zembly Provides Social Context for Web Development

Friday, July 4th, 2008

The future of application development might be becoming a little more social. Sun certainly hopes so, and has launched zembly, a new collaboration platform for writing small, and lightweight web applications. It’s a promising start, squarely aimed at small, long-tail developers, and a new approach to collaborative development over the web. Challenges remain, such as the long-term reliability of third-party application hosting and the findability of small long-tail applications on large platforms.
 
I was able to demo zembly, which attempts to lower the barrier of entry to writing applications for social platforms such as Facebook, Meebo, OpenSocial and the iPhone by sharing services and widgets and came away impressed with its focus on ease of use and belief in a new development process.  zembly is working to create a social setting for developers to share components between applications a “wiki for live, editable code that is more than just about trivial widgets, but rather about full-fledged social applications that can tap into the social graph and reach millions of users”.
 
Applications are written in javascript, rely on a widget / web service development model, and have an extensive architecture for securely managing developer credentials so that you can share outbound service calls without sharing your credentials.  These widgets and services can be shared, or cloned (forked) from other developers and carry a full change log with them, so you can freeze your dependencies to a given version.  The system makes source control and component sharing simpler for the uninitiated than tools like Git and Subversion that can be difficult to learn.
 
zembly hopes that network effects will kick in, as the service will be most successful if users trust others on the system, and share components freely - something that has been hard to accomplish even in large corporate development teams.  If successful, it will be this feature that distinguishes zembly from Google App Engine and other competitors.

Despite these concerns, as someone who sometimes needs a little peer pressure and social support to get started on development projects, I’ll be following zembly as they build out their community-oriented features and work to deliver on their promise to wiki-fy web development, and I’ll be looking forward to sharing code with friends online.

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Obama Campaign Hopes for Better Web Security

Wednesday, June 11th, 2008

Two months after their Web site was hacked, the organizers of Barack Obama’s presidential campaign are looking for a network security expert to help lock down their Web site.

“Obama for America is looking for a network security expert who wants to play a key role in a historic political campaign,” reads the ad, posted to the Barackobama.com Web site.

Successful candidates will join Obama’s Boston team and should expect to find a new job come November.

Obama’s Web site, built by Facebook cofounder Chris Hughes, has been the model of Web 2.0 campaigning, using social-networking techniques to raise funds and build a broad base of active, Internet-savvy supporters.

But security experts have long warned that powerful Web site features also open new avenues for attack.

With the Internet driving the majority of the campaign’s contributions, Web security is probably more important to Obama than it has been to any other presidential candidate. A Web outage could cost his campaign millions of dollars, and a widely publicized privacy breach could put the brakes on his most important source of cash.

In April, a programming error allowed a Hillary Clinton supporter to redirect part of Obama’s Web site to Clinton’s, but today’s Web attack techniques could lead to much more serious consequences.

“Attacks like SQL injection would be far more of a concern,” said Oliver Friedrichs, a director with Symantec Security Response who has written about computer security and the 2008 presidential election. “If I was able to get access to the database that houses their donor information, that would be very concerning.”

So-called SQL injection attacks take advantage of programming errors and allow attackers to get unauthorized access to parts of a Web site. They can be used to install malicious software or gain access to sensitive information.

Obama’s site isn’t the only one to suffer from Web security bugs. A similar flaw popped up in Mitt Romney’s site in January, and Hillary Clinton’s name was used in a spam campaign that delivered messages laced with malicious Trojan Horse software programs, Friedrichs said.

While Web defacements and denial of service attacks may be the most common security problems, a Web privacy breach could quickly become a major campaign issue, Poole said. “For a big office, things like the reputation of the candidate are really important,” he said.

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Guebuza On Results of Local Development Fund

Sunday, May 25th, 2008

Mozambican President Armando Guebuza, drawing up a balance sheet of his week long visit to the northern province of Cabo Delgado, told reporters that the most visible result of the Local Initiative Development Fund is that flour mills are now appearing throughout the countryside.

