• Have It Your Weight

    A look at the fast food industry–an important contributor to the emerging obesity epidemic—courtesy of MSNBC and Newsweek. The skinny (or not so skinny, as the case may be) is that fast food chains like Burger King are getting back to fundamentals: greasy, fat-laden food. Forget about low-fat sandwiches; BK’s new strategy revolves around items like the Enormous Omellete Sandwich that tips the scales at 760 calories. As it turns...
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  • Moss Backwards

    I’m trying my best to give a charitable reading of Knute Berger’s Mossback column in the Seattle Weekly railing against urban density. But it’s hard. To summarize as best I can:  Berger doesn’t like Seattle Mayor Greg Nickels’ plan to promote high-rise housing near Seattle’s downtown because, well…I guess Knute liked the Seattle skyline just as it was in 1980, thank you very much. Now, Berger makes at least one...
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  • Forest Fight… Over?

    The Haida people struck a $5 million deal with BC’s government that will apparently protect old-growth that had been slated for cutting. Unfortunately, the CBCarticle on the subject leaves much unclear.
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  • Last Stand for Caribou?

    We’ve heard a lot about caribou recently, mostly in the fight over drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. But fewer people know that the Northwest is home to the last remaining caribou herd to inhabit the lower 48 states. They are considered the most endangered large mammal in the continental United States. Woodland caribou once ranged in New England, the Upper Midwest, and as far south as the Salmon...
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  • Sometimes the Cloth Does Not Make the Baby

    Ok, that’s a dumb headline. But the problem itself—whether to diaper my babies with cloth or disposables—was one I spent a bit of time agonizing over. But perhaps I shouldn’t have. A new study commissioned by the British Environment Agency (reported on here and here) suggests there’s almost no difference between the two, at least in terms of environmental impacts. Which is roughly the same answer that this 1992 study,...
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  • Highway Robbery?

    (This post is part of a series.) I haven’t had much new to say about Seattle’s Alaskan Way Viaduct saga, despite the fact that there have been a bunch of significant developments of late: Late last month, Governor Gregoire signed off on a 9.5 cents per gallon gas tax increase, which would provide (among other things) $2 billion to replace the Viaduct.  But the Viaduct only gets that money if...
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  • Vote Early, Vote Often

    BC voters will have the chance to elect (note, Vancouver Sun subscription may be required for link) a new voting system next Tuesday—the "single transferable vote", or STV, which I think is a good idea.  Right now, BC uses roughly the same voting system used widely in the US:  for any legislative district, the candidate with the most votes wins.  This "first-past-the-post" system sounds fair, but it actually leads to...
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  • Fishy Farms

    Politics trumps science when it comes to permitting ecologically pernicious salmon farms in British Columbia. Read all about it in an excellent piece of investigative journalism by The Tyee. Normally those sorts of claims—that policy decisions are political rather than accurate—are hard to substantiate. But in this case the reporter was actually able to obtain proof. In one document from the province’s Fisheries Minister, an admission of salmon farms’ harm...
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  • Plan B in Canada

    I missed this when it happened on April 22. Emergency contraceptives are now available without a prescription nationwide in Canada, as Medical News Todayreports. They were already available in BC.
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  • The Case for Charisma

    If you could monitor only 7 species in the entire Pacific Northwest, which would you choose, in order to learn the most about the region’s ecological health? Here’s why I ask… Unless you’ve been living in a cave, you probably already know that the ivory-billed woodpecker was re-discovered, not extinct after all, in the swamps of Arkansas. But unless you happen to be a mollusk biologist you’re probably not aware...
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