Call Me

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Senate Concurrent Resolution 13

76th OREGON LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY--2011 Regular Session

Enrolled

Sponsored by Senators EDWARDS, PROZANSKI, Representatives BARNHART, HOLVEY, HOYLE, NATHANSON

   Whereas the Eugene Water & Electric Board, Oregon’s largest consumer-owned utility, will celebrate its 100th year of operations on March 11, 2011; and
   Whereas in 1908 Eugene voters approved $300,000 in bonds to purchase and reform the local private water utility following a typhoid fever epidemic; and
   Whereas the Walterville Hydroelectric Plant on the McKenzie River was constructed in 1911 to power pumps and ensure adequate water pressure, leading to the sale of surplus power to Eugene and the subsequent acquisition of the local private electric utility; and
   Whereas the Eugene Water & Electric Board has invested in clean, affordable and reliable electricity through projects such as Leaburg Dam, the Carmen-Smith Hydroelectric Project, the Federal Columbia River Power System, and the Foote Creek, Stateline, Klondike and Harvest Wind Farms; and
   Whereas the Eugene Water & Electric Board made an early commitment to energy conservation in 1976, having weatherized over 42,000 homes since then and annually investing five percent of retail revenues in conservation programs; and
   Whereas the Eugene Water & Electric Board has saved its customers almost 500 million kilowatt hours of power usage through its robust conservation efforts; and
   Whereas the Eugene Water & Electric Board has earned several local, regional and national awards for best-tasting and cleanest water from the McKenzie River; and
   Whereas the Eugene Water & Electric Board adopted a “Customer Care” program in 1986 to provide a wide range of assistance to low-income customers having difficulty paying their utility bills, helping on average 4,000 customers annually; and
   Whereas the Eugene Water & Electric Board in 2009 and 2010 invested more than $10 million back into the community to help customers affected by the economic downturn pay their utility bills; now, therefore,

Be It Resolved by the Legislative Assembly of the State of Oregon:

   That we, the members of the Seventy-sixth Legislative Assembly, in legislative session assembled, recognize, honor and celebrate on behalf of all Oregonians the 100 years of dedicated service of the Eugene Water & Electric Board to the customers to whom it provides safe, clean and reliable water and electricity; and be it further
   Resolved, That a copy of this resolution shall be presented to the Eugene Water & Electric Board of Commissioners.

Adopted by Senate March 14, 2011
Robert Taylor, Secretary of Senate
Peter Courtney, President of Senate

Adopted by House May 5, 2011
Bruce Hanna, Speaker of House
Arnie Roblan, Speaker of House

Monday, June 13, 2011

No Radioactivity Detected in Eugene's Water Supply

Question: Is there any radioactivity in Eugene's water resulting from the meltdown of the three nuclear reactors in Japan?

Answer: The Oregon Health Division collected water samples on behalf of EWEB, Springfield Utility Board and two other local water suppliers on Thursday, March 24. They collected samples from the river at Leaburg, in the raw water coming into EWEB's water treatment plant, in the finished water stream at the output of the plant, and in a sample taken from a location within the distribution system. The results were all "non-detect." They measured for Iodine 131 and 129, Cesium 137 and Strontium 90.

Here’s another good one that was valid in April of this year:

"The estimated biological effect from the trace amounts of radiation (iodine 131 and cesium 137) currently detected in Oregon from the events in Japan is less than .00016 millirems. To put this into perspective, a person would need to be exposed to this level all day, everyday for more than 100 years, to equal the exposure from one chest X-ray."

Another comparison is a cross-country flight which exposes a person to 5 millirems. A person would have to be exposed to the reading in April every day for 85 years to get an equivalent exposure.