Archive

Archive for July, 2011

“Give Me My Freedom, For As Long As I Be”

July 4th, 2011 1 comment

“All I Ask of Living is to Have No Chains on Me”

39996_10150246140255486_695480485_14142929_7665580_n

Give me my freedom for as long as I be.
All I ask of living is to have no chains on me.
All I ask of living is to have no chains on me,
And all I ask of dying is to go naturally.
Oh I want to go naturally.”  ~~~
And When I Die (Blood, Sweat, and Tears) (1970)

[Update: 7/10/11 – just came across this wonderful essay on the dumbing down of “The Great Gatsby”, was moved by the excerpted passages of Fitzgerald’ beautiful prose, and couldn’t help but note the contrast: the Wolfe’s not Carraway’s!:

My family have been prominent, well-to-do people in this Middle Western city for three generations. The Carraways are something of a clan, and we have a tradition that we’re descended from the Dukes of Buccleuch, but the actual founder of my line was my grandfather’s brother, who came here in fifty-one, sent a substitute to the Civil War, and started the wholesale hardware business that my father carries on to-day. – end update].

As I sit quietly and listen to the muffled distant explosions of fireworks echo on this eve of the 4th of Juy, I contemplate just what the Fourth of July really means to me.

You can keep all your patriotic , “don’t tread on me”, “rockets red glare”, declaration of independence, war mongering, flag waiving, crap.

When I was a kid, the 4th of July had nothing to do with patriotism – it meant a huge family picnic at my grandparent’s house.

That’s because July 4th was my Grandfather “Pop” Wolfe’s birthday.

The Wolfe’s were 19th century Polish immigrants. They weren’t here with the Founding Fathers, but their story is part of the living history that illustrates the meaning and the best of this country, blending feeedom and liberty with economic justice and social mobility.

Those are the core principles implicit in the Motto: “Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free”.

The meaning of their story is just as important and remains as relevant as the formal foundational documents, like the Declaration of Independence, that we celebrate on this day (with Liberty and Justice for All, and all that jive). The economic justice component – long forgotten and still unrealized – was fleshed out in FDR’s “Four Freedoms speech.

Here’s “Pop” in 1962 – he’s the guy in the middle of 4 generations of Wolfe men:

Four Generations of Wolfe's (1962)

Four Generations of Wolfe’s (1962)

I loved Pop. He used to reminisce about his days as a baseball player. He enjoyed talking to me about my own baseball exploits, as I was a precocious star baseball player.

Pop was a die hard Boston Red Sox fan, so I heard a lot about Ted Williams. As a kid, I can recall him telling me that he played on a Yonkers City champion team when he was a kid, which was a big deal at the time, and an accomplishment for which he won a tiny but real gold baseball. He gave that memorabilia to me, but I’m sad to say I lost it somewhere along the way.

Before Pop was born, his dad, great Grandpop Wolfe’s family, had left the 19th century Massachusetts mill town of Lowell when the mills started to close, in search of opportunity in New York. I don’t know when the Wolfe family immigrated to the US or where Great Grandpop was born, but he was born circa 1875 and raised his family in Yonkers NY. I recall him as a funny old man who smoked cigars. He died at around 95 (when I was about 7).

I never knew much of Great Grandpop Wolfe or the Lowell millwork experience, but when my Dad was young, he worked for his dad, in the family’s small trucking/moving business. But that didn’t work out, in part due to Pop’s service in the Navy in WW II. When Pop  returned from the War, he tried to re-establish the moving business and later formed a new business installing floors. But, that didn’t work out either.

Although I remain sketchy on the timeframes, somewhere along the line, my Dad was drafted into the Army during the Korean “police action”, and the Wolfe’s flooring business failed too. After that, dad came home and married mom. Despite my Mom’s nagging him to make something more of himself, dad went for stability, and ended up working as a bus driver.

In retrospect, I sense that these business failures, during a time of economic boom, exploding expectations, and formation of the mythical post WW II American Dream, affected their lives in a negative way. Who knows, maybe this is why I never did much with my dad or had any business ambitions – he might have wanted me to avoid these kind of disappointments.

Anyway, here’s four generations of Wolfe men almost 30 years later, on the 4th of July in 1990, as I proudly celebrate my son, Travis:

Wolfe's (1989)

Wolfe’s (1990)

and when I die,
When I’m dead, dead and gone,
There’ll be one child born in our world to carry on,
To carry on.

So, Happy 4th of July folks! And here’s a shot 5 years later, just before Pop died:

Four generations of Wolfe men (July 1994)

Four generations of Wolfe men (July 1995)

Categories: Uncategorized Tags:

Where the Frack is DEP Parks Funding Plan?

July 2nd, 2011 No comments

DEP More Than 2 Years Late In Responding to Legislative Mandate

As we begin summer, and with trees falling down in State campgrounds, we’re reminded of the crisis in State Parks funding.

For years, we have demanded that part of the solution include collection of current market value of leases and easements, particularly for utility easements across state lands.

The easement issue was epitomized by the Tennessee Gas Pipeline scandal .

