Page 4A OPINION East Oregonian Tuesday, January 31, 2017 Founded October 16, 1875 KATHRYN B. BROWN Publisher DANIEL WATTENBURGER Managing Editor TIM TRAINOR Opinion Page Editor MARISSA WILLIAMS Regional Advertising Director MARCY ROSENBERG Circulation Manager JANNA HEIMGARTNER Business Office Manager MIKE JENSEN Production Manager OUR VIEW Too much at stake to bog down session with usual silliness The 2017 Oregon Legislature 2017 Oregon Legislature will convene Wednesday amid acrimony, political silliness and dire House and Senate committees start meeting at 8 a.m. Wednes- predictions. day. The House and Senate will This is all part of the ritual convene floor sessions at 11 a.m. dance that launches each legislative Online: Go to oregonlegislature. session, as the Republicans and gov to watch meetings, to read Democrats, House and Senate, and bills and to contact legislators. individual lawmakers jockey for political leverage. a fair point when he noted that the Gov. Kate Brown and legislative Democratic leaders in Congress leaders from both parties predict also employ such “obstructionist” this could be the most difficult tactics because their party is in the legislative session in years, as minority. lawmakers struggle to balance Congress is an awfully low bar the state budget and develop a for comparison. transportation Oregonians package. There is widespread expect more of At some their Legislature. point — probably agreement that That includes late spring, if this having the session follows Oregon must majority party the usual pattern — legislators will reinvest in its roads make concessions to work well begin the difficult and bridges, and with the minority compromises on party, and vice the budget and make its public versa. other contentious Republican issues. No one transit systems leaders have wants a repeat of admitted that the the era in which more effective. 2017-19 state the Legislature budget will be repeatedly was called back to the Oregon Capitol to untenable without more revenue. Democrats need Republican votes revise the state budget. for any tax increases, which require As state Senate Majority Leader a supermajority for passage. In Ginny Burdick, D-Portland, said return, Democrats should accept last week, “I think everybody just the need for continued reforms to needs to take a deep breath.” Legislators can speed the political hold down the cost of government, including the Public Employees process by abandoning some of their political silliness, especially in Retirement System. Some people want to delay PERS the House, where Republicans are discussions, possibly until a special threatening to slow daily business. session. That is a very bad idea. Democrats outnumber Special legislative sessions come Republicans 35-25 in the House with no guarantees. and 17-13 in the Senate. Those Likewise, the 2017 Legislature numbers give Republicans little should meet both Democrats’ and influence except on tax measures, Republicans’ needs in putting which require a supermajority for together a transportation-finance approval. package. There is widespread That is why Republicans may agreement that Oregon must demand that the House devote reinvest in its roads and bridges, far more time to publicly reading and make its public transit legislation aloud, word-for-word. systems more effective. But the That would slow the legislative majority Democrats should heed process to a crawl, ensuring Republicans’ desire for flexibility in fewer bills become law, which the state’s low-carbon fuel standards some Oregonians might see as a for vehicles — a flawed program blessing. But that threat also gives Republicans a bargaining chip: Give that Democrats rammed through the 2015 Legislature. us more of what we want and we Those are real issues. The sooner won’t slow the process. that legislators can get past the Whether that is obstructionism acrimony and obstructionism, the or pragmatism is in the eye of the beholder. House Republican Leader sooner they can make progress on those real issues. Mike McLane of Powell Butte had Unsigned editorials are the opinion of the East Oregonian editorial board of publisher Kathryn Brown, managing editor Daniel Wattenburger, and opinion page editor Tim Trainor. Other columns, letters and cartoons on this page express the opinions of the authors and not necessarily that of the East Oregonian. OTHER VIEWS N Fog of Trump ormally, at the end of a new policies harder to interpret. Is his administration’s tumultuous administration planning a trade war first week, it’s the pundit’s job with Mexico, as his tweets suggest, to sit back and chin-stroke and explain or just pushing a wonky border- everything that the president and his adjustment tax that’s been part of GOP aides are doing right or wrong. proposals for a while? Are we actually In the Donald Trump era, though, considering reviving