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January 2015
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George Rebane

LakeviewORTraveling with some friends, we just returned from a visit to Lakeview – at 4,798 feet ‘The Tallest Town in Oregon’.  Lakeview sits at the north end of Goose Lake, a huge drainage basin shared by California and Oregon.  It also advertises itself as the ‘Gateway to the Oregon Outback’ which is the sparsely populated high desert of the state’s eastern region.  The town of about 2,200 has definitely seen better days.  And from talking to the locals, the worst is yet to come.  What happened?

During our stay we had a chance to talk to owners of three businesses.  Each had lived there for at least twenty years, and they told us a story of what happens when a town decides to buy into an imported glory road.  Historically Lakeview grew as the seat of Lake County and the commercial center for ranching and timber enterprises in southern Oregon, in later years adding a dollop of tourism that took advantage of the nearby mountains for camping, skiing, and some awesome hang gliding.

Then in the 1990s came some new folks with slick talk of smart growth, things natural, and sustainability.  They pitched the community on getting some OPM (other people’s money) to develop natural sources of wind, solar, and geothermal energy.  In the future, business and living would be controlled as they are in the big cities.  New zoning laws were passed, and strict business ordinances put in place.  With the help of a couple of big name foundations and government grants things were going to get organized – things were going to become progressive as reflected in the town’s new ‘mission statement’  

The mission of the Town of Lakeview is to provide citizens with a safe, family-oriented community while promoting sustainable development of our human, economic and natural resources. We progressively seek a positive future while honoring our heritage.

Well, things didn’t work out as the central planners had it figured.  The projects were delayed, the monies were late, some stuff had been overlooked, and when it came right down to it, people had other ideas which they now had a hard time implementing because of all the new rules and ordnances and codes and … .  Since they could no longer implement their own plans – i.e. continue the free and self-reliant lifestyle that drew and kept them there – people started leaving Lakeview.  Today the town is eerily empty with boarded up stores and empty commercial buildings, as its population has declined for the last twenty years.

There is a lot more to the story of Lakeview as another place that has suffered from progressive blight, and we’ll add to this piece as relevant data warrants.  But what I want to point out with this report is that such blight has quietly spread pretty much nationwide, most certainly since 2009 when we started getting all those new rules and recovery programs for the Great Recession.  It is charitably clear that no one from Washington has looked at how rural counties have taken the brunt of the ‘new thinking’ that is being imposed bit by piece on our less populated regions.  In Lakeview people know about Agenda21 (they told us so) because they are living it every day.  The real plan for Lakeview is for it to revert to its ‘natural state’ before people arrived.

As reported here for some years, California’s rural counties are destined for the same future as Lake County.  We see it right here in Nevada County which has a lot more to offer residents than Lake County, Oregon.  Of course, California imposes on us its own unique and widely infamous brand of insanity to impede growth, economic development, public use of public and private lands, and on and on.  Our own imported progressives are very active in creating and sustaining an environment in these foothills which stifles any vestige of human activity that is not according to the outlined objectives of Agenda21.

Such strategy notwithstanding, we in Nevada County divert ourselves periodically with workshops and meetings that address the holy grail of economic growth.  And we invite speakers from faraway places to tell us how they were able or are still trying to promote such growth.  What we seem to miss is that these hoped for experts come from places that look nothing like our county and community.  Perhaps we should hold more useful gatherings and hear the experiences of people from places like Lake County.  I bet that each of them have a woulda/coulda/shoulda tale to tell that would really resonate with what we have been going through, and maybe even shine a light on some yet-to-be-discovered dark corners where there be tigers waiting for us.

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117 responses to “The Sad Tale of Lakeview, OR”

  1. fish Avatar
    fish

    Posted by: Walt | 20 January 2015 at 08:25 AM
    Stay tuned Walt while we watch the swollen and purple one cheer on the Kalifornia Kleptocracy! You might have been close jeffy if Brown hadn’t been so dogged in his lust for the “Normal Speed Train to Nowhere”, and his inability to close the pension funding issues…..so no cigar!
    I imagine that in his more lucid moments Uncle Jerry is hoping for a quiet death in his sleep followed by internment an unmarked grave before the choos choos cost overruns materialize and spoil his legacy!
    Now about those “Than Francithco Valuths”……we going to be seeing a list anytime in the near future?

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  2. Todd Juvinall Avatar
    Todd Juvinall

    Come on Jeff Pelline, what are San Francisco values?

