OPINION A4 HERMISTONHERALD.COM SATURDAY, JANUARY 17, 2015 EDITORIAL • COMMENTARY • LETTERS HermistonHerald VOLUME 109 ɿ NUMBER 5 JESSICA KELLER EDITOR jkeller@hermistonherald.com 541-564-4533 MAEGAN MURRAY SEAN HART SAM BARBEE JEANNE JEWETT REPORTER mmurray@hermistonherald.com 541-564-4532 SPORTS REPORTER sbarbee@hermistonherald.com 541-564-4542 REPORTER smhart@hermistonherald.com 541-564-4534 MULTI-MEDIA CONSULTANT jjewett@hermistonherald.com 541-564-4531 STEPHANIE BURKENBINE MULTI-MEDIA CONSULTANT sburkenbine@hermistonherald.com 541-564-4538 To contact the Hermiston Herald for news, advertising or subscription information: • call 541-567-6457 • e-mail info@hermistonherald.com • VWRSE\RXURI¿FHVDW(0DLQ6W • visit us online at: www.hermistonherald.com ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered by carrier and mail Wednesdays and Saturdays Inside Umatilla/Morrow counties ......................................................................................... $42.65 Outside Umatilla/Morrow counties ...................................................................................... $53.90 The Hermiston Herald (USPS 242220, ISSN 8750-4782) is published twice weekly at Hermiston Herald, 333 E. Main St., Hermiston, OR 97838, (541) 567-6457, FAX (541) 567-1764. Periodical postage paid at Hermiston, OR. Postmaster, send address changes to Hermiston Herald, 333 Printed on E. Main St., Hermiston, OR 97838. recycled A member of the EO Media Group Copyright ©2015 newsprint Cause and effect “ ::YOU SHOULD WRITE SOMETHING ABOUT CAUSE AND EFFECT::” my editor told me. Regular readers will note that she reads differently now; apparently using brackets to indicate Editorspeak causes the words to disappear on the internet. This was not a problem back in the quill and parchment days of my youth, but I can adapt. “Cause and effect” is an interesting topic, in theory simple to understand but in practice, not so much. Hold a pencil over the ÀRRU/HWJR7KHSHQFLO GURSVDQGKLWVWKHÀRRU The cause of the drop is gravity. The effect is a dropping pencil hitting WKHÀRRU6LPSOHULJKW" So what kind of problems could possibly arise with VRPHWKLQJVRHDV\" 7KH¿UVWSUREOHPLV that the human brain is ZLUHGWR¿QGSDWWHUQV even where patterns do not exist. See further examples at “that cloud looks like a bunny” or “those cracks in the lava ÀRZDUHLGHQWLFDOWRD road map of Hermiston, except for the lack of Beebe and Grouse.” This wiring can be useful at times, but it also leads to the logical fallacy of post hoc ergo propter hoc: “After this, therefore because of this,” or its close cousin, “Correlation is not causation.” In short, just because two things happen close together in time does not mean they are related. The bells here in town that ring around sundown are not causing the sun to go down. We do not need to bang drums to save the sun from a solar eclipse. Stepping on a crack does not hurt your mother’s back — that effect was caused when she slipped on the Matchbox cars you left laying in the living room. Don’t ask me how I know that last one. There are entire classes of people who do not grasp the basics of cause and effect, or at least affect not to. “I was arrested for no reason!” they’ll say, ignoring the fact that they were pushing a shopping cart of unpaid-for Letters Policy THOMAS CREASING OFF THE BENCH Herald columnist merchandise out of a local store when it happened. The problem isn’t limited to the criminal class, either — scientists used to believe that maggots spontaneously appeared on meat until Francesco Redi proved differently with an experiment. Likewise, politicians believe that jobs spontaneously appear because they give their cronies money — an experiment that has been demonstrating drastically different results for nearly the decade. One of the biggest problems people have in dealing with cause and effect is the combination of not knowing, or not considering, what effects their actions will have. In fairness, sometimes LW¶VMXVWWKH¿UVWSHEEOHRI the avalanche — Gavrilo Princip could not possibly have had any idea that his VKRWVZRXOGEHWKH¿UVWRI World War I. On the other hand, only the willfully blind could have