Opinion 4A Thursday, May 20, 2021 Kathy Aney/East Oregonian, File Seventeen-year-old Weston-McEwen senior Bailey Munck testifi es re- motely from Pendleton on March 25, 2021, for Senate Bill 649, known as Bailey’s Bill. The bill increases penalties for criminal sexual contact with an underage victim when the defendant is the victim’s teacher. Our View Bill should not be used as political pawn n the end, it is a shame a few Oregon law- makers were forced to resort to a lit- tle-known, and hardly used, rule to get a bill that addresses criminal sexual contact off the ice and moving in the Legislature. The legislation, Senate Bill 649 — also known as Bailey’s Bill — boosts penalties for criminal sexual contact with an underage victim if the off ender is the victim’s teacher. The existing law delivers harsher penalties to a coach caught in the same situation as a teacher. The bill, named after Weston-McEwen student Bailey Munck, received easy approval in the Oregon Senate before it trav- eled to the House where, for reasons not clear, it stalled at the House Judiciary Committee. The chair of the committee, Rep. Janelle Bynum, D-Clackamas, “indicated” she was not going to give the bill a hearing, which prompted nine members of the judicial committee to invoke House Rule 8.20. The rule stipulates if a majority of committee members request a hearing in writing, the chair must set up a hearing within fi ve days. That set up a hearing for Tuesday, May 18, with another on May 24, along with a work ses- sion on the bill that same day. Bynum’s reluctance to move the bill may be connected to political brinkmanship, where it was going to be used as a bargaining chip regarding other legislation. Hopefully, that is incorrect. If it is not, then that should give readers — not to mention voters — pause. A lawmaker should not regulate a bill that addresses a subject as sensitive and as important as criminal sexual contact to a mere chess piece on a broader political chess board. The lawmakers who pushed for the hearing should be lauded. Sen. Bill Hansell, R-Athena, and Sen. Kathleen Taylor, D-Milwaukie, who navigated the bill through the Senate, also deserve praise. Bailey’s Bill should not have ended up stuck in limbo in a committee of the House. The bill, once it reached the House, should have been acted on immediately. That it was not is troubling. The broader issue, though, is appropriate pun- ishment for those who prey on our children. This bill will fi x a glaring hole that seemingly gives instructors a lighter punishment when they, in fact, should receive the same penalty as coaches. It will close a dangerous loophole. The other key piece of the bill is it has wide, bipartisan support. Currently, such unity among lawmakers is rare and when it occurs should be advanced as quickly as possible. This time lawmakers did the right thing and voters should be pleased. And Bynum’s constituents ought to have a word with her about her actions. I My Voice Our freedom requires responsibility, not home arsenals EVELYN SWART JOSEPH hen referring to the early colonial days, some people conclude that since the col- onists had to fi ght to gain indepen- dence from the tyranny of the king of England, patriots now must have home arsenals to fi ght our current government. They believe that the Second Amendment to the Constitu- tion requires that there be no limits to the amount of armor they collect and prepare to use. There is a diff erent way to think of the Second Amendment and the way it relates to the Declaration of Indepen- dence. As an exercise toward under- standing “freedom” on one Fourth of July, a group of us reenacted the colo- nists’ deliberation for the Declaration of Independence. We were assigned opposing positions, those agreeing to separate from English rule and those who were reluctant to change the status quo. As the group read the historical document, we noticed that the phrases at the beginning of the document were, and still are, used frequently: “We hold these truths to be self-ev- W Letter It is time to part ways with big government in Salem I read with interest and totally agree with Mike McCarter’s Other Views column in the May 1 edition of The Observer. For way too long rural Orego- nians have lived under the thumb of a Democratic governor and Leg- islature that design the rules and laws to fi t the metropolitan scene, totally ignoring the lifestyle of ranchers, loggers and citizens in rural Northeastern Oregon. As former Oregon Rep. Mark Sim- mons said, and I believe hundreds of others agree, it is time to part ways with them in every legal way available. I would say to the folks in rural Oregon that it is time to divorce ourselves from the big government in Salem and the metro area. Duane Berry Imbler ident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.” The Fourth of July group read through what seemed a never-ending list of grievances against the king of England. Sure, the colonists were against paying taxes to the king because they suff ered extreme abuses by the dictator king. The king’s sol- diers were the controlling power in the colonies even during times of peace. Just read the long list of abuses listed in the Declaration of Independence and you will appreciate our freedom today. The Declaration of Independence is a powerful reminder of the reasons our founders wrote the Constitution as they did. Those ideas or concepts form a contract structuring the U.S. as a free country. We citizens are free from tyranny and authoritarianism because the patriots who designed our Constitution made it a “government of the people, by the people and for the people.” As a result, the lives we live today are far diff erent from the oppression the colonists experienced. We have civilian control of our government. We vote for our representatives and let them know what we want in our Write to us EDITORIALS Unsigned editorials are the opinion of The Observer edito- rial board. Other columns, let- ters and cartoons on this page express the opinions of the authors and not necessarily that of The Observer. LETTERS • The Observer welcomes let- ters to the editor. We edit let- ters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. We will not publish consumer complaints against businesses, personal attacks against private individ- uals or comments that can incite violence. We also discourage thank-you letters. • Letters should be no longer than 350 words and must be signed and carry the author’s name, address and phone country. Our representatives raise taxes to maintain the government services we want or need. At least that is the way our government is designed. We disagree with one another, but the majority rules. The majority rules by a system of Law and Order that is dependent on the loyalty, responsibility and education of the people. But, a country is successful only when a majority of its citizens believe in those basic foundational rules and accept their citizenship responsibilities. I believe that by understanding the reasoning of the Constitution builders, we should have no need to be sus- picious, fearful or ready to fi ght our government. With a system of Law and Order that supports freedom, men and women of goodwill have no need to be armed with high-powered mil- itary equipment and ammunition to protect their homes, property, fam- ilies. Muskets were enough for the patriots in 1776 and they ought to be enough for patriots in 2021. Freedom requires responsibility, not home arsenals. ——— Evelyn Swart is a retired educator who lives in Joseph and believes education is an important solution for understanding the issues we face. number (for verifi cation only). We will not publish anonymous letters. • Letter writers are limited to one letter every two weeks. • Longer community com- ment columns, such as My Voice, must be no more than 700 words. Writers must pro- vide a recent headshot and a one-sentence biography. Like letters to the editor, columns must refrain from complaints against businesses or personal attacks against private individ- uals. 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