Under this fund, annually each district receives at least seven million meticais from the state budget for initiatives intended to increase food production and generate jobs. The money is supposed to be lent to businesses and individuals with viable projects: repayment of these loans will produce a revolving fund that can be continually invested in district development.

The increase in the number of small flour mills, Guebuza said, meant that peasant farmers did not have such long distances to travel to mill their maize, and the time they saved could be used in other activities.

He was also impressed by the increase in the number of small brick factories, producing construction materials that can be used to build better homes that are more resistant to heavy rains and high winds.

Guebuza claimed that the fund had also stimulated the rise in the number of associations of peasants producing rice, vegetables and cotton.

But the President warned against imagining that handing over seven million meticais to each of the 128 districts would solve all problems. It might solve an immediate problem of shortage of funds for development, but other challenges soon arose - such as the need to train those who receive the money in business management.

“We have insisted on the need to train the people who ask for loans”, said Guebuza. “This is our current challenge”. Such training was needed to ensure that the beneficiaries would be able to repay the interest-free loans.

Asked whether the state would recover the old state farms as a way of contributing to a Mozambican green revolution, Guebuza said that running farms was not the state’s job.

Instead the state “takes responsibility for creating a healthy environment so that agricultural production occurs”. It would encourage producers, including the commercial farming sector, and was concerned to train the necessary high level specialists who could play a key role in increasing production.

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New committee to vet 2nd Ward development

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

Developers eyeing construction projects in the 2nd Ward will now contend with a new group connected to the Web Development alderman that will consider and critique projects before they are submitted to the broader community.

The Citizen Advisory Committee was formed by the office of 2nd Ward Alderman Robert Fioretti to vet development proposals, said Hannah Jubeh, Fioretti’s campaign manager during his election.

“They basically review the project, they make recommendations, they say their kind of notes or feedback to the alderman, what they think works, what doesn’t work, what might work better,” Jubeh said of the Web Development committee. “The alderman will take those suggestions and make changes accordingly as part of the overall plan.”

Development was a major issue during last year’s aldermanic primary and runoff election, with former 2nd Ward alderman Madeline Haithcock perceived by some residents as nonresponsive to concerns about the impact of seemingly constant new building projects. Jubeh said under the “previous administration, there was no process at all.”

“These developers are not used to how the process works now, based on what they were used to it in the past. I heard that a lot-how does the process work?” Jubeh said. “We have to bring them in and reeducate them on how the process is going to work.”

The Citizen Advisory Committee has been up and running for a couple of months, Jubeh said. It has 18 members, from four different sub-areas in the ward: the south end, the west end, the Web Development central business district and the Taylor Street/medical district area.

The alderman’s office created the committee by emailing their 4,000-address email database, asking for participation. Forty people responded. Staff divided those 40 into geographic areas and held a lottery to determine who would join the committee. The committee meets as a whole and also can address specific projects in its sub-area.

The email list included Fioretti campaign contributors, people who signed up for information about the campaign through its Web site and Web Development people who have given their email address to the alderman at one of his community meetings, Jubeh said.

Jubeh, who now works as director of political affairs for the Chicago Federation of Labor, spent nine years advising 10th Ward Alderman John Pope on economic development. She said she continues to work with Alderman Fioretti as an unpaid volunteer.

New development projects do not go directly to the CAC. Jubeh and Alderman Fioretti first look at them before sending them to the group. Established community organizations also can weigh in on the Web Development proposal before the CAC contributes. A developer must also complete a development application before meeting with the alderman. But Jubeh said the group will play a key component in “smart planning” for the ward.

“If you go to a community meeting and you haven’t vetted the project per se with residents who live in that specific area, your process is going to be lengthier, and where do you go from there?” she said.

One longtime South Loop resident and development observer said he had not heard the CAC was staffed.

Dennis McClendon said he didn’t think many people know how the CAC was working. He also said Fioretti needs to better inform the Web Development community about projects.

