'hank' does not have the time for this shit.

Maybe 'hank' does not really give a shit, or just too lazy to spend the hours, days, weeks keeping the CC honest.

Maybe 'hank' is transitioning to something more important and interesting.

Anonymous said...

Think about this two months ago ggCACB was the top-ten company in ORYGUN, today its a pariah, a loser, an icon of moronity and Bush Era Christian Exceptionalism.

...

Cascade Bancorp (Oregon) Named in Oregon's Top Ten Most Admired Companies
Dec 18, 2008
Press Release: Cascade Bancorp (Oregon) Named in Oregon's Top Ten Most Admired Companies

Cascade Bancorp is a financial holding company. Cascade Bancorp has a market cap of $194.65 million; its shares were traded at around $7.9 with a P/E ratio of 16.7 and P/S ratio of 1.01. The dividend yield of Cascade Bancorp stocks is 0.58%. Cascade Bancorp had an annual average earning growth of 21.7% over the past 5 years

Anonymous said...

Funny that you would say I expend energy to "fix this shit-hole"... Why?

Why would anyone expend energy to fix a SHITHOLE?


*

Pearls of wisdom, that there is!

Butter is using logic and reason with an opponent armed with neither!

Anonymous said...

Why would anyone expend energy to fix a SHITHOLE?

*

Because some of us are 'invested' in this town, some of us do care about having police and fire protection.

You don't care about shit homer, but we know that already.

Bend was turned into a shit-hole by greed, people like you & pussy came here by greed.

BEM thinks that Bend can be better. I think that BEND can be better, a lot of people that I know, that are ex city-hall shakers KNOW Bend can be better.

During the past 5-10 years NOBODY could stop the HOLLERN/MOSS greed gland, but now its over, and HOLLER&MOSS are finished, its time to rebuild BEND.

The greed fuckers are leaving, BK & JAIL, ...

YOU have already told us you ain't staying, I asked this question TWO YEARS ago, who is going, who is staying.

The only people staying then & now were ME, MARGE, DUNC, ... that was it, even BEM never affirmed he was staying.

Anonymous said...

Butter is using logic and reason with an opponent armed with neither!

###

They call Butter the King of the Morons for a reason.

Anonymous said...

Why would anyone expend energy to fix a SHITHOLE?

It wasn't always a shithole; it was turned into one by rampant, out-of-control, ugly growth that blighted the landscape and overburdened the infrastructure. But now that it's in that condition I don't see how it could be restored to pre-shithole status.

Anonymous said...

It wasn't always a shithole; it was turned into one by rampant, out-of-control, ugly growth that blighted the landscape and overburdened the infrastructure. But now that it's in that condition I don't see how it could be restored to pre-shithole status.

*

So essentially let's just keep fucking the town, cuz it fucked, that's your arg right hbm?

The 'good fight' must always be fought, post 1998, HOLLERN shutdown the debate, hence there was ONLY smart-growth ( code for FULL ON low-cost SDC, no limits ).

Today we got a glut, and today there is an immense power vacuum, as all the 'beautiful people' of BEND are going to prison.

If you don't think that BEND can be fixed then why the fuck do you stay? Are you telling us that your just like BP & BUTTER? That your only here because you like decay? and corruption?

Bewert said...

Re: If either the BPussy or the Hpussy think something is illegal, then file a fucking complaint.

###

You are teh fucking town idiot. Look up the law yourself if you don't believe me. I fucking posted the exact statutes above, but since you deem anything that I write not worth reading, I'm sure you didn't read it.

Our fine Ethics Commission DOES NOT TAKE COMPLAINTS ABOUT ANYTHING OTHER THAN EXECUTIVE SESSIONS. Meaning nothing about electronic meetings, nothing about proper public notice, NOTHING THAT IS NOT LABELED AN EXECUTIVE SESSION.

Who are you--Oran's left nut? Dumb ass.

Now if others want to stand up and file a lawsuit in circuit court, the only avenue of legal protest available, I'm more than willing to add my name to it. But I won't finance it alone.

IHateToBurstYourBubble said...

Because some of us are 'invested' in this town, some of us do care about having police and fire protection.

Then do something, instead of telling us all what a bunch of useless assholes we are.

You don't care about shit homer, but we know that already.

Really? Interesting you know so much about me & everyone else, despite the fact that we've never met & all I know about you is you're an alki with Turrets who sits on the toilet all day.

Bend was turned into a shit-hole by greed, people like you & pussy came here by greed.

You actually contermand this statement 2 paragraphs from now, so I;'ll ignore.

BEM thinks that Bend can be better. I think that BEND can be better, a lot of people that I know, that are ex city-hall shakers KNOW Bend can be better.

Well BUOY for you. DO SOMETHING INSTEAD OF BOTCHING ALL DAY.

During the past 5-10 years NOBODY could stop the HOLLERN/MOSS greed gland, but now its over, and HOLLER&MOSS are finished, its time to rebuild BEND.

Well, Holy Shit, something we can agree on. Sorta. It AIN'T TIME TO REBUILD BEND. This is BAILOUT LOGIC.

This thing needs to run it's course. As you said, IT IS A SHITHOLE. It's a greed-fueled empty husk of what it could be because of the OLD BOY NETWORK that has destroyed it. Not me, or you're beloved RENTERS.

There's NOTHING TO DO. BEND IS FUCKED. And it ain't my fault, or Brucey's. You BUSTER have said it yourself 1,000,000X: We knocked down the cost of building, wiped out SDC's, made Hollern millions, IGNORED infrastructure, focusing on ROUNDABOUTS and other useless SHIT, AND NOW WE ARE BROKE.

This place WILL BK THIS YEAR. There's absolutely NOTHING TO DO ABOUT IT. I don't support DOING ANYTHING for the same reason I do not support the bailout: WASTED MONEY, WASTED EFFORT THAT WILL COME TO NOTHING AND ACTUALLY MAKE THE PROBLEM WORSE.

Tha's why I'm not going to FIX THIS SHITHOLE. YOU DON'T FIX SHITHOLES, YOU TEAR THEM DOWN & START OVER.

Bewert said...

Re: I don't, I want competence, and in a sea of incompetence, Capell&Teater is all we got.

###

Now that's fucking rich--Teater, the guy who was on the Council until the start of 1995, just as the bubble was nearing its crest. Back when they could have stacked up the reserves for the obviously bursting of the bubble.

Yeah, I want more of that.

Dumb ass.

IHateToBurstYourBubble said...

That your only here because you like decay?

I like BK. I also like COMEUPPANCE.

Dude, you are obviously a Capell/Teater cock smoker, and that's fine. But those fuckers ARE THE PROBLEM now. Capell flipped his switch & has returned to true colors: RE COCK SMOKER.

We're FUCKED. COBA/COAR have successfully purchased Bend for PENNIES ON THE DOLLAR.

Bewert said...

Re:...pussy came here by greed.

###

This is the last fucking place I would have come if I was in it for the money. What money? I came just before the crest of the RE wave and I could see it happening. So tell me again--how was I planning to get rich here?

You are so fucking clueless I can't even think of words to describe it.

Anonymous said...

You BUSTER have said it yourself 1,000,000X: We knocked down the cost of building, wiped out SDC's, made Hollern millions, IGNORED infrastructure, focusing on ROUNDABOUTS and other useless SHIT, AND NOW WE ARE BROKE.

*

Yes, all fucking true, so we file City BK, null&void all the debt, and pull our asses out of the muck, pray that the BULL&SORE go away, and out of the ashes we get a new media, or perhaps our media will eventually ONLY be BEBB censored by BENDBB.

To me the BK is a good thing, it needs to fucking happen, its the kind of bitch-slapping wake up call that will get folks off their ass.

Yeh, I hope HBM got that one, pure 100% PUG philosophy to "DESTROY SOMETHING AND REBUILD OUT OF THE ASHES".

Bullshit, once Bend is burnt to the ground NOBODY will re-invest for generations.

HOMER/BUTTER is a fucking LOSER, just like DUNC, just like BP, and JUST like HBM, this board has always been 100% losers.

A loser will not even try.

WRT to the pussy and ex-session complaint, this is NOT new shit, every fucking city in ORYGUN deals with this shit, and many have fucking sued their city, ... its always been an endless cat&mouse game, I was fighting that shit 30+ years ago, and that's why today I have no fucking interest in the game, we passed sunshine laws at the state level years ago, and it didn't change a fucking thing.

The USA is 'rule by interest' its a Hamiltonian Democracy, and so is BEND.

IHateToBurstYourBubble said...

Yeah, and I have to say:

Brucey puts up post after post about Bend CC 100% VIOLATING THE RULES, and stonewalling EVERYTHING to gain transparency. And actually stays on it. Where as you just call him a pussy.

OK, he might not have filed his complaint, and a lot of other shit... but the FUCKER SHOWS UP.

You remain on the toilet, shitting all day. Fuck you.

Do something you fucking douche bag.

Anonymous said...

I usually don't post here, but I feel that somebody needs to step up to the plate and demand that Bruce Ewert be appointed Mayor of Bend.

Bruce is the most intelligent man in Bend.

If the city council can place Oran Teater in power, without a vote from the people, then they can retract that, and replace him to today with Bruce.

Anonymous said...

And actually stays on it.

*

Yes, and I have pointed out for over 2+ years that 99% of this forum is lazy, stupid, renters, who now are un-employed and angry white trash.

I have stayed the course all along, and then as now, nothing has changed.

Anonymous said...

Do something you fucking douche bag.

*

Pissing in the wind on these blogs is NOT doing something.

Oran Teater and Bruce Capell are the only people in this town trying to fix it, and I say GREAT!

If you lazy fucking renters think that BPUSSY could do a better job, then write his fucking J-Hancock on the ballot and get the fuckhead elected.

He's a fucking joke, but the 'Bend Morons' think he's a geniass, so fucking what.

Anonymous said...

We're FUCKED. COBA/COAR have successfully purchased Bend for PENNIES ON THE DOLLAR.

*

COBA/COAR is broke, Bend can no longer borrow money.

Bend will BK, if you don't care about Bend, then you should leave ASAP, but then I said that 2+ years ago to this forum.

LavaBear said...

>>>If the BPussy ran for office he would get two votes, his wife, and himself.

He'd get three because I'd toss him mine just because he actually cares and does shit.

Anonymous said...

So essentially let's just keep fucking the town, cuz it fucked, that's your arg right hbm?

Let others try to fix it if they want to; IMO it's unfixable. Once a place becomes a shithole it tends to remain a shithole. Nobody is going to un-build all the crapshacks that have been thrown up around here in the past 10-15 years. They're just going to stand there until they fall apart. (Fortunately that won't take too long, considering their construction.) There's no money to bring the infrastructure up to speed. And if and when the real estate market revives, they'll be revving up the bulldozers to build more as fast as they can.

And Bend politics is not going to fundamentally change. It's government of the GOBs, by the GOBs and for the GOBs. Always has been, always will be.

Bewert said...

Bend's Defaults Triple From Last Years Record

LavaBear said...

>>>Yes, and I have pointed out for over 2+ years that 99% of this forum is lazy, stupid, renters, who now are un-employed and angry white trash.

I am a lazy, stupid renter but I am currently OVER employed and too fucking busy. White trash perhaps but not angry. The people I run into lately that are angry are the people who are 10 feet underwater on their 3500 square foot anchor.

Anonymous said...

If you don't think that BEND can be fixed then why the fuck do you stay?

Because (a) my wife is not ready to retire yet and (b) we couldn't sell our house in this market. Believe me, as soon as I can get outta here I will be outta here.

LavaBear said...

So I have a confession to make. I know Oran Teater well. I feel better that he is on the council than any of the other jackoffs. I despise how the jackoffs went about getting him on, but I'm glad they did.

Anonymous said...

Really? Interesting you know so much about me & everyone else, despite the fact that we've never met & all I know about you is you're an alki with Turrets [Tourette's] who sits on the toilet all day.

LOL! Yep, that's our Buster!

Of course if you drink 12 pints of Abyss every night you GOTAA sit on the toilet all day.

LavaBear said...

Bruce why don't you just e-mail Hank? He knows shit and he's been trying to help you for months and months. Hard headed are you.

LavaBear said...

What time do the Federales kneecap Moss today? That's really all that is left. The market has spoken.

Bewert said...

Will do, LB.

I get the feeling Oran is all right, but seeing how he was in the lead up to the bubble, and how he was installed currently makes me doubly suspicious. Plus his conflict of interest between COCC and JR U...

St Paddy said...

Vote For Pedro! err I mean Bruce:)
You got my vote too Brucey.

LavaBear said...

>>>Plus his conflict of interest between COCC and JR U...

It's a small, small town Bruce. If you are somebody that cares and is involved it's impossible to not have conflicts of interest somewhere.

Bewert said...

Planning To Spend Ten's of Millions at JR

With eye candy of the Suterra constuction.

Bewert said...

LB, I'm just wondering where the money is going to come from for both. Seems like one is going to get the shaft. But I'll try to get Oran to talk to me about the issue before too long.

Personally, I would like to see the school on the hill grow stronger, and turn the U land at JR into more jobs. It's not like they are more than ten minutes apart.

Anonymous said...

>>>Yes, and I have pointed out for over 2+ years that 99% of this forum is lazy, stupid, renters, who now are un-employed and angry white trash.

Two years ago when I found this blog I was a homeowner. Because of it I became a renter. Funny how if I had "taken one for the team" and lost all my money I would be considered "worthy."

When I moved here, people weren't getting rich.