    Like

  3. Jeff Pelline Avatar
    Jeff Pelline

    Barry,
    Indiana … Texas … “the Dump” … You’ve got it all wrong – and backwards. This is California! We brought you Alice Waters, California cuisine, Silicon Valley, the Rose Parade, Lake Tahoe, Apple, Google, Stanford, UC Berkeley, UCLA, even Ronald Reagan and so on. And the governors of Texas and Indiana will never be president!

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  4. Walt Avatar

    Rolling Stoned?? Now there is a Leftist rag if there ever was one.
    “Tough love” A’? I will believe that when “on the dole” so-called non profits
    get cut off from the money tit.

    Like

  5. Russ Steele Avatar

    Well here is something for Jeff to chew on.
    Seven years after the recession began, only one in 50 U.S. counties has fully bounced back, according to a study the National Association of Counties released Monday.
    The 2014 County Economic Tracker shows that 65 of the nation’s 3,069 counties have met or surpassed prerecession levels in four measured categories: jobs, unemployment rate, economic output and home prices.
    Those places range from Anderson County, S.C., to McKenzie County, N.D., to Kodiak Island, Alaska.
    National employment surpassed 2007 levels during 2014 and the U.S. gross domestic product had fully recovered from the recession by 2011. But the national unemployment rate was 5.6% in December compared with 5% when the recession began seven years earlier. And housing values in much of the country have yet to fully return.
    The recovered counties are largely located in energy-rich areas and have small populations. Of the 65 recovered counties, 24 are in Texas and 16 are in North Dakota. The others are generally in the middle of the country, including nine in Minnesota and eight in Kansas.
    None of the fully recovered Counties are in California. Why is that? Could it be that California is too far left, has too many regulations, energy costs too high, the state viewed as not business friendly (CEO Magazine 50th of 50 states). If Brown is such a great leader and economic development, why is Texas winning the jobs and recovery war.
    Check out your County at the County Economic Tracker.
    http://www.naco.org/research/Pages/county-tracker-2014.aspx

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  6. Barry Pruett Avatar
    Barry Pruett

    “We brought you Alice Waters, California cuisine, Silicon Valley, the Rose Parade, Lake Tahoe, Apple, Google, Stanford, UC Berkeley, UCLA, even Ronald Reagan and so on.” Yes…and the Chicago Cubs won the world series in 1908. You are a liberal extremist fossil living in the ancient history of the once golden state. Sadly, California is no longer the golden state and has been destroyed by those who share your extremist ideology. California needs to adapt or die. California is facing a $443 billion debt wall. $443 BILLION with a capital “B.” It is time to pay the piper. Right now Gov. Brown and the other liberal extremists in the legislature are ignoring this vitally important issue. Once such debt wall crumbles, so too will your variety of liberal extremism California. Dude, you are a silly fossil. Go back to the sixties!

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  7. Jeff Pelline Avatar
    Jeff Pelline

    Russ,
    I’ve got to move on to something else, but Texas, as you know, is luring companies with taxpayer dollars via the governor’s enterprise fund. Tiny western Nevada County doesn’t have an enterprise fund, so it’s going to have to build bridges, not burn them, with the rest of the state. It’s going to be a tough row to how for tiny western Nevada County, and thumbing our noses at the rest of the state is not a productive strategy.

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  8. Jeff Pelline Avatar
    Jeff Pelline

    Barry,
    Gov. Brown’s budget includes pension reform. Why don’t you invest in some California stocks like APPL or GOOG? It’s never too late. And keep working on your temperament. I know you can do it!

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  9. George Rebane Avatar

    ToddJ and RussS should expect nothing explicit or substantive from Mr Pelline who is following the tried and true progressive path of empty platitudes – in his case promoting an unknown definition of ‘purple’. I have said countless times in these pages, the farther left they are, the less inclined they are to talk about their belief tenets (e.g. ‘SF values’) or present substantive data to support their collectivist worldview. His 915am is a classic response that ignores the socio-economic metrics of California – to him California is still king of the hill because, well, because after all it is still California. That is the visible depth of a progressive. But then again, perhaps a future outpouring will prove me wrong.

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  10. Gregory Avatar
    Gregory

    Someone should clue Scoopy into the fact that Texas is encouraging business to move there by a great deal more than an enterprise fund. That just helps companies take the big step… it’s the underlying economics and the prospects for California continuing to sink that is drawing them in.
    Quiz for the day… with the current balanced budget in California thanks to Jerry Brown V2.0, why are unfunded liabilities continuing to grow?

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  11. Jeff Pelline Avatar
    Jeff Pelline

    George,
    The stock appreciation of Silicon Valley companies during California’s “great decline” (to use your words) is not an “empty platitude.” Put your money where your mouth is! It might improve your sour disposition.

