Down with ONDA (Oregon Natural Desert Association)

Down with ONDA (Oregon Natural Desert Association) ONDA is not what it seems. Their only concern is to make Eastern Oregon their personal playground. They don't care about our economic future.

Join me in boycotting the businesses that support them. I will post these businesses as I find them.

04/01/2014

So what I'm finding out is that ONDA is proposing 800 miles of trails starting in Deshutes County, going through Lake, Harney, Malheur and so forth. Also going into Northern California...they will be at the CRT meeting 5:30pm Chamber of Commerce tomorrow, April 2nd ...anyone who wants to have a voice in this needs to plan on being there! Get the word out please!!!!

Our regular CRT meeting will be held on Wednesday April 2nd at 5:30 – 7pm in the Harney County Community Center (484 N. ...
04/01/2014

Our regular CRT meeting will be held on Wednesday April 2nd at 5:30 – 7pm in the Harney County Community Center (484 N. Broadway Burns). The Agenda includes:

5:30-6pm: GEODC (Greater Eastern Oregon Development Corp) CEDS presentation.
6:00 – 6:30: ONDA (Oregon Natural Desert Association) Desert Trail presentation
6:30 – 7pm: Harney County Film Presentation (Steve Grasty)

Randy Fulton - Director
Harney County Economic Development
484 N. Broadway
Burns, OR 97720
Tel: 541-573-1638
Fax: 541-573-2341
Cell: 541-589-3994
[email protected]
www.harneycounty.org





Welcome-Harney County Economic Development
www.harneycounty.org
Harney County Economic Development, committed to the growth and development of the prospering community of Harney County, Oregon..

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Harney County Economic Development, committed to the growth and development of the prospering community of Harney County, Oregon.

01/18/2014

So now we have to fight the ALDF,( Animal Legal Defense Fund)
Stupid people!~ maybe if they witnessed the destruction of what the coyotes can do but I doubt it! Going to try and put something on their website but understand they don't let anyone comment if its against their beliefs...wow aren't they just a dandy group! Damn tired of this crap, wish people who don't know what their talking about would stay in their own backyards!

01/08/2014

more food for thought...hunting is not one of the threats to sage grouse...they are still being hunted even though they are "in danger" and may be put on the "endangered species list"! What the heck? I'm confused! If they are so endangered then why in the heck are they still being hunted? Anybody out there with an answer for me on this?

01/08/2014

so here's some more food for thought..grazing...the livestock eat the grass and yes some of the invasive weeds so they keep the wildland fire fuels down. They HELP the land by eating the fuels that help cause the fires..so why in the world do we want to stop grazing? Again someone's agenda? Think about the Steen's and the fires we now have and no one can fight them except on the ground a foot or by air, we can not get to them because the roads are closed, its a wilderness and no vehicles are allowed so the fuels continue to grow and become more ready for fires..

01/08/2014

ok, so been thinking pretty hard about this sage grouse....
#1 threat is wildland fire..so how is closing roads going to help? Plain and simple its not! The roads are needed for the firefighters to get in and fight the damn fire. In fact in one report I read it stated that 2 track roads and existing roads needed to be maintained in order to be able and get to the areas..it does also state that they should be closed during high risk fire times but that already happens...so why are they saying that roads needs to be closed...is this someone's agenda and this is their way of getting the roads closed?

01/08/2014

Went to the meeting tonight about the Sage Grouse, was very impressed at the turnout! Thank you people for showing up! I got so hot in that room I had to go outside and get some cold air..I listened to what I could hear from the very back of the room..I have been downloading and reading many different things I have found on the internet..very interesting and I will be sharing my thoughts and views with everyone as soon as I get them together.
But for now I have learned that in 3 different reports the major threats to the Sage Grouse are not closing roads and stopping grazing..They are as follows
1. Wildland fires
2. Invasive weeds such as medushead and cheatgrass
3. Juniper encroachment
Interesting to say the least! I have been collecting my thoughts on all of this and I am coming up with my letter as to what I can suggest for the Sage Grouse...Stay tuned!