(also see:  NEW JERSEY FORFEITS MILLIONS ON PARK LEASES AND CONCESSIONS — Lapsed Leases, Below Market Rates and Sweetheart Deals Give Corporations Breaks

So, we note that way back in June 2008, the Legislature mandated that DEP act to reform longstanding problems.

We secured amendments to that law specifically to address utlity easements across state parks and state lands.

That issue is especially timely, now that Governor Christie’s Energy Master Plan touts new gas pipeline infrastructure to import Marcellus fracking gas.

So, here it is – have at it (see:P.L. 2008, c. 31):

4. a. The Department of Environmental Protection shall conduct, within six months after the effective date of this act, a study of the facilities, services, resources, activities, and amenities provided, or which reasonably could be provided, at each State park or forest as defined in subsection e. of section 3 of P.L.1983, c.324 (C.13:1L-3).  As part of the study, the department shall:

     (1)   examine opportunities for increasing revenue realized from State parks and forests through (a) concessions, (b) marketing of products with State park or forest, New Jersey history, or other New Jerseyana or Garden State themes, (c) marketing of other products such as camping and outdoor recreational supplies and equipment, and (d) leases and rentals for events and other one-time or short-term uses;

     (2)   conduct a re-appraisal of the rents and fees charged for all residences and other buildings and structures, and for utility easements and right-of-ways, located on State park or forest lands to ensure they reflect current fair market values and will continue to do so;

     (3)   research fee structure strategies such as per person pricing compared to per vehicle charges and non-uniform pricing based upon intensity or frequency of use, location of the State park or forest, season, time of day, age of the visitor, and other similar factors;

     (4)   determine whether the fees it charges or will charge at State parks and forests are competitively priced when compared to similar facilities, services, resources, activities, and amenities offered in the private sector or by other states; and

     (5)   determine whether the fees it charges or will charge are causing or will cause any significant decrease in visitation to State parks and forests or a decrease in the use of certain facilities, services, resources, or amenities or in participation in certain activities.

     b.    The department, within 60 days after completion of the study required pursuant to subsection a. of this section, shall submit, pursuant to section 2 of P.L.1991, c.164 (C.52:14-19.1), to the Legislature and to the State Treasurer a report of its findings and conclusions from the study.

     c.     Based upon the results of the study, the department shall, by July 1, 2009, (1) modify the fees it charges for facilities, services, resources, activities, and amenities at State parks and forests to ensure as much as practicable that the fee structure established properly reflects the availability of those facilities, services, resources, activities, and amenities and that the fee revenues realized therefrom are making an appropriate and reasonable contribution toward defraying the cost of operating and maintaining State parks and forests, and (2) implement other measures deemed in the study to be appropriate and beneficial with respect to increasing revenues realized from State parks and forests.

Where are the media and Legislative Oversight?

Categories: Uncategorized Tags:

Where the Frack is the DEP Water Supply Master Plan Update?

July 2nd, 2011 1 comment
heron doesn't have a lot of water to wade in. Alexauken Creek, West Amwell (July 11, 2010).

heron doesn’t have a lot of water to wade in. Alexauken Creek, West Amwell (July 11, 2010).

New Fracking Threats – Ed Rodgers of NJN Is Not Here to Cover the Story

In the summertime, riff on Mungo Jerry (listen), you got water on your mind: New Jersey’s chronic drought problems come to mind (see: NJ lurches from drought to floods, but Christie Rollbacks Weaken DEP Management).

Adding to NJ’s chronic water supply deficits, we now have a major new water demand in the Delaware basin, fracking.

Lifting the current DRBC moratorium would open the door to over 18,000 wells in NY and Pennsylvania, according to DRBC. Those wells would use over 100 BILLION gallons of water; generate more than 25 BILLION gallons of toxic hazardous wastewater with unsafe levels of radioactive contaminants; and destroy over 150,000 aces of forests and farms, more than all the land protected by the NJ Highlands Act.

New York state just lifted their moratorium on fracking, so the threats are magnified.

NJ’s highly touted moratorium legislation (Correction: Ban, not moratorium) would have ZERO IMPACT on these threats. As I wrote:

There will be no fracking in NJ, so any legislation banning it or imposing a moratorium in the state of NJ, while well intentioned, is a symbolic hollow gesture.

So, of course we must again ask: when will the many years late and long awaited draft Water Supply Master Plan be released for public comment? (public hearings are not scheduled for July, so maybe DEP will wait until the dog days of August, when Trenton is a ghost town).

In the midst of last year’s drought, and in response to our criticism of this delay, on August 14, 2010DEP told Ed Rodgers of NJN that the Plan would be released in May 2011.

Curious, Ed was practically the only reporter who covered this aspect of the drought, educated the public, and held DEP accountable.

But Ed – and NJN – are no long broadcasting.

No way I see Steve Adubado getting his ass out of his cushy NY Office and down to Trenton to get in DEP’s face on this – which is (pardon the bad pun) way over his head.

Which is just one reason why Governor Christie killed NJN.

Categories: Uncategorized Tags:

Sunrise

July 1st, 2011 No comments

sunrise1

sunrise2

sunrise3

sunrise4

sunrise5

Categories: Uncategorized Tags: