LETTERS Smoke screen There are small steps that each of us can take to make life better for others. A yes vote on Measure 44 is one of those steps. Cigarette smoking causes many acute and chronic diseases that health care providers see. In Oregon, tobacco costs all of us about $900 million in health care and lost productivity annually. Measure 44 will increase the cig arette tax from 38 cents per pack to 68 cents per pack. Ninety per cent of the $138 million raised will go to the Oregon Health Plan and ten percent will go to a cam paign to discourage smoking, es pecially directed toward young people. The supporters of this measure include people whose profit from this is the satisfaction of helping others to enjoy good health — the American Cancer Society, Amer ican Heart Association, Ameri can Lung Association, state and county medical societies, etc. The opposition is the tobacco in dustry, who know that as the price of cigarettes goes up, fewer people will start smoking. Please join us in voting for Measure 44 on Nov. 5. Paula F. Ciesielski, M.D. Donna Scurlock, M.D. Eugene Go recycle Don’t be fooled by misleading advertising and money that poi sons citizen initiatives! The neg ative advertising that has been put forth on Measure 37, to ex pand the Oregon Bottle Bill, has been confusing many otherwise devout recyclers and upstanding intelligent citizens. Do not be fooled by these negative, anti-re cycling, anti-environment, anti community ads sponsored by Coke, Pepsi and out-of-state in terests. The bottle bill needs to be expanded, just look in any public garbage can, on any street or in any park. Non-deposit beverages are not making it into the recy cling bin. There is nothing confusing about the expansion of the Ore gon Bottle Bill. Any container covered will be marked as it is under the current bill: Oregon 5 cent deposit returnable! The only confusing part of the expansion measure is the misleading mes sages being presented by the op ponents. Less than 50 percent of the sin gle-serving beverages on the mar ket are not covered currently un der the bottle bill. A no vote on Measure 37 is a nail in the coffin of recycling. Vote yes on Measure 37. Ezra Louthis Environmental Studies Reject light rail All Oregonians are being asked to pay for a new light rail in Port land. Those of you outside the Portland area are being offered $375 million for your own trans portation projects, to match the $375 million going to Portland’s light rail. What you may not know is that your $375 million will actually cost you $584 mil lion. This disturbing analysis comes from the Oregon Transportation Institute, a private non-profit or ganization based in Portland. The high cost is the result of two factors: lottery bonds earmarked for transit and road projects must be repaid with interest, and your share of the state’s general fund earmarked for those uses won't be available to you for education, criminal justice and other uses. And, while Portland gets its light rail money all at once, the rest of Oregon gets most of its money over a 10-year period. In addition to costing you more than you get, none of the $375 million must go to fix one pothole, pave one highway or build one road. No specific pro jects are even identified. The money can be used for Columbia River dredging and pedestrian or bike paths. It doesn’t have to be used for roads at all. Many experts understand that the light rail hasn’t reduced traf fic congestion or air pollution in Portland. It diverts scarce re sources away from better transit alternatives. Now, all Oregonians are being asked to help pay for Portland’s transit mistakes. Steve Buckstein President Cascade Policy Institute Yes on 38 During an Eastern Oregon trip on Oct. 11 and 12, between the town of Spray and Fossil Beds National Monument Headquar ters, I witnessed on two separate occasions cows tearing through the chocolate brown sediment filled John Day River. I don’t doubt that there are conscien tious ranchers like Joan Lathrop (Oct. 18, ODE] but from my many trips to Eastern Oregon, I find more resistance to the sugges tions and reasoning behind Mea sure 38 than progressive ac knowledgement and response to the problem of degraded water quality and aquatic habitat. If the No on 38 members of our human community had spent as much time and money on appropriate ranching practices as they have against this initiative, they would have garnered much more empa thy from the west side ‘burbians. But they haven’t, so thank you for voting yes on 38. Hal Hushbeck Environmental Studies Fence alternatives I don’t like fences and 1 strong ly support Measure 38. Does this stance appear contradictory? It’s not. Despite what opponents have claimed, Measure 38 does not force ranchers to build fences. In fact, fences are not mentioned anywhere in the text. Measure 38 does require ranchers to keep livestock out of polluted waters if their livestock contributes to the problem. Fences are not the only way to achieve this end. Hedgerows and/or shaded upland watering sites are just as effective. In addi tion, ranchers can comply by de veloping an approved water quality plan. It’s not fences that ranchers fear. It’s the measure’s enforce able time lines for taking action to protect water quality. Here it’s important to point out that ranchers are not expected to be in compliance the day after the election. In fact, ranchers have until 2002 to comply if they op erate in a watershed that supplies municipal drinking water and until 2007 for all other waters. The text of Measure 38 speaks for itself. I’ve read it and I’m vot ing yes on 38. Holly Knight Eugene Smith unfair A popular bumper sticker I’ve noticed reads: “The Right Wing has a White Ring to It.” This sen timent was underscored during the Tom Bruggere/ Gordon Smith debate on Oct. 20. Bruggere pointed out that Smith’s employ ees were denied health insur ance. Smith retorted that the “regular ones” have coverage. It’s the seasonal workers, predomi nantly migrant workers of Latino heritage, who are paid minimal subsistence wages and receive zero benefits. This inequity of benefits may be because, in Smith’s own words, he does not regard mi grant workers as “regular” folks. So it’s no surprise that Smith Frozen Foods reaps huge profits and Gordon Smith can pay him self $2 million annually. Huge salaries are not crimes, but when they are reaped on the backs of low salary/no-benefits workers, it’s unconscionable. Conscience and character do matter. Tom Bruggere’s record tells a better tale. Industry maga zine reports consistently rank Bruggere’s company at the top of worker appreciation polls. Brug gere was a leader in advocating employer-paid child care. We need leaders in the U.S. Senate who value workers and treat them humanely. It’s not just good business, it’s the right thing to do. Maybe someday the “Right Wing will do the Right Thing” for workers, all of them. But until that day comes, this Republican is voting for Tom Bruggere. Carol Berg Eugene Little Caesars Pizza !!!SPECIAL!!! Sunday, Oct. 27th ONLY MEDIUM PIZZA with cheese and pepperoni No Substitutions. Round pizzas only. Limit 3 pizzas. Valid at this Little Caesar s location onl;y. Carry out only. No deliveries. Sorry, no rain checks. You Must Show Valid UO Student Body Card To Receive Special Offer. WILLAMETTE Next to Blockbuster Video _ _ 343-3330