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  12. Todd Juvinall Avatar

    While Texas was enticing people and business to relocate there, California’s smarty pants legislators and Governor were banning plastic bags. This is what the problem is here. 900 new signed laws every year. Each one diminishing our rights. But in the eyes of a liberal like Pelline these are needed to ensure control of people’s individuality. One needs look at General Plans and zoning laws in every single jurisdiction in the state. I am sure the process alone to study and pass these laws and update them every five years runs into the billions. Then when you look at the rules to start a business or build a house, you can see why things are headed backwards. We cannot even open a existing mine in our county. The Supervisors are so paralyzed by fear based on bogus input from a lawyer that all we get is the status quo. Until we change things that don’t BK everyone that wants to start their dream business (only the bi boys get the breaks) we will not progress to number 49 on the list.

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  13. Russ Steele Avatar

    Balance Budget? Only if Brown ignores the unfunded liabilities.
    Debt? What debt?
    Brown had little explanation or discussion of the state’s massive debt problem in this $96 billion budget. Before understanding state spending and any talk of a surplus, the state’s debt must also be considered.
    According to the Small Business Action Committee, because the Legislature has refused to make any sincere pension reforms moves, nearly $2.5 billion in pension debt has been run up just in the last two years.
    Brown occasionally speaks of California’s “wall of debt.” However, he is usually careful in his definition of debt, and only attributes a very small segment of what the actual debt obligation is. He didn’t say much about the “wall of debt” during the Tuesday press conference, but the written May Budget Revision says the budget plan will reduce the wall of debt to less than $5 billion by the fiscal year end of 2017, from $27 billion today.
    But it must be difficult to reconcile a supposed state “surplus,” with actual, total bond debt of $79.6 billion, California State Teachers’ Retirement System debt of $70.9 billion, California Public Employee Retirement System debt of $128.3 billion, and other post-employment benefit debt of $63.8 billion, according to SBAC. Where is the surplus?

    – See more at: http://calwatchdog.com/2013/05/14/gov-browns-may-budget-revision-balances-only-by-ignoring-unfunded-liabilities/#sthash.i9HLxMA1.dpuf

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  14. Brad C. Avatar
    Brad C.

    Back to Lakeview and how it’s current economic condition is all the fault of progressive interference…
    What, specifically, were the “progressive” regulations that led to Lakeview’s current sad state of affairs?
    Google Earth Oregon and you can see clear cuts all over the place. This leads me to wonder how people can say logging has been shut down by the Spotted Owl since logging is obviously occurring.
    I don’t think you can compare a bump in the road like Lakeview with Hong Kong…
    “Towards the late 1970s, Hong Kong has become established as a major entrepot between the world and China. The city has further developed into a global hub for freight logistics, information, trade and financial centre (London-Hong Kong-New York). Hong Kong is thus regarded as a “world city” and one of the eight “Alpha+ cities”. It ranked fifth on the 2014 Global Cities Index after New York City, London, Tokyo and Paris.[18] The city, however, has the most severe income inequality among the advanced economies.[6] Furthermore, the population of Hong Kong enjoy one of the highest per capita income in the world.”

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  15. George Rebane Avatar

    JeffP 1016pm – I’m sure you attempted to make a point somewhere in citing the Silicon Valley bright spot (while forgetting to mention that ALL those companies have been reducing staffs and expanding their operations elsewhere and not in California). You continue to overlook the aggregate metrics that describe California, and ignore the impact of leftwing policies that are doing nothing to lift California out of its dismal rankings among the several states. But true to your colors, you do not want to talk about the aggregates that represent the entire state, but instead scurry to a rare and redeeming anecdote to carry your argument. Again, what is your point?
    And for what it’s worth, my money has always been on California enterprises in which I have been a principal entrepreneur, and today those chips are still invested in California. We have been blessed through our work in the formerly Golden State, and have not given up on the potential of its resurgence which I believe that you and yours are doing everything to inhibit. Today Jo Ann and I can live anywhere in the world, yet we stay and invest here. You know nothing of what you speak.

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  16. Todd Juvinall Avatar
    Todd Juvinall

    What would an Iphone cost if it was made in California? Since it is done in China I am assuming the cost may be a lot more? And if that is the case, could the laws and regulations of our state and feds have something to do with the Chicoms making those phones?

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  17. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    The I-phones are made by the Chicoms because they are of smaller stature, thus making them closer to their work. Attention to detail is very important to Apple.
    Love the story about Steve Jobs when the local city council approached the billionaire about building a nice fancy rec center for the city. He told them that’s why he pays taxes and iif they want a new rec center, go build it themselves. Taxed Enough Already.

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