Source: Oregonian, The Contact: http://www.oregonlive.com/ Pubdate: Sun, 09 Aug 1998 Author: Jeff Mapes of The Oregonian staff PACIFIC PARTY CANDIDATE CRITICIZES KITZHABER Blair Bobier claims that the governor has not done enough to protect the environment Blair Bobier, the founder of Oregon's environmentalist Pacific Party, on Saturday kicked off his campaign for governor by charging that Gov. John Kitzhaber has acquiesced in the destruction of the state's streams and forests. Bobier, who became the fourth minor-party candidate to enter the race, also took the governor to task for signing a bill to recriminalize possession of small amounts of marijuana and for not seeking overhaul of a tax system he said is tilted in favor of large corporate interests. A 38-year-old lawyer and political activist, Bobier in 1991 founded the Pacific Party, which has qualified for the ballot in Oregon and is affiliated with the Green Party nationally. "At best Gov. Kitzhaber has stood by idly as this destruction has taken place," Bobier said at a Portland airport news conference before going up in a private plane to view clear-cuts and damaged streams. He called the governor's voluntary restoration plan for coho salmon inadequate and criticized Kitzhaber for not seeking a halt to logging in federal forests. Bobier also endorsed Ballot Measure 64, which would ban clear-cuts and the use of pesticides in Oregon forests. Although the Pacific Party so far has not had a big effect on Oregon politics, the Green Party has become a significant force in some states. In New Mexico, Green Party candidates have taken more than 10 percent of the vote in a recent gubernatorial election and two congressional races. In all three cases, Republican candidates won as Democrats blamed the Green Party for their defeats. Bobier said he wasn't concerned that a strong showing for his own candidacy could aid Republican gubernatorial candidate Bill Sizemore -- who has criticized Kitzhaber for supporting too much environmental regulation. "The difference between Sizemore and Kitzhaber is just like rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic," he said. "It really doesn't make a lot of difference." Bobier, who lives in the small Coast range town of Summit, also said average Oregonians need to make changes in their lifestyles. He criticized the use of lawn chemicals, power mowers and leaf blowers. He also called for taxing activities based on the amount of pollution they generate, and he said the state should greatly increase its investments in mass transit and bicycle paths. He called for universal health coverage and for "long-term, meaningful jobs for everyone who wants to work." Bobier is a graduate of the Northwestern School of Law of Lewis & Clark College and previously worked at the Department of Environmental Quality as a public defender and with the Sierra Club Legal Defense Fund. The other minor-party candidates in the governor's race are Libertarian Richard Burke, Socialist Trey Smith and Roger Weidner of the Reform Party. - --- Checked-by: (Joel W. Johnson)