Once upon a time there was a roadie for Guns-n-Roses who partied to hard so he got fired. He realized that if he got fired by those dudes for partying he had a problem and he went to rehab. When he got out of rehab he wanted to give back so he started working at an outdoor school for troubled kids (hoods in the woods type). He then moved to Bend to start one because of the large amount of public land. A girl in Philly found out about the school and wanted to work at it so she moved here. Her boyfriend followed her. That was a really good friend of mine. He thought I'd like it here, so I came to visit and never left. That was over 10 years ago. No get rich, just a place I thought was nice.

I still have the same job that pays well. My department is hiring. I have the most seniority there and am about as safe as anyone.

I do give a shit about Bend. I try to make it better for those I know. I help them. I spend money locally.

I don't need to be "part of the club" that is loosing everything they have by owning a home right now. I have a good down payment and 794 credit. I'll buy when it makes sense, not when I feel that I need to so I can be considered worthy by some shithead.

Bewert said...

Or even better, LB, maybe Oran would respond directly to us in the comments of my blog...

Bewert said...

The Battle of the Banks:

CACB 1.49
-0.19 (-11.31%)
Real-time: 1:06PM EST

CBBO 1.15
-0.33 (-22.30%)
Real-time: 12:51PM EST

St Paddy said...

Here's a bit of info on the Middleton case.

Tammy and Hubby were appointed as middletons trustee on Oct 16th 2006 (was the notary date) but not recorded until March 11th 2008 which seems kind of odd but legal (I think)

It looks like he owned only one residence at 20795 Arago Circle in Starwood. This property was deeded to his trust as a bargain and sale deed on July 15th 2008 and in the signature where his name was to go was marked with a big black "X"

Mr Middleton passed on October 10th 2008

Next was the sale of Arago Circle to a woman named Julianne Fouts on October 9th 2008 (the day before he died) for $219,900 the deed was signed over by Tammy Sawyer acting as trusteee.

It doesn't look like there was any large amounts of wealth here. Or really anything way out of the ordinary.

The investigation must have more to do with the "investment" properties.

Anonymous said...

Limbaugh tells PUG-BITCH of BEND TELFER to nix governor tax plan.

Tax Bill Said To Be A "Job Killer"


Posted on Friday, February 13, 2009 (PST)

Bend Senator Chris Telfer is calling a bill on it’s way to the Governor’s desk a “job killer”. If Governor Kulongoski signs it, Oregon will be re-connected the 2008 federal tax code. This would mute any new Federal Stimulus Tax Credits. Telfer says it will force Oregon businesses and families to pay another $96-million dollars in taxes. Democrats pushed the bill because they feared any Federal Tax Code changes may not benefit Oregon.

Bewert said...

New Jim Rogers interview:

Jim Rogers on Future Banking

Anonymous said...

How many fucking times have I demanded and/or asked the BPussy to put his name on the ballot? Forever right??

What's the fucking problem?

Bewert said...

Half of all CDOs of ABS failed

By Paul J Davies, ft.com

Published: February 10 2009 19:38 | Last updated: February 10 2009 19:38

Almost half of all the complex credit products ever built out of slices of other securitised bonds have now defaulted, according to analysts, and the proportion rises to more than two-thirds among deals created at the peak of the cycle.

The defaults have affected more than $300bn worth of these collateralised debt obligations, which were built from bits of other asset backed securities (ABS) such as mortgage bonds, other CDOs and structured bonds, or derivatives of any of these, according to analysts at Wachovia and Morgan Stanley.

So-called CDOs of ABS caused huge losses to banks such as Merrill Lynch, UBS and Citigroup, which held large amounts of the supposedly safest, top-rated chunks of them. They have since been damned by bodies such as the Bank for International Settlements as being too complex to risk manage effectively.

CDOs of ABS were used increasingly at the peak of the credit bubble to keep the securitisation machine moving by recycling hard to sell bits of subprime mortgage bonds and other risky tranches into new structures with top-notch credit ratings.

However, the ratings of these deals proved unsustainable, as evidenced by the fact they have accounted for 92.9 per cent of all 16,587 ratings downgrades globally from all rating agencies since the beginning of last year, according to Morgan Stanley.

The way these complex and risky transactions were exploited at the peak of the bubble can be seen in data from analysts at Wachovia, who reckon that 47.6 per cent of all CDOs of ABS by volume issued since the market substantively began in 2002 have now hit an event of default.

By their records, the first three years of the market saw less than 100 deals sold per year and less than 10 per cent of those have defaulted. The number of deals done rose to 133 in 2005, less than 20 per cent of which defaulted, and 89 in just the first half of 2006, about one-third of which have defaulted.

However, the real peak of the market saw 147 deals done in the second half of 2006 and 172 done in the first half of 2007 – of which 68 per cent and 76.2 per cent, respectively, have now defaulted.

The way these CDOs have performed has especially hurt the new wave of specialist credit hedge funds, which sprang up in recent years and became heavily dependent from creating and managing such deals. They were drawn to such business by a belief in the sustainability and predictability of the fees it would generate.

However, about one-third of the CDOs of ABS that have defaulted, or almost $105bn worth, have been or are being liquidated – often ­leading to losses for investors and putting further pressure on market prices of the bits of mortgage bonds and other CDOs they are selling.

###

Good news. We are getting rid of the toxins slowly but surely.

Bewert said...

Re: What's the fucking problem?

###

I'm too easy a target as a newbie. Maybe by next time I'll be past that. Especially if my blog becomes more widely read.

Anonymous said...

LOL! Yep, that's our Buster!

Of course if you drink 12 pints of Abyss every night you GOTAA sit on the toilet all day.

*

Yep, that's our buster so fuckin powerful in Bend that he's got gary fish by the nuts, and gets all the abyss he wants for free.

See this is my point, anonymity is what makes this all interesting, buster lives in Heaven at the D&D 24/7 drinking unlimited Abyss, I wouldn't want to imagine another Bend.

Most mortals in Bend can't get Abyss for any price, but not buster, he gets all he wants.

Is not Bend a perfect city? Is it not worth fighting for?

Anonymous said...

Thanks for supporting my position LB, your a worthy KUNT.

I note that for as much as TEAM-KUNT's want to BASH the good old boyz, they ain't got anything better to replace them with.

Like HBM said weeks ago on his forum when somebody said 'RECALL', the problem, and was well articulated by HBM, is that the idiots that fucked up Bend with $200M in debt are BEND-GONE. Hell most of them have left town in the last 1-2 years, by death, or by political flight ( Telfer ).

The SUPER assholes are all gone, so there is NOBODY to 'recall'.

So now we got to file bankruptcy, kill all this debt, and then re-prioritize the city finance's.

Now that all the easy-money is gone, the grifters and hustlers will leave.

I see a bright future for Bend, but then I was always the one who said my fondest days were back in the 1980's when Bend had a hardware store downtown, and the only place to drink was D&D, and the much of the town is boarded up plywood.

To me once the city goes BK, and goes into austerity mode ECKMAN will fly away, and good old Chamber-Pot-of-Commerce boyz will once again rule the town, cuz nobody else has interest.

In time when the MONEY comes back you'll see the 'progressives' like Hummel & Abernethy return, but today there is NOTHING to steal.

Capell & Teater aren't crooks, there is NO better team in Bend to fix the fucking mess created by the stupid fucking progressives.

Remember in Bend a progressive is a liberal-shit-eater that fucks you economically with a condom, a regular lib is too bend-stupid to use a condom for self protection. Either way everybody gets fucked.

There are MANY of us that care. I know BEM cares, Lava cares, marge cares, dunc cares, ... many care.

Certainly Mark Capell cares very much about Bend. He gets shitty pay, and sitting in those meetings is boring as hell.

Anonymous said...

The asshole kisses dunc's ass.

...

Thanks dunc, you have essentially back my feelings, people MAY not like the fact that Bend Chamber Pot of Commerce ( litterally an old boy/girl golden vessel of feces ), has taken back over, but hell.

Oran Teater was FUCKING furious about how Aberpussy and Co gave the keys to the city to Kuratek ( jeff&ray show ).

Like I asked for @ BB2 and didn't get one fucking feedback, "IF NOT CPC, then who will fix Bend", and of course NOT one fucking answer, cuz these kunts don't want Bend fixed, they got no investment.

Me & you disagree and many essentials dunc, but we obviously agree that good-ol boyz such as ourselves, .e.g. Bend Businessmen, know a hell of a lot more about how to fix a BK'd city than blogger renters, or sissy's like Aberpussy with an Master's in public admin, but not a fucking clue.

For the record it was Ron Garzini many years ago that told the boys&girls the so called 'progressives' of Bend to run the city like a BIZ, a USA biz, .e.g. code for massive fucking debt.

ME&YOU dunc, me and YOU are cash-flow businesssmen, we are survivors, cuz we ONLY spend what we take in, ... So Garzini ran this fucking town into the toilet, and he's now living comfy up in Redmond. He fucked places everywhere he went from WestLinn to Alaska, from Bend to Redmond, to Juniper Ridge. But NOW they're all BEND GONE.

The argument is essentially about WHO runs BEND or who runs the world some say the Jews run the WORLD, well you know what I would rather have Smart Jews running the world than dumb morons who can't tie their shoes without their wifes help (BP).

Again we have NO choice BEND must be fixed, and NOBODY in this town is capable other than the Good Old Boyz who essentially have a vested interest in fixing this town.

Everyone at BB2 from Homer to BPuss have said they don't give a fuck, including hbm, ... But I do give a fuck, and I know you give a fuck dunc, otherwise you would leave, and I would leave, I wanted waste my fucking time blogging if I didn't think that Bend could be fucking fixed. Almost a year ago BEM laid it out.

Bend can be fixed, and today the way I see it is people like butter&bp are standing in the way. If they think they can do better then run for office.

We had to put Oran Teater in their, if we had let Leonard have the orifice all he would have done is PUSH for his propane company to use only propane for the BAT BUS, ... another kluster-fuck. Oran Teater & Mark Capell care about this town, and will fix this town. I have complete faith in them.

Let them get the job done.

Thanks dunc, for having at least one forum in this town where real businessmen can speak.

Duncan McGeary said...

O.K.

Now I'm worried. ;-).

Anonymous said...

Capell & Teater aren't crooks, there is NO better team in Bend to fix the fucking mess created by the stupid fucking progressives.

So it was the "progressives" who caused the real estate bubble and bust?

If the "progressives" had really taken a progressive, smart-growth position and stuck with it this disaster might not have happened or at least might not have been so bad. It was the policy of breakneck growth pushed by the GOBs and GOGs that got us into this fucking mess -- and then the GOBs and GOGs (with the help of The Bulletin, their propaganda organ) made the "progressives" on the council the scapegoats and, with the help of COBA and COAR money, unseated them.

"I was always the one who said my fondest days were back in the 1980's when Bend had a hardware store downtown, and the only place to drink was D&D, and the much of the town is boarded up plywood."

Yep, those sure were the good ol' days. You are one sick fucker. If that's your idea of paradise, why don't you move to fucking Burns?

Bewert said...

Actually, you might like Paisley better than Bend or Burns.

Duncan McGeary said...

"made the "progressives" on the council the scapegoats"

I don't quite agree with this. I think the progressives got a little carried away with Juniper Ridge and the BAT, for progressive reasons. (Pie-in-the-sky.)

The GOB's may have quietly urged them on, but....at least they could see that the gig was up.

Of course, maybe they're just out to plunder what's left....

Bewert said...

My problem with the GOBs is that they were in charge in the run up (for example Oran was in the CC until January '05) and now they are being pushed as the savior to our financial problems.

If they hadn't pushed so hard for build thousands of unneeded STD's, we wouldn't have the infrastructure problem we have now. If they had put in place SDC's based on the actual costs here in Bend, we wouldn't be in the giant fucking hole we are now.

I do agree that there was a lot of pie in the sky and that Juniper Ridge in particular was turned into a particularly horrifying mess. But here again you see one of the Bully Four directly involved: "Councilors Jim Clinton and Mark Capell led the [JRP] negotiating team and provided periodic updates to the full Council in executive session."

This was back in late-2005 to mid-2006, the period when JR turned into a Celebration, FL-style mixed-use dream in the desert. Complete with a water feature.

BAT was simply extremely poorly executed. The purchase was OKed 7-0 as part of a 14-item consent agenda on June 21, 2006:

"D. Authorize the City Manager to sign a contract for six (6) used buses for the new transit system; to be purchased from Transit Sales International at $35,200.00 each, for a total of $211,200.00 "

There was no discussion about BAT before this vote according to the minutes. According to the related Issue Summary:

Six 1996 32’ Eldorado Transmark buses used in Salt Lake City by the Utah Transit Authority. The units had between 92,000 and 344,000 miles with blue interiors and if sold as a lot would come with $45,000 worth of brand new parts. A full written quote detailing all inspections, new paint job, digital destination signage, fareboxes, condition of equipment required at delivery was received in the amount of $35,200 per bus with a delivery via flatbed truck price to Bend estimated at $1,800 per unit. A road test was performed on one of the units.

The whole deal stinks when looked at closely, especially the suppression of the city mechanic's inspection results. Personally I think there was some under the table money passed out over this one to certain City staff, although there has never been any proof. Google cache of BULL story here. That poisoned the water over buses in Bend, something that any other city our size has.

But then Buster has never been one to let facts get in the way of a good rant...

Anonymous said...

My problem with the GOBs is that they were in charge in the run up (for example Oran was in the CC until January '05) and now they are being pushed as the savior to our financial problems.

If they hadn't pushed so hard for build thousands of unneeded STD's, we wouldn't have the infrastructure problem we have now. If they had put in place SDC's based on the actual costs here in Bend, we wouldn't be in the giant fucking hole we are now.


Ab-so-fuckin-lutely.

BAT was simply extremely poorly executed.

Aside from the lemon bus purchase, which I admit was a complete clusterfuck, how has BAT been poorly managed?

