CRC Opposition and Alternatives Rally

12 Noon on Sunday, April 5th at Waterfront Park/Morrison Bridge (on west side of river)

Press release below:

Bill Bradbury To Speak At CRC Opposition And Alternatives Rally

Citizen’s Coalition Schedules Rally for Noon, Sunday, April 5th Waterfront Park, Releases Satirical Video

A grassroots coalition of Portlanders and Vancouverites opposed to the current scope and direction of the Columbia River Crossing project will host an Opposition and Alternatives Rally at Waterfront Park. The event is schedued for noon, Sunday, April 5th, on the lawn of Portland’s Waterfront Park – just north of the Hawthorne bridge. Rally organizers call this the opening salvo in a sustained campaign to block funding for the project in its current form, and to offer alternatives that match the desires of a community to be fiscally responsible, address environmental challenges and tackle livability issues effecting the region.

“This part of the world has made truly sustainable choices in the past, an urban growth boundary, investment in mass transit, bicycle infrastructure and the stoppage of the Mt Hood Freeway and Harbor Highway,” rally organizer Joe Kurmaskie said. ” Innovative decisions that have made us an attractive city to live in or visit. Putting up a four billion dollar, 12 lane mega-bridge will change all that, and not for the better.

“The project is based on models done before peak oil and the arrival of an economic crisis that’s changing every aspect of people’s lives, including their transportation choices. The CRC is 20th century thinking applied to a very different world today. The Coalition For A Livable Future has long said that we can not hope to build our way out of congestion. As proposed, this bridge promotes single occupancy vehicle use, invites unchecked sprawl to southern Washington and opens the door to widening I-5 through the heart of Portland.”

The Waterfront Park rally will include speakers, calls to action, information booths, distribution of lawn signs and tangible steps citizens can take to oppose the project, as well as the announcement of teach ins by smarterbidge.org, and other organized events in the future. Speakers will include elected officials, transportation experts and community leaders explaining their opposition to the project while proposing alternatives.

So far, confirmed to speak are former Oregon Secretary of State Bill Bradbury (who give’s Al Gore’s climate change presentation all over the country), Portland City Commissioner Amanda Fritz (the only city council member who voted against moving forward on a 12-lane CRC bridge), and Metro Councilor Robert Liberty (who voted against the project in the past and has offered specific alternatives) and Bicycle Transportation Alliance advocate and educator Michelle Poyourow.

The coalition is also taking the fight to the blogsphere through a series of mock video ads that use satire to drive their points home. Modeled in the American tradition of political satirist Mark Twain and more recently, the humor and humanity of Jon Stewart, the first sixty second spot is titled, “Have We Got A Bridge To Sell You?” and spoofs on the informercial/Home Shopping Network format.

In the video, a coffee cup toting couple sitting on a couch does a cheerful hard sell on the “Bridge Shopping Network”. The item up for bid is a $4.2 billion dollar “Luxury Item”. As a salesman makes his pitch sitting beside a poster of the proposed 12 lane bridge the phrases such as “Shock and sprawl!”, “Building like it’s 1959?”, “Making amends for not buying the Mt. Hood Freeway” and “$4 Billion dollars, subject to increase without notice”, roll by in ticker style at the bottom of the screen. Another one-liner you’ll hear: “This bridge can be yours for just 1,000,000 easy payments of $4,000 each!”

The videos will be posted on youtube each week and links emailed to 250 blogs and media outlets. The goal is to expose truths about the project in an entertaining way while promoting organized events such as the rally, teach ins and trips to Salem to voice opposition to elected representatives.

“We can’t allow the area to become another L.A. or Houston in terms of traffic,” Kurmaskie noted. “The CRC project will degrade everything we’ve collectively invested decades creating. There are cheaper, more environmentally sound ways to do this. We aim to make the public aware of them.”

Update: There is now a map of group rides to the rally from various points around Portland and Vancouver. The map will continue to be updated with new rides and meeting points.

Contact: Joe Kurmaskie
503 239 6985
Cell 408 595 6025
mtcowboy@teleport.com
metalcowboy@metalcowboy.com
Portland, Oregon

Jonathan Maus (Publisher/Editor)

Jonathan Maus (Publisher/Editor)

Founder of BikePortland (in 2005). Father of three. North Portlander. Basketball lover. Car owner and driver. If you have questions or feedback about this site or my work, feel free to contact me at @jonathan_maus on Twitter, via email at maus.jonathan@gmail.com, or phone/text at 503-706-8804. Also, if you read and appreciate this site, please become a supporter.

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mark
mark
15 years ago

Just one comment. I am encouraged to know that the rally is taking place. However, organizers might have considered the calendar a bit more carefully. This is Palm or Passion Sunday on the Christian calendar, a fairly important day. Not everyone is of that faith or any faith at all, but simply moving the time to 1:00 pm would have made it possible for more people who are otherwise committed to join the rally at the start time. I hope to get to some of it.

Carl
Carl
15 years ago

Come make some signs at the Lucky Lab on Friday!

http://www.bta4bikes.org/btablog/2009/04/02/friday-crc-sign-making-beer/

Travis Wittwer
15 years ago

@Mark, you make a good point and that would have been a good idea. Sadly, that is not the case. However, this can be a learning opportunity for everyone. The plans for this rally have been going around on the shift list-serve, steadily, and with intent, for about two weeks. Longer on Twitter. What we can learn from this is that if people have an idea, to share it with everyone, and then the group will come to consensus. For example, someone wanted to travel down to the rally as a group and took the leadership role to lead a ride. Others joined with other routes. A need for a map with all the routes was needed so someone suggested that and someone else created it. Sign suggestions with sayings were thrown out to the group, some of the sayings were “voted” down because of sending the wrong message. So my point is that if we, you, me, see an area of need like a later time, we, you, me need to make sure to get that out there to the people.