waterboarding, there’s a distinctive problem: Before he or is that just an empty executive order can be defended or criticized, we have left over from the Romney transition Ross to figure out what’s actually happening. Douthat that James Mattis and Mike Pompeo And for several reasons, that’s going to have no intention of operationalizing? Comment be harder in this presidency than ever Is the administration about to embark before. on a racially coded war against First: This is clearly going to be an phantom voter fraud based on random administration with multiple centers of gravity, anecdotes and conspiracy theories ... or is this with more fractiousness and freelancing than just a “Twitter promise,” not a real one? in the relatively tight ships that Barack Obama Of course, time will bring a certain clarity. and George W. Bush ran. The Trump White We’ll find out whether Trump’s refugee House has a weak chief of staff surrounded by and visa freezes from Muslim countries rivalrous advisers. The Trump Cabinet is not are actually temporary, a means to stricter necessarily on the same ideological page as screening, or whether they become permanent. the president’s inner circle. Trump himself is We’ll move from speculation to reality on famous for agreeing with the last person who Russia policy. We’ll find out how far the bent his ear. So there is no trustworthy voice president intends to run with the voter-fraud providing public clarity — least of all poor nonsense. We’ll see how often his angry Sean Spicer — in cases where multiple balls tweets and behind-the-scenes obsessions and trial balloons are airborne. cash out, and how often they’re just a way of Second: The establishment press, as I venting. warned last week, is being pressured to lead But if the fog lifts in some cases, it’s the resistance to Trumpism, which makes it likely to chronically shroud the policymaking more likely to run with the most shocking process on issues (health care, taxes, interpretations (muzzled bureaucrats! mass infrastructure, more) where Trump needs his resignations!) of whatever the White House congressional allies to have certainty about happens to be doing. At the same time, the their shared objectives. And it threatens to Trump inner circle clearly intends to lean into descend more dramatically — with Stephen this phenomenon, to encourage the press-as- King-style monsters screaming in the opposition narrative, seeing mainstream-media mist — with every unexpected event, every mistakes as a way of shoring up its own base’s unlooked-for crisis, in which what the White loyalty. And then the technological forces House says in real time will matter much more shaping media coverage also encourage errors than it does right now. and overreach — a dubious story or even a I ended last week’s column with a warning misleading live-tweet of a press conference for the press corps about their potential can go around the online world long before the contribution to a climate of political hysteria. more prosaic truth has reached your Facebook But this column’s warning is for the president feed. (A self-serving suggestion: In such a and his advisers, some of whom clearly like climate, the discerning citizen may come to the fog and seem to imagine that it will help appreciate anew the tortoise-like pace of print them govern just as it probably helped them journalism.) win. Third: Trumpism is an ideological cocktail They shouldn’t be so confident. For that doesn’t fit the patterns we’re used to in legislators, too much fog is paralyzing. For U.S. politics, and Trump has arrayed himself voters, it’s a recipe for nervous exhaustion. against bipartisan habits of mind on all sorts For allies, it’s confusing; for enemies, it looks of issues. This means, as The Week columnist like an opportunity. Damon Linker notes perceptively, that he’s Trump is not a popular president, he has guaranteed to do things that seem “abnormal” not actually built an electoral majority, his and that take both the press corps and D.C. team is not particularly experienced. If he mandarins aback — like, say, actually can’t provide clarity and reassurance and a enforcing already on-the-books immigration little light around his agenda, it will be very laws. The trick for the public will be figuring easy for a fog-bound presidency to simply run where what’s “abnormal” is obviously aground. “alarming” and where it makes more sense to ■ wait and see. Which will be hard for reasons Ross Douthat joined The New York one and two, and also because ... Times as an Op-Ed columnist in April 2009. ... Trump himself is a loose cannon whose Previously, he was a senior editor at The public interventions tend to make his own Atlantic. YOUR VIEWS Trust us, we have a plan — or do we? I hear that the community is finally going to get the details from our public works director on the Eighth Street Bridge