Anonymous said...

But then Buster has never been one to let facts get in the way of a good rant...

Buster hates the "progressives" because he sees them as representing "the new Bend," and he prefers "the old Bend" (the one with all the downtown stores boarded up and people lining up for government surplus cheese). Buster is a bitter old alky -- no more, no less.

Anonymous said...

I think the progressives got a little carried away with Juniper Ridge and the BAT, for progressive reasons. (Pie-in-the-sky.)

I agree with you about JR, Dunc, but what exactly was "pie in the sky" about BAT? Virtually every other city of our size in the country, and many that are considerably smaller, has a public transit system. Also it's mandated under state law. I'm surprised Bend got away without having one as long as it did.

Anonymous said...

Bend can be fixed

So how would you "fix" Bend, Buster? Please be specific.

(This oughta be good.)

Quimby said...

>> But then Buster has never been one to let facts get in the way of a good rant...

>> Buster is a bitter old alky -- no more, no less.

These observations may be true, but the dude obviously has a unique insight into the human condition as well as what makes men/businesses/govt's tick.

And he can rant like no-one I've ever read!

I know it seems like I'm not posting here much (I am) but even I'm smart enough to NOT drop some of the more juicy turds under my Quimby handle. Fucking lawyers are gunning for sites like BB2.

Bewert said...

Buster, is this your answer?

I agree with this list:

"What can Bend do now? Well, maybe we should put the question a little differently: what should people do when they're stuck in the middle of nowhere with no money? The answer is to protect their own interests, make their little corner of the world the best possible place to live, and band together to prevent outsiders from coming and taking their stuff. Because life's not going to get easier around here for a while.

1. RAISE TAXES. That's right. Bend needs money. For deferred infrastructure and maintenance, for police and other essential services, for schools, for public transit. Revenues are already down, but the big whammy's yet to come: reduced property tax assessments due to falling property values. Bend needs to resist the urge to cut taxes, and actually needs to increase revenue this year and going forward.
2. INCREASE FUNDING FOR ESSENTIAL SERVICES AND PARKS. Especially police. Bend needs to regain its reputation as a safe, relatively drug-free, violent crime-free town if it's going to keep residents and attract new ones. What's the point of living in a small town if you can get carjacked in the Costco parking lot, same as Compton? And parks too. There's no point in living in small-town Oregon if there's no place to push a stroller or walk a dog.
3. SUSPEND MASTER-PLANNED PROJECTS. Forget about Juniper Ridge. Forget about the Third Street Corridor. Pay off whoever's owed, terminate the consultants' contracts, stop buying new land, stop land grants, stop all city-funded development activity. No more Lava Court or whatever it's called. Keep the land for the future (a university, for example) or sell it to the private sector at market prices, with restrictions if necessary. Maybe in other cities, the local authorities have the vision and competence to carry out big-concept projects. Not in Bend.
4. CUT THE DESTINATION RESORTS LOOSE. No matter what they say in public, not one of these destination resort subdivisions around here is "penciling out" the way its sponsors thought it would. Soon the destination resorts will come calling to city and/or county and/or state governments asking for property tax breaks, regulatory exemptions and other goodies, and they should be told "NO." I'm not an anti-destination resort activist. Some say that their drain on services and infrastructure exceeds their economic benefit. But let's assume for sake of argument that they create jobs and are generally a net benefit to neighboring communities. It doesn't matter - they don't deserve a handout. They should be treated like any other business. Either destination resorts make economic sense or they don't. In a county where almost every business besides Trader Joe's is hunkering down for tough times, 5,000 homeless people are living in the woods, the desert, motels, vacant homes and the streets, and 19% of the population (including kids) has no health insurance, luxury golf course developments don't deserve any subsidies or breaks. And making them nicer does almost nothing to make Bend or other Central Oregon communities nicer.
5. LOBBY FOR A FOUR-YEAR UNIVERSITY. And don't let up! The best way to secure Bend's future is to get a 4-year university here. Natural resources is gone. Real estate is gone. But Bend is an excellent candidate for a 4-year school. OK, so far it hasn't worked out. But that's because these fool good-old-boy local business interests have been put front-and-center. Bad idea. Those guys' money should be welcome in the effort, but all these fat, white local artifacts should be kept safely out of sight when we're selling this area as a site for a new 4-year university. It might take another 5 or 10 years. It might take longer. But it makes sense. Bend would be a great college town. We just need the right people to plan our approach and the whole community needs to be on board, like what happened in Merced.

posted by Bend Economy Man"

###

You can scream all you want, but a nickel a gallon gas tax going directly into the streets fund would do a lot to make this a better place.

Anonymous said...

For conspiracy theorists this one may seem obvious, but for the rest of us it might give us pause -- particularly those progressives/democrats who have HOPE.


This.



Governing elites in Washington and Wall Street have devised a fiendishly clever "grand bargain" they want President Obama to embrace in the name of "fiscal responsibility." The government, they argue, having spent billions on bailing out the banks, can recover its costs by looting the Social Security system. They are also targeting Medicare and Medicaid. The pitch sounds preposterous to millions of ordinary working people anxious about their economic security and worried about their retirement years. But an impressive armada is lined up to push the idea--Washington's leading think tanks, the prestige media, tax-exempt foundations, skillful propagandists posing as economic experts and a self-righteous billionaire spending his fortune to save the nation from the elderly. ... This swindle is portrayed as "fiscal reform." In fact, it's the political equivalent of bait-and-switch fraud.

Defending Social Security sounds like yesterday's issue... But the financial establishment has pushed it back on the table, claiming that the current crisis requires "responsible" leaders to take action. Will Obama take the bait? Surely not. ... The program's financing is basically sound, he has explained, and can be assured far into the future by making only modest adjustments.

But Obama is also playing footsie with the conservative advocates of "entitlement reform" (their euphemism for cutting benefits). The president wants the corporate establishment's support on many other important matters, and he recently promised to hold a "fiscal responsibility summit" to examine the long-term costs of entitlements. That forum could set the trap for a "bipartisan compromise" that may become difficult for Obama to resist, given the burgeoning deficit. If he resists, he will be denounced as an old-fashioned free-spending liberal. ...

To understand the mechanics of this attempted swindle, you have to roll back twenty-five years, to the time the game of bait and switch began, under Ronald Reagan.

The Gipper's ... massive tax cuts for corporations and upper-income ranks ... launched the era of swollen federal budget deficits. But their economic impact was offset by the huge tax increase ... imposed on working people in 1983: the payroll tax rate supporting Social Security... A blue-ribbon commission chaired by Alan Greenspan worked out the terms, then both parties signed on. ...

Ever since, working Americans have paid higher taxes on their labor wages--12.4 percent, split between employees and employers. As a result, the Social Security system has accumulated a vast surplus--now around $2.5 trillion and growing. This is the money pot the establishment wants to grab, claiming the government can no longer afford to keep the promise it made to workers twenty-five years ago. ...

Follow the bouncing ball: Washington first cuts taxes on the well-to-do, then offsets the revenue loss by raising taxes on the working class and tells folks it is saving their money for future retirement. But Washington spends the money on other stuff, so when workers need it for their retirement, they are told, Sorry, we can't afford it. ...

The assault sounds outrageous and bound to fail, but the conservative interests may have Obama in a neat trap. Their fog of scary propaganda makes it easier to distort the president's position and blame him for any fiscal disorders driven by the current financial collapse. He will be urged to "do the right thing" for the country and make the hard choices... Obama's fate may depend on informing the public--now, not later...

Bewert said...

BTW, if anybody is interested: Final Text of Stimulus Bill

I especially like the part starting on page 62.

Duncan McGeary said...

I'd be all for the BAT if I thought it had any chance of working without losing tons of money...

"Virtually every other city of our size in the country, and many that are considerably smaller, has a public transit system."

So?

Everyone always says this, but it doesn't prove that Bend needs or will support one. Demographics, geographic layout, traditions, and history all play a bigger role.

I'm not convinced.

It sounds like, keep up with the Jones, me too'ism.

As far as the 'Progressive Block.'

If they hadn't appeared so completely clueless in the six months leading up to the election, I'd have more sympathy for them.

For gods sake. A four year college? Major industry? Mixed use? (shopping, walking, housing, industry.)

Sorry, this sounds like all those hair-brained --"let's close off the downtown streets and have a walking mall"-- disasters of the 70's - 80's. Giant urban projects that only will be proven failures after all the money is spent.

Bewert said...

I saw that Nation article earlier. A bit frightening, but I can't imagine Obama taking up the cause of cutting entitlements, especially to the retired, when the economy is so fucked.

And then there is this lesson learned from the stimulus debate, a mistake not likely to be repeated:

Rahm: Obama Lost Control Of Stimulus Debate

White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel, in an interview with reporters, conceded that President Obama lost control of the stimulus debate by focusing too much on bipartisan outreach. The Wall Street Journal reports:

Mr. Emanuel owned up to one mistake: message. What he called the outside game slipped away from the White House last week, when the president and others stressed bipartisanship rather than job creation as they moved toward passing the measure. White House officials allowed an insatiable desire in Washington for bipartisanship to cloud the economic message a point coming clear in a study being conducted on what went wrong and what went right with the package, he said.

According to Emanuel, the White House "lost" control of the message for four days. He suggested that the president decided to change his tone after the House vote, when not a single Republican voted for the bill.

According to the WSJ Emanuel added that "Washington should have learned something about Mr. Obama as well, with the shift from bipartisan overtures to outright mockery of his opposition."

When the president spoke to House Democrats at a February 5th retreat in Williamsburg, Virginia, he'd moved from courting Republican support to attacking them as obstructionists who clung to ""false theories of the past."

The top aide argued that despite the missteps, the final stimulus bill is "close to about 90%" of what they had wanted.

He also promised that the president will not stop reaching out to the GOP.

"The President's always going to reach out to people in both parties. I mean we have these upcoming summits, one on fiscal reform, and another one on health care. There's gonna be Republican participation, and that will never change."

LavaBear said...

>>>posted by Bend Economy Man


Bruce you know the difference between Buster and BEM right?

Bewert said...

Krugman had some choice comments today as well:

One might have expected Republicans to act at least slightly chastened in these early days of the Obama administration, given both their drubbing in the last two elections and the economic debacle of the past eight years.

But it’s now clear that the party’s commitment to deep voodoo — enforced, in part, by pressure groups that stand ready to run primary challengers against heretics — is as strong as ever. In both the House and the Senate, the vast majority of Republicans rallied behind the idea that the appropriate response to the abject failure of the Bush administration’s tax cuts is more Bush-style tax cuts.

And the rhetorical response of conservatives to the stimulus plan — which will, it’s worth bearing in mind, cost substantially less than either the Bush administration’s $2 trillion in tax cuts or the $1 trillion and counting spent in Iraq — has bordered on the deranged.

Anonymous said...

I'd be all for the BAT if I thought it had any chance of working without losing tons of money...

No public transit system anywhere makes money, Dunc. That isn't its purpose. It's a public service.

Should we also eliminate schools, police and fire departments, parks and libraries because they don't make money?

Public transit is an important amenity for a community that's trying to sell its "quality of life." Not just poor and disabled people but also older people rely on it. And that last demographic will continue growing.

Anonymous said...

Sorry, this sounds like all those hair-brained --"let's close off the downtown streets and have a walking mall"-- disasters of the 70's - 80's.

That isn't what mixed-use development is about at all. You're a smart guy, Dunc, but I think your outlook is rather provincial. You need to get out of Bend more often.

Duncan McGeary said...

"I think your outlook is rather provincial."

And Bend is a province...part of our problem is thinking we're the big city.

"Public transit is an important amenity for a community that's trying to sell its "quality of life."

Fair enough. Then that community needs to vote it funds....

Duncan McGeary said...

"That isn't what mixed-use development is about at all."

No? I think that's exactly what it is. An imposed from the top down academic theory, much like the downtown malls.

I believe development should happen organically.

What about Land Use Planning?

Setting the conditions under which growth may or may not happen, is very different than a city actually trying to develop it under some pie-in-the-sky, build it an they will come, notion. That is something completely different.

Set the conditions, and if they are feasible, let people do them. If they aren't feasible, they won't be done, and it's back to the drawing board.

Anonymous said...

Here is a good, short page discussing what is meant by mixed-use and intelligent development.

http://www.walkscore.com/walkable-neighborhoods.shtml

It's not about the city building it and hope they will come, but about looking at a big picture and the city saying what can and can't be built where.

Duncan McGeary said...

"It's not about the city building it and hope they will come, but about looking at a big picture and the city saying what can and can't be built where."

Well, it sounds like we could've used a bit less of that at Juniper Ridge, and a bit more of that everywhere else in Bend....

I'm just questioning all this, not saying I'm right.

But for instance, my wife and I have a thriving used bookstore on the corner of Third and Greenwood, the Bookmark. Listening to the plans the city had for the 'downtown corridor' it was clear to me that they had no respect for the businesses that were already there, and a grandiose idea of what they thought should be there.

I'm saying, sometimes what's there is what should be there. Let the free market decide.

Bewert said...

No, it's hard to tell everyone apart, especially when they use aliases that change depending on the place. I seem to remember Buster ranting about that list a couple of times, though. Which is why I posted it.

By all means feel free to inform me of anything you deem useful.

Dunc, the bus will always lose a little money in operational costs, but it is heavily subsidized by the Feds. It is a net gain in quality of life for a lot of people who are otherwise unable to get around, i.e. the handicapped, elderly, poor, etc. It can be done without costing a million+ a year out of the general fund. But I'm afraid the current environment does not bode well, for several reason which relate to the bus staff shooting themselves in the foot. Especially that initial purchase and also the management-heavy synopsis of the last ballot measure. It still was a fairly close election:

Yes 17,315 (47.34%)
No 19,257 (52.66%)
Total: 36,572
Over Votes:
Under Votes: 4,240

Bewert said...