“A bunch of projects have gotten pulled from agendas at the last minute, things like Congress Hotel and the Avalon Bay project,” McClendon said. “It’s not really clear what the process is for showing those to the community. Occasionally, we have these meetings but they’re convened at the last minute. Avalon Bay was done that way.”

Still, McClendon said Fioretti is making development decisions based on “more rational bases and much more understanding of the subject.”

McClendon said the committee is a good idea in the abstract but it must avoid being dominated by any one personality or view.

“I don’t think the alderman should consider himself bound by its recommendations because often what the good of the city may not be may not immediately please residents around the site,” McClendon said.

The CAC is exploring setting monthly meetings and using the Web Development alderman’s Web site to communicate about upcoming projects.

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Fiften years of the web

Saturday, May 3rd, 2008

On that date Cern, put the web in the public domain, “thereby ensuring that the world would have a single system for accessing the Internet, instead of a Microsoft Web, a Macintosh Web and who knows, perhaps even an Amstrad Web,” argues Gillies, who by the way is director of communications for Cern.

Cern’s Tim Berners-Lee recognized the need to manage the data on the web in a simpler way than the complex protocols that had limited the Internet to academics and government bureaucrats.

Encouraged by his bosses, he created the first browser on a NeXT computer using URLs, HTML and HTTP protocols.

Berners-Lee went on to head up the MIT-based World Wide Web Consortium that sets global standards for the web. Recently, he said that even after 15 years of existence and 165 million websites around the world the web is “still in its infancy.”

Berners’Lee argues that the web’s ability to engender collaboration could one day see the web being used to help manage the planet.

“What’s exciting is that people are building new social systems, new systems of review, new systems of governance.

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It’s tough to get back investement on timeshare

Sunday, April 27th, 2008

Timeshare buyers are cautioned about labeling their weeks as “investments.” Think of it as prepaid vacations, timeshare developers famously say.

While an investment, especially in real estate, often stands an excellent chance of making money, the usual return on a timeshare typically centers on enjoyment rather than cash.

Timeshares continue to be big business — more than $8 billion a year — despite the sluggish economy. The American Resort Development Association reports that more than 4.5 million U.S. households own one or more timeshares in 1,604 resorts.

A growing number of entrepreneurs, with an exceptional grasp on how to purchase, close and sell timeshares have begun to acquire inexpensive weeks at upscale resorts via resale channels. They then rent out the properties at a weekly or a per-night rate comparable to what a nice hotel would charge.

“We have people who will go to our Web site and buy 10 weeks at a time,” said John Locher, vice president of sales and marketing for Redweek.com, an online conduit for timeshare buyers, sellers, landlords and renters. “They have studied certain resorts and markets and know what’s possible as far as rental income during a majority of the year.”

Steve Shermoen, a self-described “small-town attorney” from International Falls, Minn., said he now controls about 100 timeshare weeks and plans to spend most of his retirement years rotating through some of them in different parts of the world. Is he concerned about owning so many pieces of the only real estate asset class that always loses money when resold?

“You cannot make the rental concept work if you buy directly from the developer,” Shermoen said. “You have to be sure of what you are buying and purchase only on the resale market. The cost from the developer simply is too high for it to become a rental that will pencil out.”

Shermoen and others like him typically stick to Marriott, Hyatt, Hilton and other upper level properties that they can pick up at a fraction of the original purchase price. They often seek sellers who are extremely eager, often desperate, to dump a timeshare contract because of unexpected circumstances including loss of job, divorce or death. Many timeshare bargains can be found online right after the annual fees are announced for the coming year. As an attorney, Shermoen also offers to close the transaction at a discounted fee.

“Many people are grateful that there is a buyer who is willing to take the week off their hands,” Shermoen said. “They simply are tired of paying the annual fee and can’t wait to get out from under it.”

