FROM PAGE ONE THURSDAY, APRIL 14, 2022 SCHOOLS MORE INFORMATION Continued from Page A1 such as Black Lives Matter and LGBTQ pride fl ags, on school district property. A few months after that vote, the school board fi red its superin- tendent without cause. Fallout from the controver- sial board decisions led to an unsuccessful but close recall eff ort against Newberg School Board members Dave Brown and Brian Shannon in Jan- uary. The election revealed sharp public divide on whether the school board was representing its community, with 52% of voters opposed to the recall and 48% voting in favor. A large number of respon- dents cite political infl uences in their disapproval of their local school board. “School boards have become too political,” one Yamhill County Repub- lican noted. “They should focus on education, not social justice and political indoctrination.” A Deschutes County Republican respondent said: “The school board is focused on social issues, culture and indoctrination. They do not take the steps to improve education only making sup- porting programs that fi t their agenda. This is done to the detriment of learning.” But another Deschutes County survey taker, a Dem- ocrat, said her school board was “not doing enough to support POC & LGBT com- munity. Racism, sexism, & homophobia are rampant in Bend & concerns by parents are ignored. … They talk the talk, but don’t walk the walk.” In Clackamas County, Cris Waller said her local school board was “taken over by conservatives” in the last election. “I’ve heard from people I know about what a disheart- ening time it is to be a school board because of the relent- less pressure from right-wing groups,” Waller said when reached by Pamplin Media Group. She said that the same groups that have been taking over school board meet- ings have been taking over Clackamas County’s board of commissioners. In Washington County, one woman said voters in her community “managed to keep crazy, fringe characters” off the school board. “However, they are banging at the door to get in with their white-pride, Christian-zealot fervor.” Kwee Heong Tan, also of Washington County, said his local school board “cares about admin and non-educa- tion areas like artifi cial grass, while textbooks are old, and emphasis on AP subjects are reduced due to lack of teachers.” While Oregonians are The Oregon Values and Beliefs Center is committed to the highest level of public opinion research. To help obtain that, the nonprofi t is building a large research panel of Oregonians to ensure that all voices are repre- sented in discussions of public policy in a valid and statistically reliable way. Selected panelists earn points for their participation, which can be redeemed for cash or donated to a charity. To learn more, click here. split on whether they are being served and represented by local school leadership, the survey shows broad sup- port (70% or higher) for an array of taxpayer-funded family support services like tutoring, sports, after-school clubs, children’s health care and youth mental health services. Even those services that garnered the least sup- port, like culturally inclu- sive learning materials and required cultural awareness and implicit-bias training for school staff , showed 70% of those polled felt they were valuable. When it comes to sup- porting child care and early learning programs, partic- ularly for kids with special needs or disabilities, more than half (56%) of Oregonians say it’s “very important” to off er childcare and learning programs. More than 86% of those polled said it’s some- what or very important to fund programs for special needs children. Similarly, 79% said it was somewhat or very important to make child care more aff ordable for families through additional govern- ment funding. “Women are more likely than men to express strong support for using taxpayer funds to bolster early learning and childhood programs and services,” the OVBC noted in its summary of survey results. “Lower-income residents are also more supportive.” Still, residents are mixed on how to pay for those ser- vices. In Multnomah County, which enacted new tax mea- sures in 2020, and in Port- land, specifi cally, which now has the highest state and local combined income-tax rate in the nation, higher-in- come earners are feeling the squeeze. “I currently pay over $500 per month in property tax. I get a little over $1,000 from SS. I am raising my grand- children. Do the math,” one woman in Multnomah County, who identifi es as a Democrat with a “some- what liberal” social ideology, told surveyors. “I cringe at the thought of all these well- meaning projects being pro- posed, knowing full well it will be property taxes that pay for it.” THE OBSERVER — A7 MINE Continued from Page A1 at Sanger Mine in June of 2021 over a 10-day stretch. “Sometimes they fi lmed for an hour and only a minute of the footage appeared in the show,” Candlish said. He said he learned a great deal about mining over the 10-day period. “They showed me things like how the con- fi gurations of sluice boxes can make a big diff erence in how much gold you can get,” Candlish said. Sluices are long, narrow boxes that water passes through when put in a creek or stream. Sluicing is a method of separating and recov- ering gold from gravel by the use of running water. McCLOUD Continued from Page A1 for Deschutes County is $693,000, according to Redfi n real estate reports. Meanwhile, Multnomah County’s median home value is approximately $493,000, according to Redfi n. “An issue that pushed me into homelessness was, you know, having not enough opportunities for aff ordable housing,” McCloud said. “We have to be looking at how we can increase access to aff ordable housing for all kinds of Oregonians, but especially those that don’t prefer to be homeless, because I think there’s a distinction to be made.” McCloud said