Re: No? I think that's exactly what it is. An imposed from the top down academic theory, much like the downtown malls.

###

Dunc, when was the last time you were in Europe?

Anonymous said...

Bruce you know the difference between Buster and BEM right?

*

The old guy with big dick, and young guy with the big dick right?

Anonymous said...

I'd be all for the BAT if I thought it had any chance of working without losing tons of money...

###

If giving Leonard the Oran Teater seat, and giving Leonard an infinite right to supply the BAT BUS with propane into perpetuity, I would support BP and his patron Leonard.

Everyone in Bend has a natural right to make a profit off the taxpayer? Is this not Bend?

Anonymous said...

(This oughta be good.)

*

All lawyers, CPA's, Judges, and COP's MUST immediately provide rear access to themselves and all wives, and daughters, we'll leave the sons' to team mormon.

That's a 'good' start.

Anonymous said...

I don't quite agree with this. I think the progressives got a little carried away with Juniper Ridge and the BAT, for progressive reasons. (Pie-in-the-sky.)

The GOB's may have quietly urged them on, but....at least they could see that the gig was up.


*

Real Buster sez, ...

I have written about this forever, for every theft there is a 'progressive' front-end, and a conservative-back end robbery. Like HOLLERN's 'smart-growth' sold in 1998 by good looking young kids up a High Desert Museum, but executed by the best Pugs ( conservatives ) money can buy.

When dunc talks 'progressive' he's just talking about the 'feel good' & 'do good' aspect of how JR, BAT/BUS, and all other POGROMS are sold, but behind every 'progressive' movement (SORE) there is a BULL who will scrape the meat from the bones.

That's why Bill Smith & Mike Hollern OWN/CONTROL the BULL/SORE here in BEND, the SORE (progressive) gets the old hippy's all erect over a new idea ( public transportation), and then Knife-River ( conservatives ) clean the public scalp.

Now what here is being said that has NOT been said before?

Quimby is right, the Lawyers are watching this site closely cuz they want ever so to be fucked in the ass.

Anonymous said...

My name is MOSS, and I'm here to fuck you in the ass with a dildo that was owned by bruce-pussy, but only used once IN bendbb.

...

Oregon-based banks see stocks drop in wake of bailout-overhaul announcement
Fri. February 13, 2009; Posted: 09:52 AM
Stocks RSS
Today’s top stocks. Click here
Feb 11, 2009 (The Bulletin - McClatchy-Tribune Information Services via COMTEX) -- WCBO | Quote | Chart | News | PowerRating -- Shares of several Oregon-based banks were hit hard Tuesday following the Treasury Department's rollout of its plan to overhaul and expand the government's rescue of the banking system.

Bend-based Cascade Bancorp, parent company of Bank of the Cascades, saw its shares tumble 25 percent, or 60 cents, to close at $1.82 on Tuesday, the lowest in the company's 31-year history. Others to decline were Lake Oswego-based West Coast Bancorp, 21.9 percent; Medford-based PremierWest Bancorp, 13.1 percent; Portland-based Umpqua Holdings Corp., 6.5 percent; and The Dalles-based Columbia Bancorp, 2.6 percent.

Tuesday's announcement left regional bank representatives uncertain about what the government is trying to accomplish and how it will impact the banking industry, said Julie Miller, executive vice president and regional manager of the Central Oregon division for Bank of the Cascades.

"We continue to watch the outcome," Miller said. "It didn't give specifics, and the market responded to that." Big national banks were hit hard, too, including Bank of America, down 19.3 percent, and Wells Fargo, down 14.2 percent.

There wasn't a lot of information directly related to small banks in Tuesday's announcement, which introduced a plan that could cost $2 trillion through investments from the Treasury, Federal Reserve and private sector, according to Dustin Brumbaugh, a Seattle-based analyst for Ragen MacKenzie, a division of Wells Fargo Investments.

Some small banks that were left out of the first round of capital injections from the Treasury's Troubled Asset Relief Program were hurt by investor uncertainty, Brumbaugh said.

"The low stock valuations that we're seeing today reflect concern over their ability to access the equity capital (needed) to manage their way through this downturn," he said.

Bumpy ride Tuesday's stock slide continued a bumpy couple weeks for Cascade Bancorp, which released fourth-quarter earnings Jan. 29. Its shares traded at $4.22 on Jan. 28 and have fallen 57 percent since.

Cascade Bancorp's stock was downgraded Jan. 30 to "underperform" by two analyst firms, Toronto-based RBC Capital Markets and Portland-based DA Davidson, with RBC citing worse-than-expected earnings and 55 percent increase in nonperforming assets, to $194.2 million.

Cascade Bancorp applied for $67 million in TARP funding but has not received the money. Even with TARP funding, the bank may still need to raise private equity due to its exposure in Central Oregon and Boise, Idaho, two of the country's hardest-hit real estate markets, according to the Jan. 30 report from Joe Morford, a San Francisco-based analyst for RBC Capital Markets.

Regardless of whether it receives TARP funding, Cascade Bancorp has the capital to weather the storm and remains well-capitalized by federal regulatory standards, Miller said.

"We continue to take a conservative approach and manage our loan portfolio very carefully," she said. "We are very in tune with what our loan portfolio looks like and we are well-provisioned in case of any loan losses." The company also has bought into unlimited Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. insurance for noninterest-bearing accounts, low-paying savings accounts and NOW accounts, or checking accounts that earn interest, further protecting consumers, Miller said.

Umpqua Holdings Corp., meanwhile, received $214 million in TARP funding last October shortly after the program was rolled out.

Although he had not reviewed Tuesday's Treasury plan in great detail, Ray Davis, president and CEO of Umpqua Bank, said he would like to see a plan where the government would buy, hold and eventually sell banks' bad assets through what's been called a "bad bank" program.

"That creates a bottom that would allow banks to take money and start lending again," Davis said.

Umpqua Bank has already unloaded many of its distressed assets in Central Oregon, Davis said, adding that the bank has plans to maintain a strong presence in the region.

The new plan, announced Tuesday, failed to satisfy investors because it lacked details and the marketplace did not believe it was going to work, said Bill Valentine, who owns and operates Valentine Ventures LLC in Bend.

"My personal opinion is that this does nothing to fix the problem and will enhance the problem," Valentine said. "This will create a tremendous amount of debt (for the nation)."

To see more of The Bulletin, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.bendbulletin.com Copyright (c) 2009, The Bulletin, Bend, Ore. Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services. For reprints, email tmsreprints@permissionsgroup.com, call 800-374-7985 or 847-635-6550, send a fax to 847-635-6968, or write to The Permissions Group Inc., 1247 Milwaukee Ave., Suite 303, Glenview, IL 60025, USA.

Anonymous said...

I just found this site. Is there any pictures of Bruce?? I'm going to name my son bruce, I'll be giving birth any day now at St. Charles.

Bruce is the kind of man I want to marry, if I could only find a real man in Bend.

Bewert said...

FRom my blog:

Did anybody envision it any other way? Why do you think they brought in the bPussy on retainer to choreograph the theft?

When the last GOB has made a killing on the city 'investment' the Bulletin will give that 'investor' a philanthropy award.

Only in Bend.

###

I wish I actually had received that supposed retainer.

It is interesting to watch the various forms of push back. When Oran does an online or enail intervue.....

LavaBear said...

Washington Trust Bank of Spokane aquires all of the deposits of Pinnacle Banl, Beaverton, Oregon

Pinnacle Bank, Beaverton, Oregon, was closed today by the Oregon Division of Finance and Corporate Securities, which appointed the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) as receiver. To protect the depositors, the FDIC entered into a purchase and assumption agreement with Washington Trust Bank, Spokane, Washington, to assume all of the deposits of Pinnacle Bank.

Due to the observance of Presidents' Day on Monday, Pinnacle Bank's sole office will reopen as a branch of Washington Trust Bank on Tuesday. Depositors of Pinnacle Bank will automatically become depositors of Washington Trust Bank. Deposits will continue to be insured by the FDIC, so there is no need for customers to change their banking relationship to retain their deposit insurance coverage. Customers of both banks should continue to use their existing branches until Washington Trust Bank can fully integrate the deposit records of Pinnacle Bank.

Over the weekend, depositors of Pinnacle Bank can access their money by writing checks or using ATM or debit cards. Checks drawn on the bank will continue to be processed. Loan customers should continue to make their payments as usual.

As of December 31, 2008, Pinnacle Bank had total assets of approximately $73 million and total deposits of $64 million. In addition to assuming all of the deposits of the failed bank, including those from brokers, Washington Trust Bank agreed to purchase approximately $72 million in assets at a discount of $7.6 million. The FDIC will retain the remaining assets for later disposition.

The FDIC and Washington Trust Bank entered into a loss-share transaction. Washington Trust Bank will share in the losses on approximately $66 million in assets covered under the agreement. The loss-sharing arrangement is projected to maximize returns on the assets covered by keeping them in the private sector. The agreement also is expected to minimize disruptions for loan customers as they will maintain a banking relationship.

Anonymous said...

CACB is fucked, CBBO is fucked, Bend is fucked.

AHaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa.
I'm FUCKED.

IHateToBurstYourBubble said...

I seem to remember Buster ranting about that list a couple of times, though.

BEM posted first on his blog, Buster copied it later when he hopped on the I WANNA FIX BEND bandwagon.

I acknowledged it was a noble feeling, but Bend was doomed.

Anonymous said...

Stimulus Package? Total Fucking Bullshit. Did any of these Fucking Douchebags pass Economics 101 in their freshman year? Does Common Sense exist?
The Senate,Congress, and the Obama Cult has PEGGED THE MORRON METER.

WE ARE ALL F U C K E D......

compliments of a WASP & 3 Bombers of Deschutes Henge HOP. BURP....

Anonymous said...

Not one of those stupid fuckers in congress has even read the "stimulus" bill.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CvnwOjDjnH4

Anonymous said...

"Not a single House Republican backed the package."

That's fucking ORG, I think the pug's have found their ball's.

The Wall Street Journal

Feb. 13, 2009

The Democratic-controlled Congress has passed a $787 billion economic stimulus bill designed to attack the economic crisis, handing a victory to President Barack Obama.

The Senate approved the measure 60-38 with three GOP moderates providing crucial support. Hours earlier, the House vote was 246-183. Not a single House Republican backed the package. The president could sign the bill as early as next week, less than a month after taking office.

Anonymous said...

I acknowledged it was a noble feeling, but Bend was doomed.

*

As soon as we can get you fucking 'loser renters' are running in mode 'learned helplessness' out of this fucking town, and populate it with people who care, then we can fix Bend, the 'loser renter', esp the variety without a job is a cyst and parasite.

Anonymous said...

There was never a 'fix' Bend band-wagon, day-one here I asked "who is going to stay, and in who go".

HOMER(BUTTER-BALLS) has forever been trying to talk down the BEND RE market on the theory is then he'll be able to afford to BUY, today he admits he couldn't buy a single from DORN even if he wanted to.

There has always been those of us who intended to stay, and out of the PUG ashes fix this fucking town. There have always been those who just enjoy watching a good fire cuz human misery gets them off. Then there are those like Jeff&Ray, BP that come to towns like this and offer 'services'.

When the money is 'bend gone', then all the grifters and helpless will leave, and we can then 'fix' Bend, and that time is getting very near, the Bend BK is near.

Anonymous said...


Record nails broken in car crash of SLC woman say's Guinness Book of World Records

File photo of Lee Ewert, August 2006

Lee Ewert had not cut her nails since 1979

An American woman listed in the Guinness Book of World Records for having the world's longest fingernails has had them broken off in a car crash.

Lee Ewert from Salt Lake City, Utah, had not cut her nails since 1979.

Anonymous said...

More 'fodder' for 1031 people who like to connect the dot's to Moss, Christians, Bend RE, and Fraud.

...

Bend real estate firm closes amid FBI probe

Posted:
Video Gallery
Bend real estate firm shuts amid investigation (2/13)
3: 07
Sawyer Five principal broker denies wrongdoing (2/9)
2:22
Bend police capt. on leave amid investigation (2/6)
2:44
Tami Sawyer (file photo) is under FBI investigation, along with husband Kevin, on leave from police job
Tami Sawyer (file photo) is under FBI investigation, along with husband Kevin, on leave from police job
Steve Wilson, who was principal broker for The Sawyer 5, says it's time for a 'fresh start' with a new firm to keep clients 'out of the fray'
Steve Wilson, who was principal broker for The Sawyer 5, says it's time for a 'fresh start' with a new firm to keep clients 'out of the fray'
Also on KTVZ.com
Sawyer Five broker: Firm not under investigation
Bend police captain on leave amid FBI probe

Days ago, broker denied involvement; now he's starting new firm

By Victoria Adelus, KTVZ.COM

It's Friday the 13th, and The Sawyer Five's Bend office, open just days ago, has its doors bolted, blinds down and is closed for business.

Employees are still inside the building, and appear to be hiding behind the walls and doors. They wouldn't answer for NewsChannel 21 - or a UPS delivery man.

The Sawyer Five's website - www.sawyerfive.com - that too, seems to no longer have a team.

Just days earlier, Steve Wilson, now the former principal broker for the company, said The Sawyer Five was not the subject of an FBI investigation into Kevin and Tami Sawyer's business or businesses, confirmed a week ago by Police Chief Sandi Baxter.

"We have nothing to do with the individual companies that employees may or may not own," Wilson said Monday.

"The Sawyer Five is not involved in any of this," he said. "There is no action with the (state) Real Estate (Agency), and there is no action with any investigation."