I was one of them, yet I didn’t even consider renting it out. Nearly 20 years ago, I spent hundreds of dollars marketing the timeshare and considered myself extremely fortunate to get back most of my investment. While some people swear it’s the only way to travel with a family and that the international “bank” of resorts not only offers flexibility but also destinations they normally would not consider, it didn’t happen for us. Basketball tournaments, family reunions, budget restraints and four different school schedules, coupled with the fact that we are very picky about accommodations, led to a three-year timeshare shutout. We owned the “points” for three years and never spent one night in a timeshare resort.

Timeshares come in a variety of packages, including a points program where owners exchange a specific number of accumulated points for a week, weekend or individual nights at resorts that participate in the points arrangement. Some of the larger timeshare companies now offer a point system, permitting owners to split the traditional week into smaller segments. The concept has worked very well for out-of-town family reunions, weddings or simply a needed weekend getaway.

The idea of breaking up the timeshare week into a few one-or-two night stays can also make sense for vacationers traveling a country by car. The average worker typically receives two or three vacation weeks each year and often prefers not to spend a large percentage of that time in one location.

The value of the points can vary greatly. For example, weekend nights will require more points than weeknight stays, and popular resorts will demand more points than a run-of-the-mill getaway. In addition, the future value of points also can be a consideration — not unlike trying to predict the future value of money.

Similar to dollars, timeshare points can be worth a lot more today than they will be down the road. If a resort continues to increase the number of points necessary to rent the unit you covet, the value of your allotted points will decrease. You will need more annual points than the number you are receiving now to reserve the same unit. Seniors and other consumers on fixed incomes may not be getting the perpetual week they initially purchased, which could seriously curtail their dream vacations down the road.

Properly applying points and a resort’s bonus time are just two pieces to successfully renting timeshares. There’s also a huge caveat when shopping.

“Some people try to sell you weeks they don’t really own,” Shermoen said. “It’s another one of the pitfalls to consider when buying and selling. Acquiring and renting out timeshares is complicated and not for the unwary. If you are going to jump in, you have to do your homework.”

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Torch concludes topsy-turvy tour of S.F.

