|
INSIDE
Legislators
grip and grin with locals
By Meg
Olson
“I’ve
got to come to Point Roberts more often. I love this
place,” said
state representative Doug Ericksen after a two-hour chat
with a handful of local residents at Brewster’s
Restaurant.
On December
13 Ericksen, representative Kelli Linville and Senator Dale
Brandland added the Point to a day of town meetings around
the county. Five local residents and planning commissioner
John Lesow were there to talk with the legislators about everything
from the water supply to health insurance.
“I
know you can’t solve the problem I just want to
raise your awareness,” said Shannon Thomsen, voicing
concerns over the recent moratorium on water connections.
Linville said that while Point Roberts water issues were
complicated by their dependence on water supply, “management
of water resources is a state obligation,” and her
office would work with the community. “I am the water
queen,” she added.
Linville added the county land use division needed to be
closely involved. “Land use and water availability
are supposed to go together,” she said.
Several
participants segued into the larger issue of managing growth
in a community with often polarized ideas about how quickly,
if at all, development should move. “It’s easy
to plan for stagnation,” Ericksen observed. “It’s
hard to plan for growth.”
The discussion
ranged from Point Roberts concerns to wider issues of environmental
protection, growth management, farming, and health
insurance. “In
our discussions with the small business association,
their number one issue is healthcare,” Ericksen
said. “The issue we’re looking at for health
care is how to make it more affordable,” Linville
said.
Border issues
also came up, including the NEXUS program and the Western Hemisphere
Travel Initiative which would require passports for everyone
crossing the border by 2008 if implemented as written.
Ericksen
said lawmakers have been meeting with representatives from
the department of homeland security to see if a less burdensome
compromise can be reached, such as taking steps to make a
drivers license a secure form of identification. “to
get people signed up for a passport by then is a problem,” Ericksen
said. “Something is going to happen but we
want to make it less onerous.” Brandland
agreed, but Lesow condemned any deviation from
the passport requirement, “a September
10 attitude.”
All three
legislators said they were unaware of the proposed expansion
of the Deltaport container facility but would look into its
potential impacts on Whatcom County. “It is important
the agencies work across the border because the
air and water don’t know where the U.S.
starts and Canada stops,” Linville
said.
Heading
back to Bellingham the trio thanked participants and promised
a return visit. “You
have had the most colorful conversation,” Brandland
said.
|