NewsChannel 21 again caught up with Wilson on Friday, as he and other employees were moving their things out of the building.

"I've been an independent contractor and had my own company for 25 years, and we've just decided to start a new company - fresh start," Wilson said Friday.

A fresh start that Wilson says is all about his clients.

"I think we have an obligation to our clients, to keep them out of the fray and out of the mix," he said. "In order to keep our clients out of some personal issues of one of our previous agents, it's just best that we do it this way."

Wilson says three of the firm's four brokers are leaving with him.

"The staff that processes transactions are the same staff that I've had," Wilson said. "There's just no longer an association with The Sawyer Five."

However, the Oregon Real Estate Agency said Friday that at this time, they only know of one broker who has confirmed they will join Wilson in the move.

"Two of the licensees that were with The Sawyer Five have placed their licenses to an inactive status, which means they are choosing not to practice real estate at this time, but at a later time they may choose to activate their licenses under a new principal broker,"said Dean Owens, the agency's deputy commissioner.

As for Tami Sawyer, the agency says she's applied for and received a sole practitioner's license, and apparently is going her own separate way as well.

At this point, the Oregon Real Estate Agency can't confirm or deny whether or not it is investigating Tami.

NewsChannel 21 will continue to follow this story's twists and turns and bring you any information as soon as we get it.
You must be logged in to rate this story. Login or register

Anonymous said...

I acknowledged it was a noble feeling, but Bend was doomed.

*

The 'homers' of the world are doomed. Has Been loser always was, and always will be.

Homer has always use BB2 to pimp poverty, like BP has always used the web to collect nickels from his JR site. Sure some dogs come to piss, and some even leave an interesting scent.

But in Homers world, "I'm fucked, and my life is fucked, and I want all you to pay, and pay big with poverty like myself."

Nothing new here, Bend will be fixed, and the BK will pass, and new banks will replace moss, and all Bend christian mega-churches will become 'mormon',... life moves on.

The Bpussy will get dragged out of this town by his ear, when wifey blows back to SLC to be with her mother.

Anonymous said...

Now missing from the Sawyer Five web site, is a home in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, which was listed as a vacation rental. The affidavit claims the Sawyers sent more than a million dollars, to build that home.

"You have to wonder, whore $1M was that money??? Was it an S1031 offshore investment??"

Surely they're talking of judge mcDonald up in 'Crook Co' (sic), the chairman of the Orygun Real Estate Oversight , ... 'sealed & silenced', ... Omerta Bend are real estate

The Sawyer Five Closes


2/13/09 Bend

By Doug Johnson

Friday morning, the front doors of the Sawyer Five Real Estate office were locked, and the blinds drawn. According to the Oregon Real Estate Board, the firm's principal broker, Steve Wilson, transferred his license to his own business name. The Sawyer Five website no longer lists any brokers. The Oregon Real Estate Board says without another principal broker the business can no longer operate.

"Once the principal broker has transferred and all the other licenses have become inactive, the registered business name has basically closed down," says Dean Owens, Deputy Commissioner of the Oregon Real Estate Agency.

The business is registered to Bend Police Captain Kevin Sawyer, who is now on paid administrative leave, after the Police Department learned of an FBI investigation into several side businesses run by him and his wife, Tami Sawyer. Tami was also a broker at Sawyer Five, but has now changed her license to a sole practitioner's license.

"It allows her to conduct professional real estate activity without having to be supervised by a principal broker, but she can not supervise any other brokers," Owens says.

Tami can still manage property through her company Genesis LLC with that license. The FBI has neither confirmed or denied an investigation into businesses Captain Sawyer and his wife own. Those include the Sawyer Five, Genesis LLC and Starboard LLC, a real estate ventures company. Court documents show the Sawyers are being sued by several investors for hundreds of thousands of dollars, as well as a probate trust petition. Thomas Middleton senior died last July, and his trust lists Tami Sawyer as the successor trustee. Middleton's next of kin are in a legal battle with Tami for rights to the estate. According to a court affidavit in that case, a former employee of the Sawyer Five stated the Sawyers transferred money from the United States to accounts in Mexico. Now missing from the Sawyer Five web site, is a home in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, which was listed as a vacation rental. The affidavit claims the Sawyers sent more than a million dollars, to build that home. Thursday there was a hearing in Crook County regarding the Middleton petition. It's not clear if a decision was made, but according to Crook County Circuit Court, the judge has verbally sealed the case.

Anonymous said...

A looking glass into the OREO future??? ....

The Worst-Case Scenario


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By DAVID BROOKS
Published: February 12, 2009

Between 1990 and 2007, the total mortgage debt held by Americans rose from $2.5 trillion to $10.5 trillion. This rise was part of a societal credit bubble that burst in 2008. To cushion the pain of that collapse, federal authorities decided to replace private debt with public debt.
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David Brooks
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Times Topics: Economic Stimulus

In 2008, the Bush administration increased spending by about $1.7 trillion, and guaranteed loans, investments and deposits worth about $8 trillion. In 2009, the Obama administration spent $800 billion on a stimulus package, $1 trillion on a second round of bank bailouts and committed another trillion on health care reform and other bailout plans.

Americans generally welcomed the burst of public activism. In “Democracy in America,” Alexis de Tocqueville wrote about what happens to a people beset by anxiety: “The taste for public tranquility then becomes a blind passion, and the citizens are liable to conceive a most inordinate devotion to order.”

In normal times, Americans would have been skeptical of proposals to double or triple the size of federal programs, but amid the economic fear, that skepticism fell away. Wall Street traders hungered for a huge federal bailout replete with strings. Economists produced models that assumed that government could efficiently spend huge amounts of money, and these models were accepted.

The Obama administration was staffed with moderates who found that there was no reward for moderation. Liberals attacked them for being tepid. Republicans attacked them because it was enjoyable to see Democrats attacked. Over time, the administration drifted left and created what you might call Split Level Technocratic Liberalism.

President Obama defended spending initiatives in broad terms. He had enormous faith in the power of highly trained experts and based his arguments on models and projections. The actual legislation was cobbled together by Democratic committee chairmen, often acting beyond the administration’s control.

During 2010, the economic decline abated, but the recovery did not arrive. There were a few false dawns, and stagnation. The problem was this: The policy makers knew how to pull economic levers, but they did not know how to use those levers to affect social psychology.

The crisis was labeled an economic crisis, but it was really a psychological crisis. It was caused by a mood of fear and uncertainty, which led consumers to not spend, bankers to not lend and entrepreneurs to not risk. No amount of federal spending could change this psychology because uncertainty about the future remained acute.

Essentially, Americans had migrated from one society to another — from a society of high trust to a society of low trust, from a society of optimism to a society of foreboding, from a society in which certain financial habits applied to a society in which they did not. In the new world, investors had no basis from which to calculate risk. Families slowly deleveraged. Bankers had no way to measure the future value of assets.

Cognitive scientists distinguish between normal risk-assessment decisions, which activate the reward-prediction regions of the brain, and decisions made amid extreme uncertainty, which generate activity in the amygdala. These are different mental processes using different strategies and producing different results. Americans were suddenly forced to cope with this second category, extreme uncertainty.

Economists and policy makers had no way to peer into this darkness. Their methods were largely based on the assumption that people are rational, predictable and pretty much the same. Their models work best in times of equilibrium. But in this moment of disequilibrium, behavior was nonlinear, unpredictable, emergent and stubbornly resistant to Keynesian rationalism.

The failure to generate a recovery led to a collapse of public confidence. President Obama’s promises of 3.5 million jobs now seemed a sham and his former certainty a delusion. The political climate grew more polarized. That meant it was impossible to tackle entitlement debt. That and the economic climate meant it was impossible to raise taxes or cut spending or do anything to reduce the yawning deficits. Federal deficits were 15 percent of G.D.P. and growing.

Far from easing uncertainty, the exploding deficits led to more fear. The U.S. could not afford to respond to new emergencies, like hurricanes or foreign crises. Other nations sensed American overextension. Foreign debt-holders grew nervous. Interest rates rose. Congress indulged its worst instincts, erecting trade barriers, propping up doomed companies. Scholars began to talk about the American Disease, akin to the British Disease of the 1970s.

The nation had essentially bet its future on economic models with primitive views of human behavior. The government had tried to change social psychology using the equivalent of leeches and bleeding. Rather than blame themselves, Americans directed their anger toward policy makers and experts who based estimates of human psychology on mathematical equations.

Anonymous said...

I have some new heroes. The Democrats that voted against the theft.

Anonymous said...

According to a court affidavit in that case, a former employee of the Sawyer Five stated the Sawyers transferred money from the United States to accounts in Mexico. Now missing from the Sawyer Five web site, is a home in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, which was listed as a vacation rental. The affidavit claims the Sawyers sent more than a million dollars, to build that home.

In-fucking-credible. These people are in DEEEEEEEEeeeeep doo-doo.

Anonymous said...

I have some new heroes. The Democrats that voted against the theft.

The seven Democrats voted against it because it contains too much in tax cuts and not enough help for working people -- the opposite of the reason the Repukelicans voted against it.

Anonymous said...

>>The seven Democrats voted against it because it contains too much in tax cuts and not enough help for working people -- the opposite of the reason the Repukelicans voted against it.

Their reasons may have been wrong, but outcomes matter.

Anonymous said...

That's fucking ORG, I think the pug's have found their ball's.

They've never lacked balls -- it's brains they're missing.

Anonymous said...

Their reasons may have been wrong, but outcomes matter.

And the outcome was that the bill passed. I'm sure the seven Democrats knew there were more than enough votes to pass it, so they were able to make a statement without political cost.

The Repukelicans did what their de facto leader Limbaugh told them to do, as usual.

Anonymous said...

Interesting that the three de facto leaders of today's Repukelican Party are a bimbo who had to go to five different colleges to get a BA in journalism (Palin), an unlicensed plumber and tax cheat (Joe the Plumber) and a junior college dropout and failed disc jockey (Limbaugh).

Anonymous said...

Here's a good one for HBM, on the subject of OREO's largest welfare program for the 'rich' in human history. Like Bend taxpayers 100% paying for the new campussy for suterra&les-schwab, ...


Wall Street Welfare
Tough Talk and Government Assistance for the Rich


February 12, 2009 By Paul Street


Paul Street's ZSpace Page

Join ZSpace

"As Mr. Obama prepares to lay the groundwork for the second phase of government assistance," The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported last week, "his tough stance on pay may help build support from a Congress weary of bailouts." [1]



"Tough stance on pay" referred here to President Obama's order limiting executive compensation to $500,000 at companies receiving "extraordinary [taxpayer] assistance" from the federal government. It also encompassed Obama's description of certain corporate executive bonus payments as "shameful" in light of the economic difficulties faced by millions of Americans,



By "government assistance," the WSJ did not mean public help for the rising number of Americans pushed into destitution by the current epic recession. They referred instead to the Obama administration's plan to deepen the federal government's massive bailout of the leading financial institutions that have done so much to push the U.S. and global economy over the edge. The next stage of this gargantuan Wall Street Welfare project (begun with Obama's approval under the expiring George W. Bush administration) involves the government absorbing hundreds of billions of dollars worth of "troubled assets," whose value was artificially hyper-inflated by financial elites.



According to The New York Times, Obama's corporate-Democratic Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner' bailout plan reflected a triumph for unfettered capitalist prerogatives inside the new White House. Times reporters Stephen Labaton and Edmund Andrews note that Geithner "prevailed in opposing tougher conditions on financial institutions that were sought by presidential aides, including [top political and media expert] David Axelrod." Geithner fought successfully "against more severe limits on executive pay for companies receiving government aid." He overcame "those who wanted to dictate how banks would spend their money. And he prevailed over top administration aides who wanted to replace bank executive and wipe out shareholders at institutions receiving aid." According to administration and congressional officials, Geithner told Obama that "that plan would not work" if it was burdened with "too much government involvement in the affairs of the companies" - companies whose behavior deeply interferes with ordinary Americans' capacity to keep their heads above water. The new Treasury chief, whose nomination was heartily applauded by Wall Street, "also expressed concern that too many government controls would discourage private investors from participating." This grave concern over the negative impact of government - the people in a functioning democracy - won out over more image-sensitive Obama aides who worry that "rising joblessness, populist outrage over Wall Street bonuses and expensive perks, and the poor management of last year's bailouts could feed a potent political reaction" if the new White House failed to "demand sacrifices from the companies that receive federal money."



"For all its boldness," Labaton and Andrews, note, the Obama bailout "largely repeat[s] the Bush administration's approach of deferring to many of the same companies and executives who had peddled risky loans and investments at the heart of the crisis and failed to foresee many of the problems plaguing the markets." [2]



Consistent with David Axelrod's public relations concerns and with Obama's bluster on executive pay and bonuses, however, the Times reported that Geithner would "blame corporate executives for much of the economic crisis" [3] - this even as he announced a plan that failed to punish those executives to any significant degree. Geithner naturally gave no blame to the economic policies implemented under his mentor and former Goldman Sachs CEO Robert Rubin when Rubin (a top Obama advisor during the presidential campaign) served as Bill Clinton's Treasury Secretary and Lawrence Summers (Obama's current top economic advisor) was the number two official in Treasury. The (excess) capital-fueled asset inflation that recently burst with such disastrous consequences at home and abroad was richly encouraged by the deregulatory activities of the militantly corporate-neoliberal Democratic Clinton-Rubin administration [4] - a critical detail the new president leaves out when he (routinely) blames the current crisis on "the failed economic policies of the last eight years."