truly believed that destroying Iraq under Hussein would somehow have led to a calmer and better Middle East. Sometimes the %XWWHUÀ\(IIHFWLQYROYHV DEXWWHUÀ\WKHVL]HRI Mothra, after all. Just what would be the SRLQWRIDOOWKLV\RXDVN" Well, in part it’s because when the editor says ::JUMP:: you respond ZLWK³KRZKLJK"´8QOHVV of course, the response is, “Well, you know, the ceiling’s sort of low and my knees are acting up and my feet hurt...” More likely it’s to get some discussion on the table in regard to an upcoming column on “what were WKH\WKLQNLQJ"´%XWWKDW¶V going to be 600 words for a different day. That’s just the caused opinion of an opinionated guy. You can cause an effect here by sharing your opinions in response! Letters to the editor or by email to hermistonherald offthebench@gmail.com. Names of the terminally shy will be withheld on request. — Thomas Creasing is a Herald columnist and municipal court judge The Hermiston Herald welcomes original letters for publication on public issues and public policies. Submitted letters must be signed by the author and include the city of residence and a daytime phone number. Phone numbers will not be published. Letters may be mailed to the Hermiston Herald, 333 E. Main, Hermiston, OR, 97838; or emailed to editor@hermistonherald.com Don’t brush off judge issue T he question of whether the Hermiston municipal court judge should be elected by voters or appointed by the City Council should not be casually disregarded as just a minor, insignificant part of the proposed city charter and deserves closer consideration by residents and city officials, alike. For the past 50 years, Hermiston residents have elected their municipal court judge, before whom people appear when they receive traffic or other misdemeanor citations. The City Council is seeking to change that in the proposed new city charter. One question Hermiston residents should be asking, however, and one to which they deserve a thoughtful, concise UHVSRQVHLVZK\":K\ would the community be better served by having an appointed municipal court as opposed to an HOHFWHGRQH":K\LV this in the community’s best interests, and how will this benefit the FRPPXQLW\DVDZKROH" Why are do City Council members think they are better suited to decide who should be municipal FRXUWMXVWWKDQUHVLGHQWV" Right now, the matter of who will select the municipal court judge is being presented as part of the whole city charter package, after the City Council elected to not have voters decide on the issue separately. Even if Hermiston residents are largely ambivalent about the issue, how the municipal JESSICA KELLER HERMISTON HERALD Editor court judge will be selected will impact them, and community members need to know, when city officials are making decisions, they are making them with the residents’ best interests in mind and not arbitrarily. And city officials always need to be able to justify their decisions. Thus far, city officials have not been able to justify why this change is necessary, and the reasons behind why the municipal court judge should be appointed, rather than elected, have been largely unsatisfactory and the benefits vague or minimal. The logic behind appointing, as opposed to electing, a judge, is a little flimsy, and the few arguments presented to the public thus far in support of the move have not been much better. One argument for appointing the judge that has been presented in the past is, by doing so, the city will have more control over the position. The reasons why additional control is needed, however, are vague and have not been adequately addressed. First, the city already sets the budget for the municipal court. As well, the Hermiston Municipal Court’s existence is entirely at the discretion of city officials, who long ago decided the city should have one. City Manager Byron Smith also pointed out recently, apparently as an argument in support of appointment, of the cities that have municipal court judges in Oregon, only five have judges that are elected. The rest are appointed. But not all cities in Oregon have municipal courts. Many are in counties that have justice courts, which are created at the