Friday, September 12, 2008

Jewish Persecution Balloons carrying Nazi flags over Tigard, Oregon

Yes, I agree that this is more than just the 'littering' that Tigard, Oregon apparently thinks it is. This is racial assault.

http://www.mcculloughsite.net/stingray/2008/03/11/balloons-carrying-nazi-flags-over-tigard-oreg.php

"Though the sparsely populated areas of the state tend to be conservative, the Portland area is rabidly liberal. After a visit there last summer, my wife and I decided that the two hardest things to find in Oregon are an American flag and a church."

This man was visiting this area. He does not live here.

1. Tigard, Oregon is not rabidly liberal. Sorry, I have to go off into the corner and laugh hysterically.....excuse me.

2. OK, I am back. Tigard, Oregon has churches everywhere, too much traffic (ok that is irrelevant to this topic) and is not Portland.

3. There are plenty of people who fly American flags all the time although the number of those fat SUVs with the yellow ribbon have declined....due only to the price of gasoline.

4. This has happened before in Tigard, Oregon and the outrage seems to be nonexistent.

Nazis in Tigard, Oregon...again

OK, this isn't the first time in recent memory. There were those leaflets that were just sloughed off as 'littering' which is what amounts to civil right outrage in Tigard, Oregon. We suspect this is why this kind of offensive activity happens yet again.

Anyone catch anyone doing this offensive, racial assault? This isn't 'littering' Tigard, Oregon this is racial assault. The legal definition of assault needs to be expanded to include this.

Neo-Nazi swastika flags spotted flying above Tigard

11:51 AM PST on Tuesday, March 4, 2008
By kgw.com Staff

TIGARD, Ore. -- Tigard neighbors found a bizarre sight in the sky and in some local streets over the past couple days -- Nazi flags and flyers attached to balloons.

http://www.kgw.com/news-local/stories/kgw_030308_new_swastika_flags_tigard.1d2eb528.html

One has to seriously wonder why the tiny podunk suburb of Tigard, Oregon has this kind of activity more than once. What is it about Tigard, Oregon that may invite this kind of activity?

This isn't cheap. This was done with planning.

Has anyone seen Tigard, Oregon's response to this? Is there any kind of responsive other than a bland blurb that Tigard says NO to this? Obviously saying NO on a blurb is tantamount to actually figuring out who did this and fixing the problem. Well, ok, this is what passes for doing something in Tigard, Oregon.

Yawn.

"A group calling itself the American National Socialist Workers Party sent KGW TV an email claiming responsibility.

"We are 100 percent responsible for this guerilla political activism, no act of criminal mischief has occurred,” wrote a man who identified himself as ANSWP commander Bill White. “And we challenge the Tigard police to bring action against us if they feel some law has been violated."

Investigators did not say whether they were planning on any charges in the case."

Charges? Charges? Not planning any charges because....why again?







Tigard, Oregon has Arsenic at the Public Library

Tigard, Oregon admits to having arsenic in the ground around the public library? This is a public library and we are just now finding this out?

Do we need to say it again: Tigard, Oregon sucks. This is ridiculous.

Part of Tigard library grounds tainted with traces of arsenic

Fenced off - It's not hard to avoid exposure to the old insecticides, a city official says
Friday, September 12, 2008
JOHN FOYSTON
The Oregonian Staff

A new fence closes off an area of the Tigard Public Library grounds found to be contaminated with traces of arsenic, probably from decades-old orchard insecticides and herbicides.

"We're certainly not downplaying this," said Dennis Koellermeier, Tigard Public Works director, "but it's difficult to explain just how low the Department of Environmental Quality has set the safety threshold.

"You'd have to eat contaminated dirt once a week for a full 52 weeks to exceed the acceptable risk level."

http://www.oregonlive.com/metrosouthwest/oregonian/index.ssf?/base/metro_southwest_news/1221182711271430.xml&coll=7

--------


Yeah Dennis, Tigard, Oregon is downplaying this. You just said this:

"You'd have to eat contaminated dirt once a week for a full 52 weeks to exceed the acceptable risk level."

That is downplaying arsenic in the ground around the public library in Tigard, Oregon. If you were not downplaying it you would have CLEANED IT UP BY NOW!

This is, Dennis, again downplaying the risk of arsenic around the public library in Tigard, Oregon:

"The good news here, if there is any," Koellermeier added, "is that it is relatively easy to avoid exposure. Don't eat, breathe or touch the contaminated soil."

Good god!