New York Times columnist and Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman recently put the curious juxtaposition of (a) Obama's "tough" talk on executive pay alongside (b) his Wall Street-welfarist bailout plan in instructive context with the following rhetorical vignette: "Question: what happens if you lose vast amounts of other people's money? Answer: you get a big gift from the federal government - but the president says some very harsh things about you before forking over the cash." [5]



As Obama's image-handler Axelrod certainly knows, the "second phase of government assistance" (to leading investment and banking houses and insurance corporations) would certainly be rejected by most Americans in a straight-up policy referendum. Consistent with what Noam Chomsky calls "the normal [authoritarian] workings of state capitalism" [6], it will be implemented nonetheless. The nation's top banking institutions (who have tens of millions of dollars to Obama's presidential campaign) are "too big" and (more to the point) too powerful "to fail."



Obama's game here is not much different from that of Teddy Roosevelt at the turn of the century or of John Fitzgerald Kennedy (JFK) during his brief dust up with U.S. Steel in 1962. [7] Falsely claiming (like JFK) to stand above "ideology," the new president finds it useful to cloak his deep allegiance and captivity to the barons of capital by pounding his chest with some vaguely people-leasing rhetoric. It's all consistent with the formerly left Christopher Hitchens' onetime description of "the essence of American politics" as the "manipulation of populism by elitism." [8]



Government Assistance for the Poor Lags as Joblessness Rises



So what about the rising number of poor and even destitute Americans who are too small and powerless to matter? What level of government assistance is the self-described "world's greatest democracy" providing to the increasingly desperate mass at the widening bottom of its socioeconomic pyramid, the steepest in the "advanced" capitalist world? Surely that form of public assistance is rising in accord with the terrible expansion of human desolation and misery?



A recent New York Times report is less than encouraging. According to veteran Times reporter, author, and welfare policy expert Jason Deparle:



"Despite soaring unemployment and the worst economic crisis in decades, 18 states cut their welfare rolls last year, and nationally the number of people receiving cash assistance remained at or near the lowest in more than 40 years."



"...Michigan cut its welfare rolls 13 percent, though it was one of two states whose October unemployment rate topped 9 percent. Rhode Island, the other, had the nation's largest welfare decline, 17 percent."



"Of the 12 states where joblessness grew most rapidly, eight reduced or kept constant the number of people receiving Temporary Assistance for Needy Children (TANF) the main cash welfare programs for families with families with children." [9]



The public family assistance safety net is not stretching adequately to meet the needs of the growing number of poor and deeply poor Americans. The reason is the vicious welfare "reform" (elimination), which ended poor families' 60-year entitlement to cash aid, exchanging it for work requirements and time limits and giving states the power to discourage people from entering the welfare rolls. The "reform" program was passed by a Republican congress and signed by the regressive corporate Democrat Bill Clinton (whose presidency Obama has described as "recognizably progressive") over considerable protest in 1996. "While it was widely praised in the boom years that followed," DeParle notes, "skeptics warned it would fail the needy when times turned tough." [10]



The warning is being born out in spades as one of the bipartisan welfare "reform's" key structural aspects - "fixed federal financing" regardless of caseload size - discourages states from assisting the rising number of poor families. Obama, it should be noted, has repeatedly praised the great welfare "reform," arguing that "we should acknowledge that conservatives and Bill Clinton were right about welfare" [11] and voted for "welfare-to-work" measures during his time in the Illinois Legislative Assembly.



"No One is Even Taking About the Poor"



During the presidential campaign, moreover, Obama joined John McCain in pushing poverty and inequality to the margins of political discourse. Days before the election, New York Times columnist Bob Herbert noted the shocking absence of the rising number of truly disadvantaged Americans from the electoral extravaganza. "The focus in the presidential campaign," Herbert noted, "has been almost entirely on the struggles faced by the middle class - on families worried about their jobs, their mortgages, their retirement accounts and how to pay for college for their kids....no one is even talking about the poor"...



"...But if we are indeed caught up in the most severe economic crisis since the Great Depression," Herbert added, "the ones who will fare the worst are those who are already poor or near poor. They are millions of them, and yet they remain essentially invisible. A step down for them is a step into destitution." [12]



In a perceptive Election Day column, Herbert situated rising U.S. poverty in the context of something not generally discussed on the Op-Ed pages of the Times - economic inequality and its deadly impact on democracy. "Right how," Herbert noted, "the United States is a country in which wealth is funneled, absurdly, from the bottom to the top. The richest 1 percent of Americans now holds close to 40 percent of all the wealth in the nation and maintains an iron grip on the levers of power." [13]



Consistent with Herbert's populist concerns, diminished in Herbert's post-Inauguration commentary [14], Obama has put Vice President Joe Biden in charge of a "Middle Class Task Force" charged to recommend proposals to ensure that "the middle class is no longer being left behind." [15] The notion of setting up a Poverty Task Force or a related Inequality Commission is unimaginable under the reign of the supposedly "non-ideological" world view that prevails in the Obama-Summers-Geithner administration.



The left commentator Nicholas Kozloff argues that Obama's inauguration was "a missed opportunity" to have "used his bully pulpit" to mobilize the "grassroots" in opposition to poverty and inequality. Obama president could have used his remarkable popularity and resources to "revolutionize progressive politics" by kicking off "a poverty tour" that would have involved "high profile rallies in public parks or stadiums" and "mass marches through poor neighborhoods where people faced housing foreclosures." Instead the new president gave a "cliché-ridden, mundane and thoroughly unmemorable speech" and then got down to the business of bailing out his Wall Street sponsors and crafting a weak and conservative stimulus package. [16]



Dead Center



There's not much help coming to the poor or "the middle class" - a group that seems (in the new administration's world view) to cover everyone making less than $250,000 a year -from the "giant" (corporate media deceptively claims) stimulus package. The U.S. Senate stimulus plan that the militantly centrist and corporate-friendly Obama hailed as an example of "Democrats and Republicans [coming] together [to] respond appropriately to the urgency this moment demands" was a monument to business friendly equivocation. As Krugman notes in a column titled "the Destructive Center," the Senate plan "eliminates hundreds of thousands of American jobs, deprives millions of adequate health care and nutrition, undermines schools, but offers a $15,000 bonus to affluent people who flip their houses."



"Even if the original Obama plan — around $800 billion in stimulus, with a substantial fraction of that total given over to ineffective tax cuts — had been enacted," Krugman notes, "it wouldn't have been enough to fill the looming hole in the U.S. economy, which the Congressional Budget Office estimates will amount to $2.9 trillion over the next three years."



Yet even with those severe limits, corporate Republicans and Democrats in the Senate felt compelled to slash $40 billion in desperately needed assistance to cash-strapped state governments, which would have provided a quick boost to the economy while preserving essential services. Also cut were $40 billion more including badly needed funds for school funding, assistance (health care aid especially) to the unemployed, and Food Stamps. Still, the Senate bill included a lucrative tax credit for affluent homebuyers, reflecting what Krugman calls "the centrists' insistence on comforting the comfortable while afflicting the afflicted will" - an insistence that will "lead to substantially lower employment and substantially more suffering."[17]



More reason for faux-populist Obama administration chest-pounding on executive pay and perks.





Blacklisting Progressives



The stimulus and bailout plans might look a little better if Krugman, Dean Baker, and other reasonably progressive economists were in the Obama administration instead of commenting on it from afar. As the veteran left-liberal Washington- and Obama-watcher David Sirota notes, however, Obama and his centrist handlers have "blacklisted progressives" from key policy roles in his administration. "Amid a stable of eminently qualified and well-respected progressives like James Galbraith, Joseph Stiglitz, Dean Baker, Robert Reich, Paul Krugman and Larry Mishel," Sirota observes on Open Left, "Obama has chosen [corporate neoliberal] Rubin sycophants like Larry Summers and Tim Geithner to run the economy - the same Larry Summers who pushed the repeal of the Glass-Steagal Act [a New Deal measure that mandated the separation of investment and commercial banking], the same Geithner who masterminded the kleptocratic bank bailout, the same duo whose claim to fame is their personal connections to Rubin, a disgraced Citigroup executive at the center of the current meltdown. And the list of Rubin sycophants keeps getting longer, from Peter Orszag to Jason Furman."



Sirota notes that venture capitalist Leo Hindery - a top economic advisor to presidential candidates John Edwards and (later) Obama - was banned from serious consideration for a top economic post in the new administration because he is "one of the few business leaders to use his wealth to challenge deregulation, corporate trade deals, and anti-worker policies." Hindery "dared to clash with the same Wall Street Democrats whose corporate-backed policies destroyed the economy." He committed the unpardonable sin of standing "in opposition to Obama's top [corporate-neoliberal] economic advisors, many of whom were associated with The Hamilton Project, an economic think-tank that was the inheritor of former Treasury Secretary [and former Goldman Sachs CEO Robert] Rubin's generally pro-trade positions." [18]



It isn't just "hard left" anti-capitalists like me who are considered too radical for the new team's concept of "Change We Can Believe In." Even capitalists who prefer a slightly more equitable and high-road model of development are considered too far left [19] for the country. Never mind that majority of U.S. citizens hold progressive policy opinions well to the left of the business class and the nation's two dominant business parties [20].



Plus ca change, plus c'est la meme chose? No! Aux barricades [21], fellow citizens and workers. Let Axelrod's fears be realized.

Anonymous said...

Interesting that the three de facto leaders of today's Repukelican Party are a bimbo who had to go to five different colleges to get a BA in journalism (Palin), an unlicensed plumber and tax cheat (Joe the Plumber) and a junior college dropout and failed disc jockey (Limbaugh).

*

Interesting then on the subject of Bend, political leadership is by a 50 yr old mama's boy that doesn't work (BP), Intellectual is from a 'renter-loser' name HomerButter who runs the tow press, and then failed reporter HBM that tell's us that nothing is 'real'.

The three de-facto leaders of BEND: HBM, HOMER, & BP.

Anonymous said...

The affidavit claims the Sawyers sent more than a million dollars, to build that home.

*

We're talking about a normal RE shop here, where the fuck did that kind of CASH-FLOW come from? Especially in recent days/years even going back to 2006.

These FOLKS must have either been floating-1031, or taking investor-money, which is very common in these BEND recessions, is that 'investors' will give their CASH to the likes of the Sawyer-Five, to 'invest', and of COURSE no better place to invest than good ol 'mexico'. For no other reason, that our Realtors like all Bender's go down there during our winter ice-fog time of year, to warm-up.

Follow the MONEY, but this is some big fucking money, and WE STILL DON'T KNOW where it came from.

My guts tell me it had to be 'investor' money, so called RE pools are very common to this crowd, or 1031-cash-flow, which is another nice way to rake off money for these types of investments.

One thing is for SURE in 2008/2009, the Sawyer-Five weren't horse-trading MILLIONS by way of BEND RE commissions, "Where did all this money come from?" This is the question.

Anonymous said...

The three de-facto leaders of BEND: HBM, HOMER, & BP.

*

Don't forget the town drunk buster, who keeps all the bar-keeps of Bend employed.

It's getting much worse folks, at the D&D yesterday afternoon, and all the painters I know said there is NO work, they're close to leaving, and in PDX the landscapers & irrigator's similar say 'no work'. Roofing in PDX is still hot, go figure. Everything in Bend seems to be halted.

Like I have said all along, little to none of the OREO stimulus will be coming to PUG-BEND, its the least of his problems.

Anonymous said...

Big money, FBI, wads of cash, ... Mexico, '97 cocaine/heroin hwy', ... Bend cops, real estate, 1031, ... Bend christian churches, Moss banks, Bend restaurants serving cocaine like white wine, ... last minute 'will' changes, money laundering, ...

Large quantity's of money being made two years into a recession, when most realtors haven't seen a paycheck in 1-2 years....

There's a lot more missing to this story. At this point all we can do is 'connect the dots', and ask questions.

Anonymous said...

OPB's Ethan Lindsey reports from Bend, the epicenter of the state’s collapse.

Always #1, ... OPB calls BEND-ORYGUN toxic #1 loser in State for Real Estate Foreclosures, ... once again Bend is announced for what it is-is, all the while the BULL&SORE fiddle, ...

Foreclosures Weaken Oregon’s Real Estate Market

BY ETHAN LINDSEY

Bend, OR February 13, 2009 4:47

This week, Oregon was ranked fifth in the nation for its percentage of foreclosured homes.

OPB's Ethan Lindsey reports from Bend, the epicenter of the state’s collapse.


The number of home defaults in Bend doubled from 2007 to 2008.

A default begins the foreclosure process.

And things aren’t getting any better.

So far this month, Deschutes County records show an average of more than 10 homes plunging into default every single day.

And the median price of a home in Bend fell almost 20 percent last year.

Sheree MacRitchie: “It’s just supply and demand. We have a bigger supply, so prices have had to come down, quite a bit.”

Sheree MacRitchie is a realtor in Bend, and the president-elect of the Central Oregon Association of Realtors.

RealtyTrac, an industry service, says 1 of every 357 homes in Oregon is in some stage of foreclosure.

Sheree MacRitchie: “You’re going to laugh at this, I know, but there’s a lot of different energy that comes out of that home. I know that sounds very woo-woo.”

Some other realtors say they sometimes see a vicious cycle, with one foreclosed home dropping the price of all other sales in the neighborhood.

Anonymous said...

and then failed reporter HBM

Says the embittered old alky who spends his nights getting shitfaced at the D&D and his days posting obscene, illiterate rants on this site.

Anonymous said...

OPB's Ethan Lindsey reports from Bend, the epicenter of the state’s collapse.

Nice to see we're the epicenter, Ground Zero, the spot where the hydrogen bomb hit.

But it makes sense. Over the years I've become convinced there's something about Bend that attracts eccentric and/or delusional people. You've gotta be a little crazy to begin with to move to the middle of nowhere in search of a "lifestyle," often giving up a lucrative job to do it.