discretion of county commissioners and are presided over by justices of the peace. In Oregon, justices of the peace duties include presiding over traffic and misdemeanor court cases, exactly the same Hermiston’s municipal court judge. And all justices of the peace in Oregon are elected, as are all state judges. In terms of what Hermiston should do, the fact that most city municipal court judges are appointed and all justices of the peace are elected do not carry much value on their own when presented as arguments in support of election or appointment. Parents have long said to their children, “Just because your friends are doing something doesn’t mean you have to do it. If your friends all decided to jump off a bridge, would you jump, WRR"´7KHVDPHSULQFLSOH applies in this case. Smith’s argument that municipal court judge elections are just popularity contests, which suggests voters are not electing the candidates best suited for the job and are voting based on sentiment, is also questionable, if not a gross disservice to Hermiston residents’ intelligence. Following his logic, if the new charter passes as proposed, City Council members will be appointing the judge. But city councilors are elected, and doesn’t it stand to reason that if municipal court judge elections are popularity contests, so, too, are &LW\&RXQFLOHOHFWLRQV" Why would City Council members be better suited to choose a judge than the public if they, too, are elected based on popularity and not TXDOLILFDWLRQ" But let’s say the popularity-contest argument is justified. How can residents be sure the judge appointed by City Council members were chosen based on qualifications and not because that person is a friend, a former classmate, a neighbor, a member of the same church or someone who owes them DIDYRU"&URQ\LVPDQG corruption is certainly a possibility, if not a guarantee. Many questions remain unanswered regarding the municipal court judge issue that deserve attention. We encourage residents to ask them at the next city charter public meeting Tuesday. If nothing else, we encourage City Council members to answer them before moving ahead with any city charter plan. Hermiston residents deserve nothing less. — Jessica Keller is the editor of the Herm- iston Herald. She can be reached at jkeller@ hermistonherald.com LETTER TO THE EDITOR Ideas on what should be done here” logo on the water tower would make it look less Editor, OLNHJUDI¿WL$ZDWHUPHORQEHQHDWKWKHORJRZRXOGFDWFK Two comments: Please show the Port of Morrow the eye of visitors to Hermiston. MIKE MEHRENS ¿QDQFLDO ¿JXUHV DJDLQ DORQJ VLGH WKRVH IRU WKH 3RUW RI HERMISTON Umatilla. A heavy line around the “You can GROW ELECTED OFFICIALS STATE District 29: Sen. Bill Hansell, R-Umatilla Co., 900 Court St. N.E., S-423, Salem, OR 97301, 503-986- 1729. 101 S.W. Third St., Pendleton, OR 97801 (541) 278-1396. E-mail: ssen.billhansell@state.or.us. District 30: Sen. Ted Ferrio- li, R-John Day; 900 Court St. N.E., S-223 Salem, OR 97301, 503-986- 1950. 750 W. Main, John Day, OR 97845, (541) 575-2321. E-mail: ferr- ioli.sen@state.or.us. District 58: Rep. Bob Jenson, R-Pendleton; 900 Court St. N.E., H-480, Salem, OR 97301, 503-986- 1458. 2126 N.W. 21st., Pendleton, OR 97801, (541) 276-2707. E-mail: rep.bobjenson@state.or.us. District 57: Rep. Greg Smith, R-Morrow, 900 Court St. N.E., H-280, Salem, OR 97301, 503-986- 1457. P.O. Box 215, Heppner, OR 97836, (541) 676-5154. E-mail: smith.g.rep@state.or.us. FEDERAL U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden Sac Annex Building, 105 Fir St., No. 201, La Grande, OR 97850; (541) 962-7691. E-mail: kath- leen_cathey@wyden.senate.gov; (Kathleen Cathey, community repre- sentative); 717 Hart Building, Wash- ington, D.C. 20510, (202) 224-5244. U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley One World Trade Center, 121 SW Salmon Street, Suite 1250, Portland, OR 97204; (503) 326-3386; Dirksen 6HQDWH 2I¿FH %XLOGLQJ 6'%% Washington, D.C. 20510. (202) 224- 3753. U.S. Rep. Greg Walden (2nd District) 843 E. Main St., Suite 400, Med- ford, OR 97504, (541) 776-4646, (800) 533-3303; 2352 Rayburn +RXVH2I¿FH%XLOGLQJ:DVKLQJWRQ D.C. 20515, (202) 225-6730