Is this the library that is rumored (or is it reported or is it actually) so poorly built that it is actually below the level of the ground and floods? Is that real or rumor?

God I hate Tigard, Oregon!

Every time you want to give this hell hole a break, things just get worse and worse and worse. Now there is noise pollution from the endless traffic (Tigard, Oregon is now just a traffic interchange for Beaverton/Tualatin/LO not a place to live) and now there is environmental pollution around the public library.

Tigard had old orchard ground in many places...does that mean they are all contaminated with arsenic that is not a 'big deal' according to the standards of those who are supposed to be dealing with this stuff?

We heard that this has been known for years, maybe from 2002? So what is making this come up now?

So, this is from Wikipedia: Arsenic poisoning

Arsenic poisoning kills by allosteric inhibition of essential metabolic enzymes, leading to death from multi-system organ failure. It primarily inhibits enzymes that require lipoic acid as a cofactor, such as pyruvate and alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase. Because of this, substrates before the dehydrogenase steps accumulate, such as pyruvate (and lactate). It particularly affects the brain, causing neurological disturbances and death.


Monday, August 25, 2008

Tigard, Oregon Sucks....it is also raining again

Tigard, Oregon sucks because it is a poorly-planned, poorly-designed, out of control, highway interchange in burban Oregon. If you live in Tigard and think you are living in a tree-lined, shady, quiet, brat-friendly burban of greenie-loving, tree-hugging Portland, Oregon you are....GULLIBLE.

1. Portland, Oregon is bike-loving, wine-sipping, foodie-haven, etc. etc. only in small sections.
2. Burbans like Tigard, Oregon are not included in those small sections. Tigard, Oregon has a biker bar and ugly strip malls.
3. Tigard, Oregon went straight from rural, mud-soaked, backwater, podunk, no-account town to a tacky, mud-soaked, backwater, podunk, no-account burban.

Wow, what a trajectory.

Saturday, August 23, 2008

Tigard Oregon Still Sucks

Noise pollution's deleterious effects, from Wikipedia:

Noise health effects are both health and behavioral in nature. The disliked sound is called sound noise. This unwanted sound can damage physiological and psychological health. Noise pollution can cause annoyance and aggression, hypertension, high stress levels, tinnitus, hearing loss, sleep disturbances, and other harmful effects.[4][5][6] Furthermore, stress and hypertension are the leading causes to health problems, whereas tinnitus can lead to forgetfulness, severe depression and at times panic attacks.[5][7]

Chronic exposure to noise may cause noise-induced hearing loss. Older males exposed to significant occupational noise demonstrate significantly reduced hearing sensitivity than their non-exposed peers, though differences in hearing sensitivity decrease with time and the two groups are indistinguishable by age 79.[8] A comparison of Maaban tribesmen, who were insignificantly exposed to transportation or industrial noise, to a typical U.S. population showed that chronic exposure to moderately high levels of environmental noise contributes to hearing loss.[4]

High noise levels can contribute to cardiovascular effects and exposure to moderately high levels during a single eight hour period causes a statistical rise in blood pressure of five to ten points and an increase in stress[9] and vasoconstriction leading to the increased blood pressure noted above as well as to increased incidence of coronary artery disease.

Noise pollution is also a cause of annoyance. A 2005 study by Spanish researchers found that in urban areas households are willing to pay approximately four Euros per decibel per year for noise reduction.[10]


Tigard, Oregon is the definition of suburban NOISE POLLUTION. The noise pollution in Tigard, Oregon is terrible. Tigard, Oregon did not bother to plan city streets, traffic patterns and housing location and density in order to mitigate noise pollution from the desired growth.

All Tigard, Oregon cares about are a few neighborhoods on Bull Mountain. Aside from those, Tigard, Oregon will leave those living (and paying property taxes) in other areas to fend for themselves.

Try building a wall when the traffic in your area (in the area of your bedroom, your kitchen, your living room, your yard, etc.) doubles, triples, quadruples to a 24/7 constant, high decibel, incessant high-level noise. Tigard has no management whatsoever. It is out of control.


Friday, August 22, 2008

What is going on in Tigard, Oregon: City Sued

Has anything been done to fix the problem and, you know, express sorry at the taking of a young life? Anyone? Anyone?

The standard Tigard, Oregon reply: it isn't OUR fault. Wow, what a Christian sentiment.