Yes, I include myself in that category. But at least I wasn't crazy enough to buy a bunch of properties at the height of the bubble like so many did.

I'm also not crazy enough -- or dishonest enough -- to steal and think I can get away with it.

Bewert said...

Re: Everything in Bend seems to be halted.

###

I was going through NWX yesterday to see Mark Swisher's estate sale, and there on a corner was a forlorn looking foundation with a RE For Sale sign. I'll go get a picture today, a a picture's worth a thousand words...

Anonymous said...

and then failed reporter HBM

Says the embittered old alky who spends his nights getting shitfaced at the D&D and his days posting obscene, illiterate rants on this site.

*

But then, if the alki hadn't written about HBM, then nobody would know who he is, or his history, ... HBM are you a tee-totaller(sp?) you sure have a hard-on for alki's.

I think if you have read much, you would know that most great writers get their best work done drunk or on drugs.

The recurring theme is 'pay not attention' to alki messenger's, move along, ... It's odd the only people who seem to think Bend can be fixed is me, lb, and dunc, dunc doesn't drink, & lb seems to enjoy a pint as much as me, remember I'm a hobbit, and hobbit's like 'ale' and Cascadian pipe weed.

HBM do you ever have fun? Or do you just think about evil pug's 24/7??

Sadly me&hbm have more in common, than we do in opposition.

Anonymous said...

failed reporter HBM that tell's us that nothing is 'real'.

*

I guess its mean, and of course I would never talk that way to your face, or anybody's face, but lets be honest, you moved to Bend 20+ years ago, and took the shitty job at the BULL, where you neither accelerated or de-accelerated you career, and now you work for virtually free for the SORE, during your time at the BULL you didn't win a Pullitzer, you just trudged, and drudged, and put in time to get the paycheck, and make retirement, and now here you are in BEND, stuck, awaiting the wife to finish her career.

I'm NOT trying to be mean, when I said 'failed', I think a better way to describe, is how we talk about Bend taking peoples MONEY, you come to BEND and you leave with nothing,

Look at the human spirit, you were probably full of piss&vinegar when you came to BEND, but you plodded under Chandler, and put in your time, and like so many people who 'came to bend to work', you career is/was suspended.

I'm not suggesting that you aren't intelligent, or a good-man, perhaps someday on your tombstone, I'll scratch with 'shit' "Here lays a good man", "Who made the tragic mistake of moving to Bend".

xxx-ooo-xxx

remember it valentines day

I can't tell you how many 100's of good people I have known over the years that moved to Bend, and took the only job in their field in this town, and then were over-worked, and under-appreciated, and most left, very few survived to finish the curse like you to its finality.

I hope that someday you make it to Hawaii so you can retire somewhere nice.

Anonymous said...

>>And the outcome was that the bill passed.

Likely a bad outcome for the Democrats. It won't solve our problems, but adds to the debt, which is part of the problem.

Anonymous said...

HBM are you a tee-totaller(sp?)

Nope. But I'm not a drunk either.

I think if you have read much, you would know that most great writers get their best work done drunk or on drugs.

Bullshit. But if it makes you feel better to believe it, go ahead.

PS: You are not a great writer. Or even a competent one.

Anonymous said...

Nice to see we're the epicenter, Ground Zero, the spot where the hydrogen bomb hit.

*

Always #1 here in BEND, you know some entrepreneurial realtor will have this twisted "Best time to BUY RE in Bend 20 years".

IF Oreo suspends the defaults, then the nature of this story will change, but I somehow doubt that people who aren't paying their MTG's will be able to stay in the house, its irrational. Most of the term(s) for these changes to the MTG to suspend 'default' involve restructuring the loan, which involves, having a job, and descent credit.

Also another missed point, but WELL DOCUMENTED is that in almost all cases to date, where people who were losing their home, that 'assistance' only slowed down the process, the fact is at 70% for historic 50%, most of of these people had NO BUSINESS owning a home, and will NEVER keep the home.

The 'foreclosure halt' is DEM talk to appease the liberals that they get some PORK, rather than it all going to the banks, but the assistance, will mean nothing in BEND, the land of the second home, and the highest un-employment in the country.

IHateToBurstYourBubble said...

RealtyTrac, an industry service, says 1 of every 357 homes in Oregon is in some stage of foreclosure.

That's really old data. Go to realtytrac.com today, and you see it's 1 in every 158 homes in foreclosure in Deschutes County.

Anonymous said...

I think if you have read much, you would know that most great writers get their best work done drunk or on drugs.

PS: You are not a great writer. Or even a competent one.

*

So I'm a 'bad writer', and an 'incompetent one'?? Like dunc says today only bad writers have fun. WRT to competency, its a lot like any other barrier to entry. I like a lot of writers like Hunter Thompson, or Edward Abbey that try to be different.

Well never fear HBM, I'll never give up my day job for a writing career, and NEVER in my fucking life have I been offered a nickel to write, and never have I asked.

I know this is troubling, but its the reason I don't spell check, or grammar check, or 'edit', I'm not getting paid, for you its a habit, but for me its an effort, and I NEVER put out effort when I'm working for free.

Anonymous said...

I guess its mean, and of course I would never talk that way to your face, or anybody's face

No, because you don't have the fucking balls. You prefer to spew your vomit anonymously.

when I said 'failed', I think a better way to describe, is how we talk about Bend taking peoples MONEY, you come to BEND and you leave with nothing

Not quite. Our net worth is a lot bigger now than when we left CA -- even leaving the equity in our house out of the calculation.

I'm not suggesting that you aren't intelligent, or a good-man,

Gosh, thanks.

perhaps someday on your tombstone, I'll scratch with 'shit' "Here lays [sic] a good man", "Who made the tragic mistake of moving to Bend".

It wasn't altogether a mistake. Every choice involves tradeoffs. Of course it didn't help my career, but I knew that when I made the decision to move here. And if making a shitload of money had been my goal in life I never would have been a journalist in the first place. My wife and I have had a pretty good life here -- better than most people's. It's just getting to be time to move on.

BTW the verb you wanted is "lies."

I hope that someday you make it to Hawaii so you can retire somewhere nice.

Thanks again. I hope so too.

Anonymous said...

Well never fear HBM, I'll never give up my day job for a writing career

Smart thinking.

and NEVER in my fucking life have I been offered a nickel to write

No surprise there.

Anonymous said...

the fact is at 70% for historic 50%, most of of these people had NO BUSINESS owning a home, and will NEVER keep the home.

*

What I'm trying to say is that historic 'home ownership' when this is all over will drop far below the historic average of 50%, the peak was near 69% (70), thus ten's of millions of ameriKKKans are sitting in homes they have NO business 'owning'.

Home ownership has always been the 'right' to pay property tax, and at best forced-savings, or deferred income for folks like myself.

Like homer always says, "rent, and invest the difference", especially when the COST of home-ownership is over 3-4X of income, what is Bend today 6X??

Even when the Bend home falls to 3X of income, for a lot of people who don't have 20% down, or a good job, or good credit, or who just move a lot, home-ownership is bullshit.

The basic issue is that during the RE bubble that 'countrywide' ran out of suckers to sell loans too, and lobbied the government to relax the rules to include minoritys, the poor, and the retarded, ... Ok fine, so now we have millions that 'own' a home, but will NEVER fix the roof, or paint the house, or do any 'maintenance'.

So now we're going to have MORE homes go to seed in history, ... so what.

So the CITY of BEND will buy 1,000's of homes from HOLLERN-et-all or MOSS&CO, and make them into affordable housing, and talk shit about the renters becoming owners, ... but in time it will all become poverty slum, as this is always what happens when you give people something for nothing, and they don't have any 'investment'.

Anonymous said...

I guess its mean, and of course I would never talk that way to your face, or anybody's face

No, because you don't have the fucking balls. You prefer to spew your vomit anonymously.

*

I agree that no balls are required, but so what? To me we're exchanging ideas, hopefully you have left the go at the door.

One on one it really never helps to give the other man your real opinion, as generally if he's not educated the first initial response is of course to fight. But given that your a highly educated man, I'm sure you could 'yell' this shit in your face, and you would respond like Ghandi or Thoreau, ...

This venue allows us to engage in our style, if we attempted this one-one, the other would never give the other a chance to speak, the loudest or most aggressive would always 'win'.

This venue allows us to discuss any subject, and engage into the topic to completion, if the vile&bile was SO FUCKING terrible, then you would be 'bend gone', but you seem to always keep coming back for more.

Note that 'EYE' never complain about personal attacks, they have always been quite common to these bulletin boards since the 1970's, and when there is no-moderation it allows the all the 'facts' to be dumped, unlike a board like BEBB where KUNTS pick & choose what gets posted, or the BULL/SORE where KUNTS pick what gets printed.

So here we are where anybody can 'debate' any topic they wish, and go on forever, ... and yet nobody ever gets the final word, we simply stop when the topic has becoming boring or 'redundant'.

Anonymous said...

I think if you have read much, you would know that most great writers get their best work done drunk or on drugs.

Bullshit. But if it makes you feel better to believe it, go ahead.

*

You haven't read much have you? Art has always been fueled by ferment-ables, they be bread, wine, cheese, ... good drugs, in the 1800's when people could freely buy cocaine, or opium in stores. So go ahead and believe that todays 'creativity' all controlled by NY-BANKER's and WALL-ST, ... go believe that ALL good writing @theBULL is the result of lack of substance abuse.

People especially creative people have always been leveraging their emotions with drink & drugs, but then this is BEND, the land of the PUG, the land of the BOOR, the land of the vanilla-manilla PALIN/ECKMAN clone, straight from BURNS-OR, made good by marrying a rich doctor in BEND. Stepford wives, and writers who are pure as the snow, ...

Such is Bend, and then you wonder why its such a drab fucking place that lacks culture, music, ... FUN,... like the 'winterfest' put on this weekend by the SORE, what a fucking MISERABLE shit-hole @ the old-mill.

Last night @deschutes & D&D everyone was complaining the same "I'm NOT going there, why fucking pay $6 for 10oz of beer in a little plastic cup?", yes good question, esp since you can get wildfire @JC's for $2/pint, ...

So yes, we can ski, and hike in BEND, but what about the nights? Especially for people who don't own a fucking TV,...

Do you know in IRELAND something like over 40% of the public go to the pub at night to sing songs?? and have a few beers, but then those people are alive, the people of BEND died a long time ago in their zeal to get rich.

Anonymous said...

I think if you have read much, you would know that most great writers get their best work done drunk or on drugs.

Bullshit. But if it makes you feel better to believe it, go ahead.

*

You haven't read much have you? Art has always been fueled by ferment-ables, they be bread, wine, cheese, ... good drugs, in the 1800's when people could freely buy cocaine, or opium in stores. So go ahead and believe that todays 'creativity' all controlled by NY-BANKER's and WALL-ST, ... go believe that ALL good writing @theBULL is the result of lack of substance abuse.

People especially creative people have always been leveraging their emotions with drink & drugs, but then this is BEND, the land of the PUG, the land of the BOOR, the land of the vanilla-manilla PALIN/ECKMAN clone, straight from BURNS-OR, made good by marrying a rich doctor in BEND. Stepford wives, and writers who are pure as the snow, ...

Such is Bend, and then you wonder why its such a drab fucking place that lacks culture, music, ... FUN,... like the 'winterfest' put on this weekend by the SORE, what a fucking MISERABLE shit-hole @ the old-mill.

Last night @deschutes & D&D everyone was complaining the same "I'm NOT going there, why fucking pay $6 for 10oz of beer in a little plastic cup?", yes good question, esp since you can get wildfire @JC's for $2/pint, ...

So yes, we can ski, and hike in BEND, but what about the nights? Especially for people who don't own a fucking TV,...

Do you know in IRELAND something like over 40% of the public go to the pub at night to sing songs?? and have a few beers, but then those people are alive, the people of BEND died a long time ago in their zeal to get rich.

Anonymous said...

OH-OH so close to HOME, and SO far from God ( jeebus ). CRB is CACB fucked.

Columbia River Bank Told to Improve
Saturday, February 14, 2009 2:53 PM


(Source: The Columbian)trackingBy Courtney Sherwood, The Columbian, Vancouver, Wash.

Feb. 14--Columbia River Bank, which has one branch and one operations center in Clark County, has been ordered by Oregon and federal regulators to improve its capital levels, increase its loan loss reserves and seek Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. approval before lending to certain types of borrowers.

The bank has already made progress on the Feb. 9 directive, which it had been told might be coming, said Terry Cochran, Columbia River's chief executive officer. But Columbia River has been particularly hard hit by the housing downturn, especially in Bend, Ore., and 2009 promises to be a challenging year.

"Our goal in 2009 is to be a stronger bank, but not necessarily a bigger bank," Cochran said. "Growth is not an item in our vocabulary for 2009."

Cochran has spearheaded many changes at the bank since he left retirement to take its helm in October. He had served as the bank's CEO from 1981 to 2001, and returned following the resignation of Roger Christensen as chief executive.

The bank has increased its loan loss allowance to $25.2 million, from $17.1 million at the end of June. This reserve helps the bank to absorb losses if borrowers default.

Columbia River also attracted $59.8 million in stable deposits in its fourth quarter, and has stopped making real estate loans and has pulled back on other lending.

"When I first started, there was a little concern about liquidity," Cochran said. "Our liquidity has improved markedly in the last three or four months."

Old numbers

The state and federal order was based on the bank's June 30 financial numbers. Figures from that date raised concerns about bad loans, liquidity and a high level of brokered deposits, said Lisa Morawski, spokeswoman for the Oregon Division of Finance and Corporate Securities.

