Weekend Reading 2/24/12

Google Maps driving cost errors, why we don't elect scientists, and more.

Eric dP:

As inspiration for running in the upcoming Mercer Island Half Marathon, I read Haruki Murakami’s “What I Talk About When I Talk About Running,” in which he describes his decades-long discipline of long distance running.

Literary types will recognize that the title is a nod to Raymond Carver, whose work Murakami has translated into Japanese. That Murakami is a student …  read more »

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Dirty-Energy Money

Big Oil and Coal have spent $5 million on the Northwest’s Congressional delegation.
istock

istock

Big Coal and Big Oil know that, in their business, political friends are worth their weight in gold. An academic study of one case of corporate lobbying estimated the return on investment at 22,000 percent: a dollar spent earned $220. Jack Abramoff, the convicted, influence-peddling super-lobbyist, pegged the return on investment of one project at 100,000 percent: $4 million dollars in lobbying cash purchased a $4 billion tax break for Tyco International.

Inspired by paybacks like those, the …  read more »

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Our Year of Lent

Buying nothing new leads to expansion, not contraction.
Bosela, Morguefile.com

Bosela, Morguefile.com

Starting today, people across the globe will give up something for Lent. (For example, Newt Gingrich won’t have any dessert. A colleague of mine is giving up meat.)

My family is fasting from consumerism. Not just for Lent, but all year long. And what better time than the day after Mardi Gras to write about how we’re faring.

Maybe we’ll inspire someone to join us—if not for a whole year, then at least …  read more »

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Surprisingly Ambitious Permeable Projects

Northwest engineers reach beyond their permeable pavement comfort zones.

Municipal engineers don’t exactly have reputations for being devil-may-care, live-on-the-edge risk takers. Speaking generally, they work hard, take their jobs seriously, and really really want their projects to work. Collapsed bridges and over-flowing sewers don’t look so hot on the resume.

But stormwater engineers in Gresham, a neighbor to Portland, and Issaquah, located in the foothills of the Cascades outside Seattle, have built some interesting — even a touch experimental — roads and parking lots using permeable pavement.

The …  read more »

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Clothesline Bans Void in 19 States

Surprise! For millions, state laws hang community rules out to dry.

Seattle Event: Stand Up Economics

Sightline Fellow performs at Town Hall.

Weekend Reading 2/17/12

Solar tornadoes, cats make you crazy, and more.

The Northwest’s Black Residents

Which Northwest places have the most people of African descent?

Coal Dust in India

Communities near ports suffer the consequences of coal.

The Places We Love

Everything you always wanted to know about Northwest geography, but were afraid to ask.