Opinion A4 Saturday, February 5, 2022 OUR VIEW The mystery of the bills with no sponsor e would like our Oregon legislators to join us in a whodunit. The mystery is: Help us fi nd out who are the legisla- tors behind certain bills. Most bills this session or any session have a chief sponsor, maybe even a bunch of regular sponsors. They make it clear which legislators wanted their fellow legislators to consider a bill. Their names are right there on the bills. But there is a subset of bills without any such clarity. The residents of Oregon can’t know by looking at a bill who is behind it. We went through the bills that were scheduled for some mention during the legislative session on Tuesday, Feb. 1, and found three, Senate Bills 1521 and 1522 and House Bill 4031. SB 1521 would prohibit a school district from fi ring their superintendent for acting in com- pliance with state or federal law. This bill was introduced, at least in part, to prevent superin- tendents from being fi red for complying with pandemic restrictions, such as masking and dis- tance learning. It was apparently introduced at the request of the Senate Interim Committee on Education. All the members of the committee? One of them? SB 1522 has so many disparate pieces it’s hard to sum up. It’s 20 pages long. It also has to do with education. It covers access to con- tact information for graduate students, requiring school districts to allow students to apply cer- tain credits toward graduation, requirements for homeschooled students to participate in athletics and more. It was also at the request of the Senate Interim Committee on Education. House Bill 4031 establishes a state goal that the percentage of diverse employees employed by the Department of Education refl ects the percentage of diverse students in public schools. This one comes from the House Interim Committee in Education at the request of the Department of Education. Now why would legislators allow bills to be introduced without putting a legislator’s name on it? It’s not because legislators are dissolute, lazy and work-shy or too busy. It’s, in part, because they can. The rules of the House and Senate allow it. It’s Rule 12 in the House Rules. But legislators make those rules for introducing bills. So they must want it. We aren’t particularly worried about any of these three bills. The concern is the mystery that enables legislators to conceal what they are doing from their constituents. The power to act in hiding and set in motion new laws in secrecy is great power. And that has no place in a govern- ment that is supposed to be transparent. It has no place in the Oregon Legislature. W EDITORIALS Unsigned editorials are the opinion of The Observer editorial board. Other columns, letters and cartoons on this page express the opinions of the authors and not necessarily that of The Observer. 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. • Longer community comment columns, such as Other Views, must be no more than 700 words. Writers must provide 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 individuals. Submissions must carry the author’s name, address and phone number. • Submission does not guarantee publication, which is at the discre- tion of the editor. SEND LETTERS TO: letters@lagrandeobserver.com or via mail to Editor, 911 Jeff erson Ave., La Grande, OR 97850 I’m always rooting for the underdog BILL ANEY THIS LAND IS OUR LAND his year, I want to see a white- headed woodpecker. This medium-sized wood- pecker is a handsome bird, with a fully black body and striking white head, and the males sport a red nape patch. They have been recorded in Umatilla County, but it is one of those species that is rare enough that local birders get excited when a sighting is reported. The Pend- leton Bird Club keeps a running list of birds reported by their members each year, and in 2021 there were 268 species recorded in the county. But no white-headed woodpeckers. Why? It’s been reported in the past, and it uses ponderosa pine for- ests, which are abundant on the Umatilla National Forest. So why is it so hard to see one? As with a lot of wildlife ques- tions, it comes down to habitat. The preferred habitat is not just pine for- ests, but a certain type of ponderosa pine forest that is in short supply due to current management practices. These birds build nest cavities close to the ground in large dead trees (average 26 inches in diam- eter) and feed heavily on ponderosa pine seed — meaning they require stands of large mature or old growth T ponderosa pine. These are econom- ically valuable trees, and past log- ging has made them rare on private timberland and not very abundant on the National Forest. That’s one of the reasons that there has been a general prohibition on logging large ponderosa pine on National For- ests in the Blues since the 1990s. These old growth forests are much less common than they were before European settlement, with all sorts of eff ects on wildlife species that use this habitat. More than just large pine trees, the white-headed woodpecker prefers open stands. Forest inventory records from the early 1900s commonly described pine stands so open that one could easily drive a horse and buggy through the forest. Try that nowadays and you’d soon get bogged down in dense growth or high-centered on logs. Our century- long war on wildfi re coupled with timber management practices has left an unnaturally dense understory. Why do these woodpeckers prefer open habitat? One theory is that areas with undergrowth pro- vide cover for squirrels that prey on woodpecker nests. An open forest fl oor makes squirrels more vulner- able to their own predators (hawks, owls, cats, coyotes) and so less able to search and destroy white-headed woodpecker nests. See, it’s complicated. Complicated ecosystem man- CONTACT YOUR REPRESENTATIVES REPRESENTATIVES GOVERNOR Kate Brown 160 State Capitol 900 Court St. Salem, OR 97301-4047 503-378-4582 Bobby Levy, District 58 900 Court St. NE, H-376 Salem, OR 97301 503-986-1458 Rep.BobbyLevy@state.or.us SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION Subscription rates: Monthly Autopay ...............................$10.75 13 weeks.................................................$37.00 26 weeks.................................................$71.00 52 weeks ..............................................$135.00 SENATOR Greg Smith, District 57 900 Court St. NE, H-482 Salem, OR 97301 503-986-1457 Rep.GregSmith@state.or.us Bill Hansell, District 29 900 Court St. NE, S-415 Salem, OR 97301 503-986-1729 Sen.BillHansell@state.or.us STAFF SUBSCRIBEAND SAVE NEWSSTAND PRICE: $1.50 You can save up to 55% off the single-copy price with home delivery. Call 800-781-3214 to subscribe. agement principles can sometimes be boiled down to a few guidelines – like rooting for the underdog, fol- lowing nature’s lead, and keeping all the pieces. To root for the underdog in this case means paying special attention to species that are rare or declining in numbers, like the white- headed woodpecker. Following nature’s lead means understanding how natural processes, like fire, create habitat. It is easy to visualize how frequent low intensity fire can create and maintain open stands of large diameter ponderosa pine. Happily, this is the type of habitat that management can help create by heavily thinning out smaller diameter trees, leaving the big old trees and applying fire. So this spring I have another reason to head into the Blues, as if hunting turkeys, searching for morels, or getting in an early season camping trip weren’t reason enough for getting out of town. I’ll have to fi ne-tune my search image for the right habitat of open stands of large pine, but I can already think of a few places that fi t that description. Maybe, just maybe, fortune will smile on me and I’ll spot a white- headed woodpecker. Wish me luck. ——— Bill Aney is a forester and wild- life biologist living in Pendleton and loving the Blue Mountains. Anindependent newspaper foundedin1896 www.lagrandeobserver.com Periodicals postage paid at Pendleton, Oregon 97801 Published Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays (except postal holidays) by EO Media Group, 911 Jefferson Ave., La Grande, OR 97850 (USPS 299-260) The Observer retains ownership and copyright protection of all staff-prepared news copy, advertising copy, photos and news or ad illustrations. They may not be reproduced without explicit prior approval. COPYRIGHT © 2022 Phone: 541-963-3161 Regional publisher. ...................... Karrine Brogoitti Home delivery advisor ......... 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