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

SAN FRANCISCO Last-minute changes to the Olympic torch’s route through the only North American city on its world tour helped it evade not only protesters, but also fans who lined up for hours waiting for a historic sight that never arrived.”I’m disappointed, annoyed, tired, frustrated,” Sydney Sullivan, 18, said after unsuccessfully trying to chase the flame through the city. “I mean, it’s not every day you get to see the Olympic torch.”After its parade was rerouted and shortened to prevent disruptions by massive crowds of protesters, a planned closing ceremony at the waterfront was canceled and moved to San Francisco International Airport. The flame was placed on a plane and was not displayed.International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge expressed relief that the San Francisco relay avoided the turmoil of the torch’s previous stops in London and Paris, where demonstrators had tried to snuff out the flame.”Fortunately, the situation was better … in San Francisco,” Rogge said at an Olympic meeting in Beijing. “It was, however, not the joyous party that we had wished it to be.”The torch’s 85,000-mile, 20-nation global journey is the longest in Olympic history, and is meant to build excitement for the Beijing Games. But it has also been targeted by activists angered over China’s human rights record, its rule of Tibet and its support for the governments of Myanmar and Sudan.Chinese officials declared the San Francisco event a success and praised the route changes as a clever strategy for thwarting “Tibetan separatists.”The activists “ran into a brick wall in San Francisco,” the Global Times newspaper, published by the Communist Party mouthpiece People’s Daily, said on its Web site. It called the changes a “brilliant idea.”Jiang Xiayou, executive vice president of the Beijing Olympic torch relay committee, thanked San Francisco.”Perhaps some of them failed to see the sacred flame today,” Jiang said, speaking through a translator at San Francisco’s closing ceremony. “But we all have felt the passion of the Olympic movement.”Less than an hour before the relay began, officials cut the original six-mile route nearly in half.Then, at the opening ceremony, the first torchbearer took the flame from a lantern brought to the stage and held it aloft before running into a waterfront warehouse. A motorcycle escort departed, but the torchbearer was nowhere in sight.Officials drove the Olympic torch about a mile inland and handed it off to two runners away from protesters and media. The runners began jogging in the opposite direction of the crowds, and the procession gave front-row views to nearby residents, who leaned out their windows for the unexpected sight. More confusion followed, and the torch convoy apparently stopped near the Golden Gate Bridge before heading southward to the airport.As the flame traveled toward the airport, news dribbled through the crowds of more than 10,000 spectators and protesters gathered at the waterfront that the torch wasn’t coming. While Olympic fans dispersed in disappointment, many protesters were undeterred by the development.”I think it was very strange that the torch seemed to be running away from the people, but it was a good day because attention was focused on some very important issues,” said Jerry Fowler, president of the Save Darfur Coalition.San Francisco Police Chief Heather Fong said the decision was made after protesters who swarmed into the street along the original route refused police orders to get back behind barricades. Disputes among China protesters and supporters were escalating into “pushing and shoving matches,” Fong said, and one protest group began breaking windows on a bus.”We had serious concerns about the possibility of additional violence, of additional disruption … if the torch bearers were to run along this route,” Fong said. “We felt it would not be safe.”There were signs of tension even before the torch relay began. Pro-Tibet and pro-China groups had side-by-side permits to demonstrate, and representatives from both sides spilled from their sanctioned sites across a major street and shouted at each other nose to nose, with no visible police presence to separate them.Farther along the planned route, about 200 Chinese college students mobbed a car carrying two people waving Tibetan flags in front of the city’s Pier 39 tourist destination. The students, who arrived by bus from the University of California, Davis, banged drums and chanted “Go Olympics” in Chinese.”I’m proud to be Chinese and I’m outraged because there are so many people who are so ignorant they don’t know Tibet is part of China,” Yi Che said. “It was and is and will forever be part of China.”Only a handful of arrests were made, and no major incidents were reported, police said.Local officials say they support the diversity of viewpoints, but tightened security following chaotic protests during the torch’s stops in London and Paris and a demonstration Monday in which activists hung banners from the Golden Gate Bridge.Vans were deployed to haul away arrested protesters, and the Federal Aviation Administration restricted flights over the city. One of the runners who planned to carry the torch dropped out earlier this week because of safety concerns, officials said.Torchbearers in other cities have complained of aggressive behavior by paramilitary police in blue track suits sent by Beijing to guard the Olympic flame. Although there were no major problems reported in California, they did make their presence felt.At least one torchbearer decided to show her support for Tibetan independence during her moment in the spotlight. After being passed the Olympic flame, Majora Carter pulled out a small Tibetan flag that she had hidden in her shirt sleeve.”The Chinese security and cops were on me like white on rice, it was no joke,” said Carter, 41, who runs a nonprofit organization in New York. “They pulled me out of the race, and then San Francisco police officers pushed me back into the crowd on the side of the street.”Peter Ueberroth, chairman of the United States Olympic Committee, said the U.S. had struck the right balance between preserving freedom of speech for protesters, providing an exhilarating experience for the torchbearers, and preventing a repeat of the chaotic demonstrations that accompanied the torch in London and Paris.”As close as anybody can do in a free society, so far it’s looking very good,” Ueberroth said. “Virtually anybody and everybody is being heard.”On Friday, the IOC’s executive board is to discuss whether to end the remaining international legs of the relay after San Francisco because of widespread protest. The torch is scheduled to travel to Buenos Aires, Argentina, and then to a dozen other countries before arriving in China on May 4. The Olympics begin Aug. 8.After the San Francisco event, Indonesian officials announced it would significantly shorten its leg of the Olympic torch relay in the capital, Jakarta, citing security concerns. Their relay was scheduled for April 22.Rogge has refrained from criticizing China, saying he prefers to engage in “silent diplomacy” with the Chinese.Meanwhile, the White House said anew that President Bush would attend the Olympics, but left open the possibility that he would skip the opening ceremonies. Asked whether Bush would go to that portion of the games, White House press secretary Dana Perino demurred, citing the fluid nature of a foreign trip schedule.A spokesman for British Prime Minister Gordon Brown said he would not attend the opening ceremony. Brown’s office said the decision was not aimed at sending a message of protest to the Chinese government, that Olympics Minister Tessa Jowell will represent the British government at the opening, and that Brown would attend the closing ceremony.London is hosting the 2012 Olympics and British officials were expected to attend events throughout the games.French President Nicolas Sarkozy has said he is debating not attending the opening ceremony as a protest of China’s crackdown in Tibet.