01/06/2014

Truly if you have a moment then please read this, I think you will be amazed at how things are happening without even realizing it!

01/04/2014

Orig­i­nally pub­lished in Eco-Logic Online in 1997:

In com­mu­ni­ties across Amer­ica, “stake­holder” coun­cils are being formed, or have already been formed, to advance Agenda 21 to trans­form cities and towns into “sus­tain­able com­mu­ni­ties.”
This is very interesting and worth the time to read!
People does this sound familiar....think about ONDA and the Steen's...We need to show up at the Senior Center on Tuesday, January 7th, 5:30pm!

The “con­sen­sus process” is used to gain the appear­ance of pub­lic sup­port for the prin­ci­ples of sus­tain­abil­ity, applied to a par­tic­u­lar com­mu­nity. The process is designed to take the pub­lic pol­icy– mak­ing func­tion away from elected offi­cials and place it in the hands of non-elected offi­cials, while giv­ing the appear­ance of broad pub­lic input into the decision-making process.

Stake­holder coun­cils are called by many names and are cre­ated for a vari­ety of spe­cific pur­poses. What­ever they are called, and what­ever the stated pur­pose for which they are cre­ated, they all have sev­eral com­mon char­ac­ter­is­tics, and all have a com­mon objec­tive: the imple­men­ta­tion of some com­po­nent of Agenda 21. While each com­mu­nity may expe­ri­ence a vari­ety of dif­fer­ent approaches, it is nec­es­sary to rec­og­nize the com­mon prin­ci­ples that guide all such councils.

Objec­tives

The gen­eral objec­tive of all stake­holder coun­cils is to pro­mote three pri­mary val­ues: envi­ron­men­tal pro­tec­tion, equity, and sus­tain­able eco­nomic devel­op­ment. To pro­mote these val­ues, a com­pre­hen­sive “com­mu­nity” plan must be devel­oped which links, or “inte­grates,” all three val­ues. In some com­mu­ni­ties, stake­holder coun­cils are formed to work on a sin­gle com­po­nent of a com­pre­hen­sive plan that is to be com­bined with the work of other coun­cils that may be work­ing on dif­fer­ent com­po­nents in dif­fer­ent geo­graph­i­cal areas of the same com­mu­nity. The var­i­ous coun­cils may or may not know about the work of other coun­cils that is under­way simultaneously.

Cur­rently, the most com­mon stake­holder coun­cils are related to the “vision­ing” process to cre­ate “Sus­tain­able Com­mu­ni­ties;” Ecosys­tem Man­age­ment Plans, Her­itage Area or Cor­ri­dor Plans, River Pro­tec­tion Plans, Bios­phere Reserves, and Eco­nomic Renewal Plans. Almost always, the plan will encom­pass more than one polit­i­cal juris­dic­tion. In some instances, sev­eral coun­ties and states may be included, as in the case of the East Texas Ecosys­tem Plan, which embraced 73 Texas coun­ties and a small por­tion of Louisiana. In other instances, the plan may be con­fined to a sin­gle county or city. When a plan focuses on a sin­gle town or county, some­one, some­where, is plan­ning to incor­po­rate that plan into a multi-jurisdictional plan.

The stated pur­pose of the stake­holder coun­cil may be related to envi­ron­men­tal pro­tec­tion only, which is usu­ally referred to as nat­ural resource man­age­ment. It could be related to any one of sev­eral other sin­gle sub­jects such as eco­nomic renewal, edu­ca­tion, emer­gency response, or trans­porta­tion. Or, the stated pur­pose could be to develop a com­pre­hen­sive plan that addresses all the issues. What­ever the stated pur­pose, it will attempt to inte­grate envi­ron­men­tal pro­tec­tion, equity, and sus­tain­able eco­nomic development.