Tigard teen's family sues for millions in fatal police shooting

by Dana Tims, The Oregonian
Wednesday August 13, 2008, 10:55 PM

Lukus Glenn

The family of an 18-year-old Tigard man shot to death by police during a family dispute in 2006 filed a federal wrongful death lawsuit Wednesday against the county, city and officers involved.

» Read earlier coverage from The Oregonian
» Lawsuit asks for millions (PDF)

Hope and Brad Glenn, the parents of Lukus Glenn, filed the suit against Washington County, the two deputies who shot their son, the city of Tigard and a Tigard police officer.

"We were forced to go ahead and file this to shed light on the events of that night,'' Hope Glenn said. "It's all been very hard and it just gets worse, not better."

There are two claims for relief in the lawsuit. Each seeks more than $7 million.

Police and prosecutors were not immediately available to comment on the lawsuit.

The lawsuit, filed by Lake Oswego attorney Lawrence K. Peterson, says official accounts of the Sept. 16, 2006, shooting contained "glaring inconsistencies and self-contradictions that were never resolved."

A Washington County district attorney's office investigation into the shooting called the incident "tragic" but "legally justified."

"The material facts surrounding the shooting are not in dispute," wrote Rob Bletko, the county's chief deputy district attorney, in a letter to Washington County Sheriff Rob Gordon. "There is no good reason to believe that the deputies committed a crime, and therefore a grand jury review in this case is not warranted."


Wiki Nonsense

This is what passes for truth on Wikipedia. This is NONSENSE and also BORING and Wikipedia should be ashamed of itself for doing the useless thing. This isn't TRUTH, this is NONSENSE. Where is the truth about actually living in Tigard, Oregon?

A place to call home? For what, dullards and liars? What about: Tigard, Oregon, a place to call home for those who hate life. How about: Tigard, Oregon, a place to call home for slugs, mud and assorted incompetents.

Tigard, Oregon

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Tigard, Oregon
Motto: A Place to Call Home
Location in Oregon
Location in Oregon
Coordinates: 45°25′40″N 122°46′44″W / 45.42778, -122.77889
Country United States
State Oregon
County Washington
Incorporated 1961
Government
- Mayor Craig Dirksen
Area
- Total 10.9 sq mi (28.2 km²)
- Land 10.9 sq mi (28.1 km²)
- Water 0 sq mi (0.1 km²)
Elevation 300 ft (91 m)
Population (2006)
- Total 46,300
- Density 3,795.3/sq mi (1,465.6/km²)
Time zone Pacific (UTC-8)
- Summer (DST) Pacific (UTC-7)
ZIP codes 97223, 97224, 97281
Area code(s) 503
FIPS code 41-73650[1]
GNIS feature ID 1128092[2]
Website: http://www.tigard-or.gov

Tigard (pronounced /ˈtaɪgərd/) is a city in Washington County, Oregon, United States. The population was 41,223 at the 2000 census. The 2006 estimate is 46,300 residents.[3] According to the 2003 Oregon Blue Book, Tigard is the state's 11th largest city.[4] Located south of Beaverton and north of Tualatin, it is part of the Portland metropolitan area.

Contents

[hide]

[edit] History

Wilson Tigard
Wilson Tigard

Like many towns in the Willamette Valley, Tigard was originally settled by several families, the most noteworthy of which was the Tigard family, headed by Wilson M. Tigard. Arriving in the area known as "East Butte" in 1852, the family settled and became involved in organizing and building the East Butte School, a general store (which starting in 1886 housed the area's post office) and a meeting hall, and renamed East Butte to "Tigardville". The Evangelical organization built the Emanuel Evangelical Church at the foot of Bull Mountain, south of the Tigard store in 1886. A blacksmith shop was opened in the 1890s by John Gaarde across from the Tigard Store, and in 1896 a new E. Butte school was opened to handle the growth the community was experiencing from an incoming wave of German settlers.

The period between 1907 and 1910 marked a rapid acceleration in growth as Main Street blossomed with the construction of several new commercial buildings, Germania Hall (a two-story building featuring a restaurant, grocery store, dance hall, and rooms to rent), a shop/post office, and a livery stable. Limited telephone service began in 1908.

In 1910, the arrival of the Oregon Electric Railway triggered the development of Main Street and pushed Tigardville from being merely a small farming community into a period of growth which would lead to its incorporation as a city in 1961. The town was renamed Tigard by the railroad to greater distinguish it from the nearby Wilsonville, and the focus of the town reoriented northeast towards the new rail stop as growth accelerated.