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Boise checking on two employees' outside work

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

Boise attorneys and human resources officials are reviewing whether two city employees are violating city rules by working at private wastewater treatment facilities.Interim Public Works Director John Tenson said he’s asked to see if the moonlighting work performed by Bill Duncan and Chris Linder and their company, Operations Management Consulting Services, conflicts with their city jobs. The city allows employees to have second jobs so long as they don’t interfere with city work and employees inform their supervisors.Duncan and Linder meet job performance requirements managing the city’s two wastewater treatment facilities, and have disclosed the work of their company, Tenson said. Since 1999, the men also have operated the company that contracts for daily operations at smaller, independent treatment plants such as Boise’s Hidden Springs and the Avimor planned community in Ada County.In January, Boise Mayor Dave Bieter had his staff create a policy designed to block sewage from outside communities after Avimor’s developers said they intended to truck sewage to Boise’s treatment plants. Bieter has opposed the Avimor development, calling it “leapfrog development” and urban sprawl. The company owned by Duncan and Linder will operate and maintain Avimor’s treatment facility.Last month, Boise blogger Dave Frazier complained about the arrangement, and the Idaho Statesman has received messages about the moonlighting. The company’s Web site touts Duncan’s and Linder’s experience within the city. It also lists the city’s 2006 Peak Performance Platinum Award - recognition for superior operations at the West Boise Wastewater Treatment Plant.Tenson said questions about the company have cropped up from time to time. But until a Statesman inquiry, Tenson wasn’t aware his employees’ company worked on several projects with a local firm, Pharmer Engineering, that sometimes contracts with Boise. Tenson asked the city’s legal and human resources department to rule out any potential conflicts with that company, he said.”We take conflict of interest very seriously. We want to make sure every step of the way, you are doing it right,” Tenson said. “It’s awkward. From a management perspective, moonlighting causes any manager a concern. But you have to respect what they can do in their private life, too.”Duncan declined to comment, other than to say he was “not doing anything wrong or illegal. Everything is above-board.”Linder did not return a message left on his city telephone.Robert Pharmer, president of Pharmer Engineering, which designed both the Avimor and Hidden Springs facilities, said the companies work separately. “They do not oversee our projects at all, and they do not work on our projects,” Pharmer said. “There is no connection, business-wise, contractually or any other way.”City contracts are selected through the engineering division, and neither Linder nor Duncan oversee any contracts, Tenson said. “We plan (to have) a meeting later this week to make sure there is no conflict,” he said.Tenson also referenced a 2007 document from the city’s ethics commission, which said it was ethical for city employees to work for companies performing similar work as their city job, when paid by the hour and there is not a conflict of interest or violation of the fiduciary duties owed to the city.Bieter is comfortable with a previous review and has no problem with the men doing outside work, said his spokesman Adam Park. “This case has been looked at carefully, and it was determined there was no conflict of interest or violation of city policy,” Park said. “Once that determination has been made, they’re free to do what they want with their own time.”Kathleen Kreller: 377-6418

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10 p.m. — City looking into potential conflict of interest for wastewater plant workers

