The Observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1968-current, July 17, 2021, WEEKEND EDITION, Page 4, Image 4

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    Opinion
A4
Saturday, July 17, 2021
OUR VIEW
Abolishing
police is not
the answer
t least at fi rst glance, the idea that police
departments should be abolished in favor
of other methods of protection seems so
counterintuitive, it’s diffi cult to know where to
begin.
Yet, a recent survey by the Oregon Values and
Beliefs Center showed a total of 27% of respon-
dents strongly, or somewhat, support the idea
of abolishing their local police departments.
Instead of police departments, advocates suggest
a system of social workers, counselors and mental
health experts to fi ll in the police role.
The survey, though, also showed 67% of the
people polled are against eradicating police
departments. The polled consisted of responses
from 1,400 adult Oregonians.
The issue was front and center last year during
the George Floyd riots and protests as cases of
police brutality gained closer scrutiny.
And the survey showed a slight majority of
Oregonians back some type of reduced police
funding and instead favor using the savings to
pay for more public health, education and social
services.
The results are interesting and the notion to
abolish police departments carries a certain
degree of curiosity, but it is, in the end, a bad idea
linked to emotion rather than common sense.
The 2020 protests did a lot of damage across
the nation, but they did push the issue of police
miscues into the national conversation. Ulti-
mately, that was a good thing. In a democratic
society, no public agency or employee is above
the public’s review.
The George Floyd incident was a terrible injus-
tice and those who were responsible — mainly
former Minneapolis Police Department Offi cer
Derek Chauvin — were dealt with by the justice
system. Chauvin earned a 22-year prison sen-
tence for his role in Floyd’s death.
The problem is one of perception. A single
horrendous act by a police offi cer somehow fi lled
in as a statement on the entire community of law
enforcement offi cers during the summer of 2020
protests.
Typically, police follow the law. They are not
brutal. They are dedicated to serving their com-
munity and respecting civil liberties.
The issue isn’t more social workers or mental
health specialists — though they are needed —
but better training and an acknowledgment that
we need police.
Human nature being what it is, we always will
need a force of dedicated public servants to safe-
guard our homes and property. Should there be
close oversight of our police? Of course. The
public owes it to itself — and to the men and
women who wear a badge — to be vigilant about
police tactics.
But abolish police departments?
No thanks.
A
LETTERS
• The Observer welcomes letters
to the editor. We edit letters for
brevity, grammar, taste and legal
reasons. We will not publish con-
sumer complaints against busi-
nesses, personal attacks against
private individuals 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 number (for verifi -
cation only). We will not publish
anonymous letters.
• Letter writers are limited to one
letter every two weeks.
• Submission does not guarantee
publication.
SEND LETTERS TO:
letters@lagrandeobserver.com
or via mail to Editor, 911 Jeff erson
Ave., La Grande, OR 97850
A key pillar of democracy
Newspapers mean a lot of dif-
ferent
things to a lot of diff erent
ANDREW
people. They exist as a public
CUTLER
FROM THE EDITOR’S DESK
forum and as a small business.
A good newspaper is con-
hey’re dubbed “news
stantly balancing those two — at
deserts” and denote a
times competing — goals. Yet,
community that lacks
always the focus is on the reader
any type of independent news
and on the hard work of giving
sources such as a daily or
readers the type of information
weekly newspaper.
they need. That “need” can be as
There are more than a 1,000
simple as a notice of club or city
such places across the U.S. and
council meetings or as important
their proliferation is a situation
as giving voters critical back-
that worries me.
ground information about a
In our region, we are fortunate. potential candidate for political
We don’t have to deal with such
offi ce.
a circumstance. We are fortunate
Each of those news deserts
in another way too. EO Media
refl ect a failure in democracy
Group, our parent company,
and that should worry anyone
remains dedicated to the small
who cares about the future of this
communities of Eastern Oregon. nation. When the public does not
We strive to deliver high-quality
have the information necessary to
news products to our readers on a participate in a democracy, all of
regular basis.
us lose.
News deserts trouble me
Information is more important
because they represent areas
now than at probably any other
where an important support beam time in our history. That’s
of democracy no longer exists.
because there is a plethora of
That means there are hun-
information from a myriad of dif-
dreds — maybe thousands — of
ferent sources that often can’t be
voters who do not have access to fact checked.
important information. Informa-
A good newspaper fact checks
tion they can use to decide how,
information. Seeks independent
and when, they participate in our sources about a specifi c assertion
democracy.
and then presents what it discov-
T
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ered to the reader. Then, it is up
to the reader to decide.
Of course, that isn’t what
many critics and naysayers
preach: that the “media” is evil
and full of misinformation or
outright lies. Those types of
assertions always irritate me
because they’re not necessarily
true but are often taken at face
value.
I can assure you, along with
myself, our reporters work hard
to get it right. We don’t have an
“agenda.” Our focus is on our
community of readers, fi rst and
always.
If we get something wrong
we print a correction and take
responsibility. We don’t hide
from mistakes. We admit them
and move on.
News deserts are disturbing,
but I am glad Eastern Oregon
does not face such a situation. We
will continue to provide the best
in-depth coverage we can, for as
long as we can.
Anindependent newspaper foundedin1896
www.lagrandeobserver.com
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Regional publisher. ...................... Karrine Brogoitti
Multimedia journalist.........................Alex Wittwer
Regional circulation director .................. Kelli Craft
Home delivery advisor ............... Amanda Fredrick
Interim editor ....................................Andrew Cutler
Advertising representative ...........Juli Bloodgood
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Reporter....................................................Dick Mason
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