one of his priorities as governor would be to focus on devel- oping aff ordable housing — including multi-family and single-family homes — by tapping into Ore- gon’s massive timber industry and building new communities in Oregon in order to address the housing crisis. “It must be a priority. We, right away, need to be working with the timber industry to end home- lessness in Oregon,” he said. “We have the renew- able resources to do that, and so, with the localized resource that’s renewable, within our borders, we should be working with the developers to set up new communities of all types, from multi- unit housing to sin- gle-family housing and in between.” According to the Oregon Forest Resources Institute, Oregon leads the Pete Candlish/Contributed Photo Pete Candlish, right, and crew members of the Discovery show “Gold Rush” pose for a group photo during fi lming in June 2021. Mining as therapy Pete Candlish started mining while with the U.S. Coast Guard 10 years ago in Alaska and does it as a hobby to help him cope with post-trau- matic stress syndrome. “It is great therapy for me. It helps me with physical and mental healing,” said Can- dlish, who talks about this during the television show. The program about Sanger Mine is available to watch on subscrip- tion streaming services, including Discovery Plus, and Candlish said he has received a number of calls and messages from veterans who have seen it. They indicated that the program helped them deal with the challenges they are facing. “That has been grati- fying to hear,” Candlish said. Another reason Can- dlish is so drawn to mining is that each time someone spots gold they are doing something his- toric because the odds are no person has seen it before. “You are probably the fi rst person to ever see it,” he said. Candlish is optimistic that there is more to be found in the mines of Baker County. “There is still gold out there that the old- timers didn’t get,” Can- dlish said. nation in producing soft- important, and, at the same tion from the other can- woods and plywood prod- time, we’re fi nding that our didates. In that typical ucts, with more than 28% rural communities are sub- language that’s generally of U.S. plywood products jected to harmful stereo- used when we talk about being made in the state. types,” he said. “So I think extremist policies, it will McCloud decided to it’s important, as somebody not apply to me,” he said. join the race after being who is going around trav- “I think that’s an advan- disappointed with the cur- eling, talking to people, tage I have.” rent lineup of gubernato- meeting with them, lis- While McCloud has rial candidates. tening to their stories, that no previous government experience, the decision to “Before I was a can- I have an opportunity to run for governor was not didate, I was an Oregon stand in the gap and really voter who looked across help clarify and repair some taken lightly, he said. “I was with my the spectrum of candi- of the perceptions that Ore- 13-year-old daughter, and I dates to see the one that gonians have developed had fi nished typing out the I felt would represent not about each other.” fi ling paperwork,” he said. just me and my values, McCloud also levied but who was the one that his status as the fi rst Black “And I said to her, ‘Should I do this?’ And she is actu- had the ability to unify Republican gubernatorial ally the one that pressed the state of Oregon,” he candidate in Oregon as a the submit button, and let said. “And after some time way to help bridge those me know that my family observing and listening, I political divides. was behind me 100%.” felt that it was important “I have some separa- for me to attempt to take matters into my own hands, rather than sit back and complain about what another candidate is or is not doing, or what they can or cannot do.” McCloud said he could be the candi- date to unify Ore- Fast & & Reliable Reliable Fast gon’s growing political Call or or Text Text 24/7 Call 24/7 divide between rural Dale Bogardus 541-297-5831 Oregonians and those Dale Bogardus 541-297-5831 living in the Port- land-metro areas. 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Meadow hawkweed Mouse-ear hawkweed Orange hawkweed Yellow hawkweed Hoary cress -- Whitetop (within the Grande Ronde or Wolf Creek drainages) Perennial pepperweed Giant knotweed Japanese knotweed Himalayan knotweed Hybrid or Bohemian knotweed Tansy ragwort Common crupina Musk Thistle Plumeless Thistle Turkish Thistle Russian knapweed Common bugloss Meadow knapweed Yellow starthistle (outside the Cove area) Rush skeletonweed Scotch broom Leafy spurge (greater than 1 mile from the Grande Ronde River) King-devil hawkweed Dog Rose Jointed goatgrass Spotted knapweed Diffuse knapweed Yellow starthistle (Little Creek to Rinehart Ln) Oxeye daisy (except residential) Canada thistle Wild carrot – Queen Anne’s Lace Leafy spurge (within 1 mile of Grande Ronde River) Hoary cress – Whitetop (within Powder River Basin) Dalmatian toadflax Purple loosestrife Buffalo Bur Scotch thistle Sulfur cinquefoil Puncturevine Houndstongue Garlic Mustard Dyer’s Woad Yellow toadflax Myrtle spurge (except residential) Velvet leaf Black henbane Common tansy Giant Foxtail Ravenna Grass Viper’s Bugloss Rose Campion (except residential) Mediterranean sage Hoary Alyssum Armenian (Himalayan) blackberry Yellow flag iris Medusahead rye Ventena grass-- North Africa grass, Wiregrass Saltcedar Sweet Briar Rose Bittersweet Nightshade Poison Hemlock AGRICULTURAL CLASS “B” WEEDS Agricultural Class “B” designated weed is a weed of economic importance within agricultural areas of the County, which is both locally abundant and abundant in neighboring counties. Common/Wild Sunflowers (within Ag and Right-of Way areas) Horseweed – Mares tail Catchweed bedstraw Kochia Quackgrass Russian thistle Creeping bentgrass (GMO-Roundup resistant)