The Process

Stake­holder coun­cils do not sim­ply appear. Nor are they formed as the result of cit­i­zen response to a com­mon prob­lem. Some­one cre­ates them — with great care. They could be formed by a gov­ern­ment agency, or by sev­eral gov­ern­ment agen­cies work­ing together; they could be formed by NGOs (non-governmental orga­ni­za­tions) or by a com­bi­na­tion of gov­ern­ment agen­cies and NGOs — which is often the case. The Envi­ron­men­tal Pro­tec­tion Agency and sev­eral other fed­eral agen­cies offer grants to NGOs and local gov­ern­ment agen­cies as incen­tives to cre­ate these coun­cils and develop plans to achieve sus­tain­able com­mu­ni­ties. Who­ever insti­gates the process will care­fully select indi­vid­u­als from the com­mu­nity to par­tic­i­pate in a meet­ing, which will evolve into a series of meet­ings. The indi­vid­u­als selected will be cho­sen because they are known to share philo­soph­i­cal objec­tives, and to rep­re­sent broad seg­ments of the com­mu­nity. The poor, dis­abled, indige­nous pop­u­la­tions are specif­i­cally tar­geted. Rep­re­sen­ta­tives from gov­ern­ment agen­cies are also tar­geted. Typ­i­cally, at least one elected offi­cial from each of the polit­i­cal juris­dic­tions in the plan area are invited. Some­one from indus­try, and a landowner or two are also among those invited.

For­ma­tion of the orig­i­nal group is extremely impor­tant. Peo­ple who sup­port the objec­tives of the orig­i­na­tors must dom­i­nate the group. There also has to be an appear­ance of broad com­mu­nity rep­re­sen­ta­tion. The orig­i­nal group may be quite small, or it could be quite large, depend­ing upon the objec­tives and the size of the com­mu­nity and the plan area. The ini­tial meet­ing is rarely adver­tised. Par­tic­i­pants are invited per­son­ally, and fre­quently hold sev­eral meet­ings before the press or the com­mu­nity is ever informed. By the time the pub­lic becomes aware of the exis­tence of the stake­hold­ers coun­cil, it is pretty well orga­nized and its work is well underway.

The Tech­niques

The Con­sen­sus Process — often called “col­lab­o­ra­tive decision-making” — is a process that begins with a pre­de­ter­mined out­come. The agen­cies or NGOs that assem­ble an Ecosys­tem Man­age­ment vision­ing coun­cil, intend to estab­lish an ecosys­tem man­age­ment plan. The orig­i­na­tors know what they want included in the plan before the first meet­ing is ever sched­uled. Those who assem­ble Sus­tain­able Com­mu­nity vision­ing coun­cils intend to estab­lish a plan to achieve their vision of a sus­tain­able com­mu­nity. The lit­er­a­ture will say that broad com­mu­nity input is sought. In real­ity, the out­come has been decided before the first meet­ing begins; the real pur­pose for the process is to “edu­cate” the participants.

A trained facil­i­ta­tor will con­duct the meet­ings. A consensus-building meet­ing is vastly dif­fer­ent from a meet­ing con­ducted by Robert’s Rules of Order. In a consensus-building meet­ing — there are no votes. There is no debate. The idea is to avoid
con­flict and con­fronta­tion between and among dif­fer­ing views. The facil­i­ta­tor leads the dis­cus­sion with ques­tions that are skill­fully crafted to elicit no response. Ques­tions are framed to force respon­dents to dis­agree with a state­ment with which most rea­son­able peo­ple would agree. For exam­ple, a facil­i­ta­tor might ask: “Is there any­one who would dis­agree that we have a respon­si­bil­ity to leave future gen­er­a­tions suf­fi­cient resources to meet their need?” Obvi­ously, no rea­son­able per­son can dis­agree with such a state­ment. Silence — no response — implies that a con­sen­sus has been reached on the need to pro­tect resources for future gen­er­a­tions. The exam­ple is an over­sim­pli­fi­ca­tion, but it illus­trates the tech­nique used by the facilitator.