Reliance on brokered deposits, deemed a risky way to fuel growth, was a major factor in the failure of the Bank of Clark County in January.

From September to December, Columbia River Bank reduced brokered deposits from 29.3 percent of all deposits to 23.5 percent, and made improvements in most areas singled out by regulators.

But challenges still remain.

Largely because of real estate development lending, the bank's total non-accruing loans in 2008 grew from $34.9 million at the end of June to $63.4 million at the end of September and $92.5 million at the end of the year.

Bad loans and a need to reserve against more defaults contributed to Columbia River Bank's total loss of $26.4 million last year, which followed a profit of $14.5 million in 2007.

To face the mounting financial pressures, the bank has cut staffing by 14.3 percent since September, sold its credit card portfolio for a $1.2 million gain and reduced salaries by $1.1 million.

Much of the worst may now be working its way off the bank's balance sheet, as borrowers who have been struggling the longest either liquidate, refinance or overcome their struggles, Cochran said.

"The worst quarter was the third quarter, and the fourth quarter was better on many measures," Cochran said. "I see good signs, but I also still have concern about the loan portfolio. ... This year will be a challenge, not only for banks, but for most of our bank customers. It's going to be a tough year."

Anonymous said...

. Over the years I've become convinced there's something about Bend that attracts eccentric and/or delusional people. You've gotta be a little crazy to begin with to move to the middle of nowhere in search of a "lifestyle," often giving up a lucrative job to do it.

*


If that were true then BEND would have music, and art, and be fun.

Instead BEND is a PUG Limbaugh shit-hole of a town.

Where republicans rule, and the avg citizen a SO-CALI transplant, that brings their fucking value and rush.

Delusional? Yes. Eccentric NO? Bend is Vanilla ice cream and ronald raygun 100%.

Anonymous said...

Delusional? Yes. Eccentric NO? Bend is Vanilla ice cream and ronald raygun 100%.

Not all eccentrics are liberals. Kent Couch the Lawn Chair Balloon Man is a big Republican. Had Republican campaign signs all over his gas station property at Greenwood and 27th last year.

And then there's Loren Parks, amateur sex therapist and Daddy Warbucks to Bill Sizemore.

Anonymous said...

You haven't read much have you?

Nope. As a Princeton English major I'm barely able to read at all.

Anonymous said...

Art has always been fueled by ferment-ables, they be bread, wine, cheese, ... good drugs, in the 1800's when people could freely buy cocaine, or opium in stores.

I never said great writers didn't drink; I said you were full of shit when you said most of them were drunks and/or drug addicts. Any great writers who were drunks and/or drug addicts were great in spite of their addictions, not because of them.

Actually this weird idea that you have to be a drunk and/or a drug addict to be "creative" is a quite recent development. Started in the 1920s, I think, with Scott Fitzgerald, Dashiell Hammett and those guys.

So go ahead and believe that todays 'creativity' all controlled by NY-BANKER's and WALL-ST

What an incredibly idiotic statement. I never believed that for an instant.

go believe that ALL good writing @theBULL is the result of lack of substance abuse.

There is no good writing at The Bull. Costa fired all the good writers, probably because he doesn't want to be shown up. He's the dullest writer I've ever read.

Anonymous said...

So why am I here bandying words with an imbecile? Well, it beats freezing my ass off at Winter Fest.

Different topic: Check out the pic of Steve Wilson (former principal broker with The Sawyer Five) on the KOHD site. All these real estate jokers wear the identical kind of black leather coat. Must be a uniform, a way they can recognize each other at a distance.

Anonymous said...

My apologies: The pic of Wilson is on the KTVZ site, not KOHD's.

Anonymous said...

"Do you know in IRELAND something like over 40% of the public go to the pub at night to sing songs?? and have a few beers, but then those people are alive, the people of BEND died a long time ago in their zeal to get rich."

Dude, who gives a fuck about drinking? Sad that people measure a town by its watering holes. Get a life...

Bewert said...

Re: "Do you know in IRELAND something like over 40% of the public go to the pub at night to sing songs?? and have a few beers, but then those people are alive, the people of BEND died a long time ago in their zeal to get rich."

###

In Affluent New Ireland, Rural Pubs Are So Yesterday

The get rich fast flu hit the Irish particularly hard. St. Clueless, you really need to get out more...

Bewert said...

The comments in the KTVZ story on the Sawyers are close in and vicious.

This is a small city. It's interesting how social justice tries to work.

Anonymous said...

The get rich fast flu hit the Irish particularly hard. St. Clueless, you really need to get out more...

*

What that be PUSSY BOY read your dribble or go do the pub crawl in the real Ireland??

First of all dick-brain ( fucked too many toad-stools? ), the 'rural' pub scene is another animal, it requires driving, and DUI laws 'long ago' shut that gig down, as here, ... Ireland like ameriKKKa if you can't walk to the pub, ...

Pussy have you even been to Ireland? Have you ever been to Tralee or Donnegal, or Lemerick, or Galway? I know the pussy reads from SLC and knows all, ... the truth be that a vast majority of Irish folk get most of their socializing in the PUB's, just like in the HOBBIT movies of course here in the States 'post depression/prohibition' people went to home-drinking and stayed to home drinkin, but for much of the world, they live not like Mormons, but the pussy he has it all at home with all his wives, ...

Anonymous said...

Good Shit hbm, I did go down to 'winterfest' this afternoon, and it was everything that everyone said it was, ...

Most noticeable was the GIANT SIGNS that said "PAID FOR BY KNIFE-RIVER an MDU Company", not long ago, it would have taken the Sherlock-Holmes of the Great Bpussy himself to tie the Knife-River to MDU(MOSS), but there it was in BRIGHT LIGHT @winterfest.

So in my (hic) I have a new theory, that in the great hour of BEND FASCISM, all our best and MOST beautiful company's will go 'government', that be the government will own cacb, knife-river, and of course suterra, and les-schwab, and heretofore any bashing of said great 'institutions' shall be of the death penalty!! Eh!

WRT to Fitzgerald, and or the other 1920's dopers that put USA writers on the map, ... well what can be said, those were the roaring 20's and good shit happened, WTF came during depression years? OH, yes Gay EDGAR HOOVER took over HOLLYWOOD and sanitized it and forever removed nude photos of Betty Page.

Anonymous said...

Anonymous hbm said...

So why am I here bandying words with an imbecile? Well, it beats freezing my ass off at Winter Fest.

*

Words dear to me heart, from one imbecile to another, but the winter-fest that be a SORE event, certainly the KEY writer and BRAIN of the SORE can help support the EVENT!!!

It was OK, but as all Bend 'events' there were more NAZI's, e.g. guards, gendarmes, alcohol-monitor's, cops, firemen, and other 'hall-monitors' than paying customers, so fucking BEND.

Bewert said...

St. Clueless (hic) it's not even worth responding to your drivel.

Anonymous said...

Nope. As a Princeton English major I'm barely able to read at all.

*

So here we are full-circle, to what I said earlier today, so you went to Princeton, and majored in English, and then wasted it on the Bend Bulletin.

This is good to know. Now I'm going to have to drink extra tonight to inflict the pity of thought that you wasted so many of your productive years in such a town of small minded 'pugs'.

So given your 'ivy league' credentials, why do you lower your self to such trivial dribble on the SORE wrt dumb fucking pugs?? I mean you could write the sting&gore, why do you hold back so much? Certainly given the SORE is our 'manufactured' left/progressive paper, a real ivy-league intellectual could blossom. No?

I highly suggest before your BIG EXIT, that you really start raising your level, ... start assuming that the Bend reader has not a 3rd grade education level but assume an 8th or 9th ( wall st urinal assume 7th ), this could bring a Pulizter to the SORE, why the hell not??

Anonymous said...

St. Clueless (hic) it's not even worth responding to your drivel.

*

What about you Bruce Pussy, did you major in Enlish at Princeton??

Anonymous said...

Any great writers who were drunks and/or drug addicts were great in spite of their addictions, not because of them.

*

There's NOT a fucking thing today that you have said that we disagree with, I just think that highly creative people are MORE sensitive to the PAIN of life, and thus tend to go to extremes.

Certainly being a BEND METH-HEAD is not a prerequisite to being hired at St Charles. Nor is the guy at Walmart with the sign that say's "Will work for Food", an endorsement to be hired by Public ED.

Substance Abuse is not a precursor to creativity, on the other hand, success quite often is a precursor to abuse.

I think I me & quim, and TT, have killed this dead horse in the past, but to often in ameriKKKa, the reason that MOST men lead boring troubled lives in 'quiet desperation' is that they are a failure beholden to the company or the boss-hogg, and thus the silence.

Anonymous said...

One other note while the night is young, and the WINTERFEST it ripe.

SO the $$$ comes from MDU(MOSS), but ownership of 'winterfest' is SWITZER aka SORE-BOY, the boss-hogg of our own HBM.

It's pretty fucking awesome that this late hour in the rape & pillage of the Bend taxpayer, that MOSS&Co can hold the banner "MDU PAID FOR EVERYTHING", ... If this were the mafia or mob, you would almost think that a mob-boss had gone philanthropy or equiv?

Why did they HAVE TO HAVE 'winterfest' @old-mill this year rather than downtown, insiders say it was because Bill Smith a crony of HOLLERN said so, see the OLD-MILL is bend dead, and they think this slut paid by MDU (MOSS) will bring it back to life from the dead. Hell NOT even the OldMILL martini bar has brought life back to Bend's Dead Cougars.

Such is Bend.

So HBM has all this fucking Princeton writing ability, and background, ... and holds it all back for what? Certainly as Mark Twain say's "truth in BEND is much more strange than fiction, as fiction has to make sense", in Bend everything is non-real, and surreal.

Anonymous said...

So in my (hic) I have a new theory, that in the great hour of BEND FASCISM, all our best and MOST beautiful company's will go 'government', that be the government will own cacb, knife-river, and of course suterra, and les-schwab, and heretofore any bashing of said great 'institutions' shall be of the death penalty!! Eh!


###

Buster your a fucking imbecile. Everybody knows that Obama will never put good money into CACB, Knife-River, or the Old Mill.

Anonymous said...

the winter-fest that be a SORE event, certainly the KEY writer and BRAIN of the SORE can help support the EVENT!!!

Very flattering, but untrue. My role at tSW is very, very minor.

I don't care much for Bend's "fests." They're basically all the same (food, wine and beer, booths selling crafts and "art," a few bands) so why go out to one in the cold? I usually make the SummerFest (the only one where you can pretty much rely on good weather) and that's about it.

My wonderful wife of almost 40 years and I are now going out to dinner, so hasta manana.

Bewert said...

Re: What about you Bruce Pussy, did you major in Enlish at Princeton??

###

Double-major, Management Info Systems and Business Finance, state school in Eau Claire, Wisconsin.

My finest academic accomplishment was probably scoring in the 97th percentile in the Graduate Management Admission Test aka GMAT. Back when I was thinking of getting an MBA. Better than the average Harvard entrant.

But my proudest was leading a team that used the first IBM PC in our college to log on to Compuserve, download the necessary data, and pushed that data to the school mainframe to create 3D Black-Scholes models of stock option valuations. That was a hell of a push at the time in 1983.

So much for old stories.

I still really don't care that much what you think, Captain Clueless.

Anonymous said...

OY VEY !!!

I always check stats 1/2 way through the month. This is the first time the median price has fallen below 200k in a very long time. I doubt it will stay there by months end, but the only stuff selling are REO's and short sales.
So far 24 sold @ $195k median. We will see what the cheerleaders can do to turn this around.

Anonymous said...

So far 24 sold @ $195k median. We will see what the cheerleaders can do to turn this around.

*

Wasn't 1-2 years ago when we suggested that Bend would see $180k, $120k, hell $240k and they called us imbeciles, morons, dweebs, ... we'll here we are darn near the $180k median, and we're still imbeciles,...

But its not like were rudderless, we still have BP, HBM, and BUTTER leading the big ship moron through rough waters.

Soon we'll see $120k medians, and then will people freak? I doubt it, its all irrelevant, soon nobody will be able to get a loan, ... but the future is bright.

I can see the new Bend, with Mayor Bruce Pussy, unelected of course but brought in by exec session, and the BULL folds and HBM runs the new NewBull, and of course HomerButter is asked by OREO to be commerce secretary.

Anonymous said...

Pinnacle Bank

In its press release announcing the closing of Pinnacle Bank, Oregon regulators said the institution was insolvent and was facing liquidity problems from its reliance on brokered deposits.

TheStreet.com Ratings had assigned Pinnacle an E- financial strength rating in January, a downgrade from a D- in September. Nonperforming assets (mainly nonaccruing commercial construction loans) comprised 12.52% of total assets as of Dec. 31, and the institution didn't appear to have sufficient capital to ride out anticipated loan charge-offs.

Pinnacle Bank had $73 million in total assets and $64 million in deposits. Washington Trust Bank is acquiring most of the assets and all the deposits, including any uninsured balances and brokered CDs.

The FDIC estimated the cost to its insurance fund would be $12.1 million.

Anonymous said...

Dunc,

Basic high school English: Always write "..neither.....nor..." not "neither Linda or I".

The rule is "..neither... nor.."
and "..either.....or.."

You write books????

Anonymous said...

So much for old stories.

###


No please BP, we want more, when did you meet trudi in high school and figured out you would never have to find a job?

Your a mentor to all us stay at home guys.

Anonymous said...

Basic high school English: Always write "..neither.....nor..." not "neither Linda or I".

*

I can never remember is it the peter principal or parkinsons law that says that when complex subjects are on the table, most will gravitate towards trivia.

Bewert said...

I had a big story writ--but not. T and I were two of the best skiers in Alta, and we ended up together. 'Nuff said.

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