project. The Westgate overpass and the viaduct on Eastgate are still missing streetlights because either the high cost of the designer light poles or “light pollution,” both claimed by Public Works. The plan for the bridge includes the installation, near the bridge, of those same designer light poles as there are on Main Street. Common sense says, how about completing the area’s most frequently traveled areas first? Then there’s the “tunneling effect” created by the planned street trees. Since the new bridge will create a new high-speed arterial street, ripe for development of the picturesque hillside building lots, this “tunnel” of trees will create a calming effect, slowing expected heavy traffic to an acceptable flow. The Public Works Department is promising to maintain these trees, trimming branches and raking leaves, accepting responsibility for repair of sidewalks and streets damaged by the trees as they’ve done on Main Street. I’d suggest they get that in writing. Remember, the author of this plan will not be the public works director in 20 years, when the damage is really being done. In a recent conversation with our new mayor, I questioned the wisdom of approving a change in the previously approved plan to replace the townhouses in Pendleton Heights with multi-unit apartment buildings, as proposed by the contractor. The change, adding 100 new units, would add to the already congested traffic on Southgate. City Hall has consistently denied this would adversely affect traffic flow. Perhaps a chat with the outgoing mayor, having witnessed the congestion first hand, would change their mind. In other news, I thought the city had a change of heart when I saw a road grader plowing snow. It turned out to be ODOT. As the public works director explained, the city has no plan or equipment to plow streets. Wal-Mart, Safeway and Melanie Square have plans to combat the snow for continued retail operation. After all that City Hall invests in the downtown area, they have no plan for the business area or school bus routes. Maybe I’m dating myself, but I remember when they at least plowed Main Street and others. I wouldn’t call this progress. Just maybe it’s time for a plan. Perhaps it would have saved me from a fall and a trip to the doctor. Rick Rohde Pendleton Solutions for the dispatch center The Umatilla Dispatch “Funding Agreement” as defined in Sheriff Rowan’s memo to the Dispatch Advisory Committee (all public employees) dated March 23, 2016, is unjust, not equitable and ill-conceived. That memo applied to tax year 2016-2017. History: Years back, Pendleton and Hermiston did their own dispatching. Next, using county tax revenue, the sheriff’s office did the dispatching. Shortly thereafter the sheriff’s office received the 911 funds amounting to $463,258 in 2016-17 and is projected to receive an estimated $502,000 in 2017-18. The above-mentioned memo indicates the sheriff’s office requested from Hermiston $303,486; Pendleton, $308,419; Umatilla, $63,869; Standfield/ Echo, $33,485; Pilot Rock, $20,417; and fire districts, $189,389, plus $975,056 from Umatilla County (paid out from Umatilla County tax revenue). Therefore: • Rural Umatilla County, Athena/ Weston, Ukiah and Helix pay nothing in addition to normal county taxes and 911 charges. • The five major cities pay normal county taxes and 911 charges plus $729,676. • The fire districts are charged on per call basis. • The total Umatilla Dispatch budget is $2,559,908, or $36.53 per citizen. A family of four would pay $146.12 for dispatch alone — considerably more than the surrounding counties. • The charges are computed on net assessed tax value, which has absolutely no relationship to the number of calls received for service. Suggestions/recommendations: • In tax year 2017-18, established a Umatilla Interagency Dispatch Center to be funded and managed in a fair and equitable manner by those who use the services. • Place all the CSEPP equipment donated to Umatilla County in the center. • Strongly consider charging by the call — that’s the service being offered. • Add total cost of dispatch to the sheriff’s budget (indirectly the Umatilla County Budget), to be approved by Umatilla County commissioners. John Taylor Pilot Rock LETTERS POLICY The East Oregonian welcomes original letters of 400 words or less on public issues and public policies for publication in the newspaper and on our website. The newspaper reserves the right to withhold letters that address concerns about individual services and products or letters that infringe on the rights of private citizens. Submitted letters must be signed by the author and include the city of resi- dence and a daytime phone number. The phone number will not be published. Unsigned letters will not be published. Send letters to managing editor Daniel Wattenburger, 211 S.E. Byers Ave. Pendleton, OR 97801 or email editor@eastoregonian.com.