Despite the care­ful selec­tion of the par­tic­i­pants, the facil­i­ta­tor may encounter an indi­vid­ual who does dis­agree with the ques­tions. The facil­i­ta­tor is trained to mar­gin­al­ize such an indi­vid­ual by mak­ing him or her look silly by ask­ing another,
even more extreme ques­tion, such as: “Surely you are not telling this group that you feel no respon­si­bil­ity to your grand­chil­dren, are you?” With such tac­tics, one who objects or dis­agrees very often is quickly labeled as a trou­ble­maker and is either ignored or excluded from the group.

Even­tu­ally, a pro­fes­sional will write a report. It will be “The Plan,” or the doc­u­ment pro­duced by the group. Regard­less of what the group’s stated pur­pose may be, the final doc­u­ment will include lan­guage that says the plan is designed to inte­grate ecol­ogy, equity, and the econ­omy; envi­ron­men­tal pro­tec­tion, equity, and sus­tain­able development.

The Play­ers

The play­ers will include fed­eral, state, and/or local gov­ern­ment appointed offi­cials. Work­ing hand-in-hand, there will also be one or more rep­re­sen­ta­tives from NGOs that may or may not be rec­og­niz­able. The Nature Con­ser­vancy and the Sierra Club are two of the more active NGOs insti­gat­ing these stake­holder coun­cils. Fre­quently, how­ever, a new NGO will be cre­ated expressly for the pur­pose of insti­gat­ing a stake­holder coun­cil in a given com­mu­nity. One or more of the larger NGOs, or an orga­ni­za­tion such as the Tides Foun­da­tion, will sup­ply the start-up money and send a cou­ple of pro­fes­sion­als into a com­mu­nity to cre­ate an NGO such as “Friends of Hol­low Rock, Inc.” or some­thing sim­i­lar. Some­times an exist­ing local NGO will be used, with sub­stan­tial finan­cial and lead­er­ship help from a larger NGO, or with help from the fed­eral gov­ern­ment through one of the many grants that are avail­able for the purpose.

When­ever it is pos­si­ble, a well-known local fig­ure — a politi­cian, busi­ness­man, or landowner will be cre­ated to be the spokesper­son. In Racine, Wis­con­sin, no less a fig­ure than Samuel C. John­son, CEO of John­son Wax Com­pany was cho­sen to con­vince his neigh­bors that sus­tain­abil­ity was the only way to go. Such indi­vid­u­als give cred­i­bil­ity to the process and can have enor­mous per­sua­sive power over local residents.

With such a cast of play­ers, using tech­niques that are skill­ful to the point of decep­tion, in a process designed to pro­duce a pre­de­ter­mined out­come, it is lit­tle won­der that the objec­tives of Agenda 21 are being imple­mented in cities, towns and
across the coun­try­side of Amer­ica. Those who rec­og­nize the inher­ent dan­gers in allow­ing non-elected bureau­crats to develop pub­lic pol­icy, and those who can see the social­is­tic under­pin­nings of a man­aged soci­ety in the objec­tives of Agenda 21, need to rise to the occa­sion to stop the under­pin­ning of the United States Constitution.

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The Con­sen­sus Process by Henry Lamb

01/04/2014

if you would like to know about what an endangered species listing of Sage Grouse would do to your community please attend the public meeting Jan 7 at 5:30 at the Senior Center. Issues run from actions limiting access to public lands in much of the 7 SE Counties to considering (or not considering) the impacts to our communities social and economic aspects. PLEASE attend we need to show that this community is interested and concerned.

01/06/2011

I 'm sorry to say I've been so busy with just life that I haven't been very good about relating any stories or information on this page. I apologize and will try to start being better as of today! I will be looking for information that I can relate on....

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