Daily Archives: January 13, 2010

Jay Reatard dead at 29

Sad news for the garage rock world: Jay Reatard, whose given name was Jimmy Lee Lindsey Jr., was found dead in his Memphis home early this morning. He was just 29. According to a statement from Goner Records, the label that released the singer’s earliest efforts, he died in his sleep. Further details have not been released.

The troubled performer, whose entire band quit in October over an undisclosed dispute and whose rising star was occasionally besmirched by negative publicity over stage violence, leaves behind a legacy of energetic, angry and often melodic recordings with a variety of bands.

Emerging from the Memphis underground of the late ‘90s with punk act The Reatards, the young singer built a reputation on outrageous stage antics and fast and furious music with a buzzsaw sensibility. He spent time in bands as diverse as the synth-punk-influenced Lost Sounds, Nervous Patterns, Destruction Unit, new wave garage outfit The Final Solutions and innumerable incarnations of his self-titled act, including a couple of completely solo outings.

Reatard’s 2006 album “Blood Visions,” from In the Red Records, garnered widespread critical acclaim and cult adulation, which led to his being signed to big-league indie Matador Records. His debut full-length for the label, “Watch Me Fall,” was released in late 2009.

A statement on the label’s Matablog reads: “We are devastated by the death of Jimmy Lee Lindsey Jr., aka Jay Reatard. Jay was as full of life as anyone we’ve ever met, and responsible for so many memorable moments as a person and artist. We’re honored to have known and worked with him, and we will miss him terribly.”

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Haiti relief? I thought we were the evil empire

The United States was leading an international relief effort Wednesday to rescue victims trapped in the rubble and provide aid after a devastating earthquake in Haiti, as dozens of other countries contributed assistance ranging from heaps of cash to small teams of aid workers.

Canada, European nations and countries across Latin America have mobilized supplies and aid for the island nation.

But one geographically close country is conspicuously absent from the roster of helping hands.

Cuba, which had evacuated some of its residents as a precaution in case the earthquake triggered a tsunami, has so far not offered any assistance publicly to its devastated island neighbor.

Though the two countries have had warm ties since establishing relations 12 years ago after a 36-year break, the Cuban government Web site, along with Cuban news agencies, did not detail any offers of Cuban aid.

A representative from the Cuban diplomatic offices in the U.S. could not be reached for comment.

Despite the missing neighbor, most major nations in the Western Hemisphere, along with many European nations, were scrambling to provide aid by Wednesday morning.

President Obama announced a “swift, coordinated and aggressive effort to save lives” consisting of search-and-rescue operations and humanitarian relief of food, water and medicine. The United States, with its proximity to the disaster zone, is quickly deploying Marines and rescue workers to the country as well as a full range of heavy-duty resources that includes helicopters, ships and transport planes.

Gen. Douglas Fraser, head of U.S. Southern Command, said that one of the U.S. Navy’s large amphibious ships, which has medical capabilities, will likely head to Haiti with a 2,000-member Marine expeditionary unit aboard. The hospital ship USNS Comfort, which has about 560 medical personnel on board, is also getting ready to leave for Haiti, according to a defense official, though the crew has not yet received formal orders to depart.

Fraser said other U.S. military forces are on alert, including a brigade, which includes about 3,500 troops. Fraser said that the Pentagon is “seriously looking at” sending thousands of Marines to assist with disaster relief efforts and security in Haiti. The general said that a U.S. aircraft carrier, the USS Carl Vinson, is also heading from Norfolk, Va., and should arrive Thursday afternoon.

The U.S. Agency for International Development has taken the lead for the United States and is sending two 72-person search-and-rescue teams carrying tons of equipment to the island nation. Coast Guard cutters and aircraft are on the ground and ready to assist, according to the Department of Homeland Security. U.S. Southern Command is also deploying a team of 30 engineers, operational planners and other specialists to arrive in Haiti Wednesday.

Meanwhile, the European Union approved 3 million euros — worth $4.37 million in U.S. currency — in aid to Haiti, with more funding reportedly expected. The E.U. is planning to send a team of experts to assess the damage Wednesday afternoon. Israel and Ireland also had disaster aid teams on the way while China sent the first contingency to arrive after it announced some from its diplomatic mission in Haiti were missing.

In North America, Canada, according to the Toronto Sun, was sending a military reconnaissance team as well to assess the damage and determine what aid and assistance is needed. Mexican President Felipe Calderon released a written statement saying his administration is establishing contact in order to “provide timely support for (Haiti’s) population and restore life on the island to normal.”

Across Latin America, other nations beside Cuba were stepping up to help.

According to the Times of London, Peru will direct its 205 peacekeepers in the country to help rescue efforts. The Dominican Republic is sending a team of rescue dogs to search for victims. Nicaragua has pledged to send a team to repair electrical lines in Haiti.  relief

Even Venezuela announced that it would send a team of 50 rescue workers to the disaster zone. A statement on Venezuela’s government Web site announced the country would send food, medicine and other humanitarian aid.

the Bolivian government announced that its military contingent in Haiti was assisting in the rescue efforts and that the country would prepare an aid package.

Gonzalo Espariz, a spokesman for the Organization of American States, said member countries of the group plan on “channeling” aid through an affiliated organization in Haiti.

“We don’t know to what extent,” he said, but added that representatives from member nations are meeting throughout the day to determine what is needed.

Other nations expressed support for the victims but did not detail aid. According to the Fars News Agency, Iran sent its “condolences” to the people of Haiti.

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California considers this and first statewide green building code, hopes to run whats left of business sector out of the state

California, long a trendsetter for eco-friendly living, is breaking ground again this week. It’s set, as early as today, to adopt the nation’s first statewide green building code, which environmentalists say is not tough enough, and is also considering paying residents to cut their energy use.

California, long a trendsetter in eco-wise living, is set to adopt the nation’s first statewide green building code, backed by GOP Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. He spoke at the United Nations climate conference last month in Copenhagen.
By Heribert Proepper, AP

On Monday, a state panel proposed that most of the new fees California plans to impose on greenhouse-gas emissions be returned to energy-saving consumers in the form of annual dividend checks that eventually could exceed $1,000 for a family of four, the Wall Street Journal reports.

The story says this proposal is part of an effort to find the most efficient way to change consumer behavior.

California is expected today to adopt a  green building code that would reduce water use, mandate the recycling of construction waste and step up enforcement of energy efficiency in new homes, schools, hospitals and commercial buildings, the Los Angeles Times reports.

However, environmental groups, including the Sierra Club and the Natural Resources Defense Council, are mounting a last-ditch effort to derail key elements of the plan, backed by GOP Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. The report explains:

Critics say the rules fall short of rigorous standards adopted by Los Angeles, San Francisco and more than 50 California jurisdictions in league with the U.S. Green Building Council, a national non-profit group of architects, engineers and construction companies.

The council’s voluntary Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design standards have become an industry norm in recent years, with architects and construction firms competing on four levels — LEED basic, silver, gold or platinum — to market their buildings as green.

In 2004, Schwarzenegger ordered that all new state buildings meet at least a LEED silver level.

But parts of the state’s new code, which would take effect in January 2011, would amount to “a setback for California’s leadership on green building,” according to a Dec. 22 letter from six groups. They included the Sierra Club, the Natural Resources Defense Council and Global Green, along with two non-profit certification groups, the Green Building Council and Berkeley-based Build It Green.

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