1911 marked the introduction of electricity, as the Tualatin Valley Electric company joined Tigard to a service grid with Sherwood and Tualatin. William Ariss built a blacksmith shop on Main Street in 1912 that eventually evolved into a modern service station. In the 1930s the streets and walks of Main Street were finally paved, and another school established to accommodate growth.

The city was the respondent in (and eventual loser of) the landmark property rights case, Dolan v. City of Tigard, decided by the Supreme Court of the United States in 1994. The case established the "rough proportionality" test that is now applied throughout the United States when a local government evaluates a land use application and determines the exactions to require of the recipient of a land use approval.[5]

In the 2004 general elections, the city of Tigard won approval from its voters to annex the unincorporated suburbs on Bull Mountain, a hill to the west of Tigard. However, residents in that area have rejected annexation and are currently fighting in court various moves by the city.

[edit] Government

[edit] Past mayors

These people have served as mayor of the city.[citation needed]

  • 1971-1978: Wilbur Bishop
  • 1984: Ken Scheckla [P]
  • 1984-1986: John Cook
  • 1987-1988: Tom Brian
  • 1989-1994: Gerald Edwards
  • 1994: Jack Schwab
  • 1994-2000: Jim Nicoli [D]
  • 2001-2003: Jim Griffith [A][D]
  • From 2003: Craig Dirksen [A]

[A] Appointed to fill out term
[D] Died in office
[P] Mayor Protem

[edit] Geography

Tigard is located at 45°25′40″N, 122°46′44″W (45.42764, -122.77897)[6].

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 10.9 square miles (28.2 km²), of which, 10.9 square miles (28.1 km²) of it is land and 0.09% is water.

[edit] Demographics

As of the census[1] of 2000, there were 41,223 people, 16,507 households, and 10,746 families residing in the city. The population density was 3,795.3 people per square mile (1,465.6/km²). There were 17,369 housing units at an average density of 1,599.1/sq mi (617.5/km²). The racial makeup of the city was 85.38% White, 5.57% Asian, 1.14% African American, 0.61% Native American, 0.53% Pacific Islander, 3.76% from other races, and 3.00% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 8.94% of the population.

There were 16,507 households out of which 33.5% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 52.0% were married couples living together, 9.2% had a female householder with no husband present, and 34.9% were non-families. 26.7% of all households were made up of individuals and 7.8% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.48 and the average family size was 3.03.

In the city the population was spread out with 25.5% under the age of 18, 9.0% from 18 to 24, 34.1% from 25 to 44, 21.4% from 45 to 64, and 10.0% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 34 years. For every 100 females there were 96.0 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 92.8 males.

The median income for a household in the city was $51,581, and the median income for a family was $61,656. Males had a median income of $44,597 versus $31,351 for females. The per capita income for the city was $25,110. About 5.0% of families and 6.6% of the population were below the poverty line, including 7.8% of those under age 18 and 3.6% of those age 65 or over.

North of McDonald street, Tigard, along with Metzger and the unincorporated Bull Mountain area, uses the 97223 ZIP code for incoming mail, while the southern half of the city uses 97224, as does the nearby city of King City and the community of Durham. All mail for both ZIP codes are processed in Portland. The Tigard Post Office on Main street has a ZIP code of 97281, which is used only for post office boxes. Local phone numbers may be within the 503 or 971 area codes.

[edit] Local attractions

The John Tigard House, constructed by the son of Wilson M. Tigard in 1880 at the corner of SW Pacific Hwy and SW Gaarde St, remains, having been saved from demolition in the 1970s by the Tigard Area Historical and Preservation Association. It became registered as a National Historic Place in 1979, and now resides at the corner of SW Canterbury Lane and SW 103rd.

During the Portland Rose Festival every summer, the Tigard Festival of Balloons is held at Cook Park near Tigard High School. The tallest building in the county is a 12-story building at Lincoln Center.[7]

[edit] Education

The city of Tigard falls mostly under the jurisdiction of the Tigard-Tualatin School District, however some of the northwestern most part of the city falls under the jurisdiction of the Beaverton School District. The Tigard-Tualatin School District contains 10 elementary schools, 3 middle schools, and 2 high schools. Tigard is home to Tigard High School, Fowler Middle School, Twality Middle School, Alberta Rider Elementary, CF Tigard Elementary, Durham Elementary, Mary Woodward Elementary and Templeton Elementary.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Tigard, Oregon is at coordinates 45°25′40″N 122°46′44″W / 45.42764, -122.778974