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

Boise attorneys and human resources officials are reviewing whether two city employees are violating city rules by working at private wastewater treatment facilities.Interim Public Works Director John Tenson said he抯 asked to see if the moonlighting work performed by Bill Duncan and Chris Linder and their company, Operations Management Consulting Services, conflicts with their city jobs. The city allows employees to have second jobs so long as they don抰 interfere with city work and employees inform their supervisors.Duncan and Linder meet job performance requirements managing the city抯 two wastewater treatment facilities, and have disclosed the work of their company, Tenson said. Since 1999, the men also have operated the company that contracts for daily operations at smaller, independent treatment plants such as Boise抯 Hidden Springs and the Avimor planned community in Ada County.In January, Boise Mayor Dave Bieter had his staff create a policy designed to block sewage from outside communities after Avimor抯 developers said they intended to truck sewage to Boise抯 treatment plants. Bieter has opposed the Avimor development, calling it 搇eapfrog development?and urban sprawl. The company owned by Duncan and Linder will operate and maintain Avimor抯 treatment facility.Last month, Boise blogger Dave Frazier complained about the arrangement, and the Idaho Statesman has received messages about the moonlighting. The company抯 Web site touts Duncan抯 and Linder抯 experience within the city. It also lists the city抯 2006 Peak Performance Platinum Award ?recognition for superior operations at the West Boise Wastewater Treatment Plant.Tenson said questions about the company have cropped up from time to time. But until a Statesman inquiry, Tenson wasn抰 aware his employees?company worked on several projects with a local firm, Pharmer Engineering, that sometimes contracts with Boise.
Tenson asked the city抯 legal and human resources department to rule out any potential conflicts with that company, he said.揥e take conflict of interest very seriously. We want to make sure every step of the way, you are doing it right,?Tenson said. 揑t抯 awkward. From a management perspective, moonlighting causes any manager a concern. But you have to respect what they can do in their private life, too.?p/>Duncan declined to comment, other than to say he was 搉ot doing anything wrong or illegal. Everything is above-board.?p/>Linder did not return a message left on his city telephone.Read more in Thursday’s Idaho Statesman.

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Homeowners feel heat in West coal boom

Sunday, April 13th, 2008

WESTON, Colo. A hamlet near here of wooded gulches, rocky outcrops and views of the snowy tops of southern Colorado’s Sangre de Cristo mountains is the perfect escape for retirees and telecommuters who’ve settled in.But people who bought lots on the 4,000-acre North Fork Ranch about 200 miles south of Denver, hoping to leave behind big-city hassles, worry when they flip on a switch or take a drink of water. They’re afraid that volatile methane gas from drilling in the area’s coal seams could seep into their water wells or migrate inside their homes.That’s no idle fear. A house under construction near the subdivision exploded last April when methane gas leaked from an abandoned well and into the building. Two water wells in the subdivision were damaged in 2006 during gas drilling.Pioneer Natural Resources, a Dallas-based energy company, drilled new water wells, provided a filtration system and settled for an undisclosed amount with one family. The company, which contends it’s unclear whether it caused the problems, hasn’t settled with the other family.”You don’t know day to day when you turn on your faucet whether you’re going to have good, clean water or whether there’s going to be chemicals in there that you’re unaware of,” said Tracy Dahl, a design engineer who built a home atop a mountain on North Fork in 1995.Higher natural gas prices and the push for domestic energy development have made the Rockies’ unconventional sources more economical. That’s created conflicts with the area’s growing population, most of which lives on a split estate: when one party owns the land and another owns the minerals underneath.The split occurred across the West as the federal government granted homesteads but retained the mineral rights, or when people sold the land but kept the minerals. Federal and state laws give mineral owners or leaseholders the right to reasonable use of the surface to extract the minerals.Most of the gas drilled in the Raton Basin, which includes the ranch, is from coal-bed methane - gas trapped in coal seams that once provided a thriving coal-mining industry. Roughly 2,600 coal-bed methane wells have been drilled.Methane gas was a liability in coal mining because of its volatility, but then companies started tapping it as a fuel source. Pumping groundwater relieves the pressure that traps the gas, raising concerns among landowners about the effects on the water table and drinking water wells.The Raton Basin is one of the hot spots of an energy boom rippling throughout the Rockies. There are roughly 34,000 active wells across Colorado and tens of thousands more are expected over the next 20 years.Warren McDonald, who ranches west of North Fork, has a good relationship with Pioneer Natural Resources.”Typically, the people having the problems moved from cities and towns. They think they’re going to go up to the wilderness and live in harmony with nature, but those days are kind of gone,” said McDonald, whose family has ranched in the area since 1890.McDonald said energy development is a big boost for ranchers and farmers like him who own some minerals because they get royalty payments. Jobs, business and tax revenue are all up.”It’s night and day from when the coal mines shut down in the ’90s,” McDonald said.”I saw the downside when the coal mines closed,” said Glenn Moltrer, a businessman who heads the local chamber of commerce. “People actually put dummies in the windows of stores (in Trinidad) to make it look like something was there besides vacant storefronts.”On River Ridge Ranch, a rural subdivision near Walsenburg about 40 miles north, the state has halted gas production so the operator, Petroglyph Energy of Boise, Idaho, can figure out how methane is getting into water wells and how to stop it.A small fire erupted when a spark from an electrical switch ignited built-up methane at a water well on the ranch last summer. Around the same time, an explosion raised the roof on a shed over a water well near the subdivision.Petroglyph Energy provided homeowners devices to monitor whether their wellheads are venting methane. Petroglyph Chief Operating Officer Ken Smith said the company is monitoring groundwater and has seen nothing to indicate that people are in danger.Bruce Hopke’s home sports a view of hills covered in pinon pines rolling west for miles, slamming up against the snow-creased Spanish Peaks. Plans for about 50 wells have been approved on the 5,600-acre River Ranch site, but not all drilling permits have been issued.”I would love to see them fix it, I really would,” Hopke said of Petroglyph’s plan to block seeping methane. “If they fix it, nothing has changed, everything’s fine. You can have a cup of coffee and turn on a light switch - the small pleasures.”If it doesn’t fix it, then it’s a heckuva problem,” said Hopke, a retiree.Interest in the area by another gas company prompted Huerfano County to consider a drilling moratorium so it can study its rights and responsibilities, said John Galusha, county administrator.Dahl and Marcia Dasko, both members of the North Fork Ranch landowners’ association, acknowledged the strong support for the industry because of jobs. They said a hearing in neighboring Trinidad on strengthening state oil and gas regulations drew hundreds of energy workers and officials, many of whom criticized the proposals.”It doesn’t have to be done with a gold-rush mentality,” Dahl said. “Everybody knows about energy boom and bust cycles and yet everybody here seems to be turning a blind eye to it.”Dahl and Dasko noted that a recent state study estimated that drilling in the Raton Basin depletes area water by about 2,500 acre feet a year.That amounts to roughly 815 million gallons of water that aren’t returned to streams and rivers, a volume called “significant” by Matt Sares, deputy director of the Colorado Geological Survey. He said the current total is likely quite a bit lower because of the wells temporarily shut down on River Ridge Ranch. Those wells produce more water than ones farther south.Some of the water pumped out is reinjected. Some flows into streams or is used for irrigation or livestock if it meets state standards.Besides concerns about water, Dahl and Dasko said they wonder what happens to the land after wells are drilled, waste pits are dug and roads are carved out of hillsides.On a recent tour of North Fork Ranch, sections of small fences to prevent sediment from flowing into streams were lying flat in the mud.A March 11 report on the Web site of the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission, the main regulatory agency, said an inspection found “numerous sediment and erosion problems.” It said Pioneer agreed to make repairs and improvements.At home, Dasko plopped two big binders on a table. The binders were packed with photos of alleged violations, correspondence with Pioneer and other documents. She said landowners have taken water samples and charted the fate of area wetlands and streams.”We went into this whole thing very proactive, fairly organized. We hired the best lawyers we possibly could,” Dahl said of the landowners’ agreement with Pioneer for use of the surface. “Most folks are not doing these kinds of things and it’s ridiculous to expect a citizen to have to.”

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