A4 Saturday, August 6, 2022 OUR VIEW Working to help those less fortunate A rea food banks and pantries need your help now more than ever. We’ve made it known many times on this page and in this space how critical we believe it is that area food pantries receive support. That’s because we know that the struggle of hunger lin- gers all through the year. During the holidays donations to food banks to help those who are less fortunate usually climbs. The season seems to deliver the right kind of sentiments for many of us and we want to help. That’s the good news. The bad news is the need doesn’t end after Christmas. Rising prices and infl ation are not making what is already a serious situation any better. As the cost of food rises, more people have discov- ered they need the kind of help they probably never imagined they would. Many, many people across the state and in Eastern Oregon live on the fringe, between the working poor and the middle class. Those indi- viduals are people you know — they are your neighbors and friends. Most likely not one of them ever believed they would be in a position where they look into the pantry and then glance at the checkbook and see they are going to have a real challenge making ends meet. Is it unfair? Surely. Yet it is the situation many face across our great region. Sometimes life intervenes to force people to face some unpleasant realities. Maybe a spouse loses a job or suff ers a serious injury and is unable to work. Perhaps both parents are working full time but they still don’t make enough to feed their families. We live in one of the richest nations on earth. We have a bounty of agricultural products avail- able. Every harvest season we can all drive around the valley and view farmers hard at work bringing in wheat, and yet we still deal with a problem of too many people in a food crisis. The best way to help is to contact your local food bank or pantry and to fi nd out what you as a resident can do. Maybe it is a donation. Maybe it is to deliver some extra food to the pantry. The struggle against hunger doesn’t end with the holiday season. It continues through spring and into summer and the fall. So, if you can help out, contact your local food bank or pantry. Working together we can help those who are less fortunate. 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 Collaboration is a lousy way to manage our public lands RICK MEIS OTHER VIEWS I was intrigued by the OpEd Mark Webb wrote recently about col- laboration. He makes common mistakes in his less-than-accurate description of what a collaborative should be if they are going to be done inclusively and eff ectively. If Mr. Webb believes what he stated in his opinion piece, he would under- stand that when it comes to public lands management, a collaborative would be unnecessary. In practice, collaboration has become a process of playing two sides off against each other in order to create enough guilt in one or more parties that compromise is reached. The pri- mary problem is that it is not based on sound science or best available data, thus eliminating the concept of best management practices and the long- term needs of the resource to maintain the natural values of the landscape into the future. The use of collaboration has become a cop-out on the part of public land managers to not have to do the work required of them in order to achieve good management decisions. Agency budgets have been slashed repeatedly, making it diffi cult to do a good job, thus making collaboration a fall-back tool. Collaboration has become a pro- cess that gives validity to those whose activities are either illegal, incompat- ible, or damaging to public resources. Those types of activity, using sound management principles, should be restricted. The goal of the normal data- and science-driven decision making process of land manage- ment agencies is to fi lter out input that lacks substance and thus should not be incorporated into management decisions. Public land management decisions should be made using well-estab- lished legal and regulatory processes. So-called public interest groups on all sides use it as a way to raise money and their profi le. The politically moti- vated use it to reach another suc- cessful failure by achieving the lowest common denominator. Our public lands are integral to maintaining viable natural ecosys- tems. The most guilty players in col- laborations are the so-called environ- mental groups who have chosen to defy everything they claim to stand for in order to curry political favor, new donations or something equally shallow. It is unconscionable. These groups should not be selling the future of our natural heritage down the river. High-impact activities, whether industrial or recreational, have inten- sifi ed to the point where they’re no longer compatible with long-range U.S. PRESIDENT Rick Meis, of Halfway, is a retired business owner who has been actively involved in wildland and wildlife issues in the Northern Rockies since the 1970s. Joe Biden The White House 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. NW Washington, DC 20500 Comments: 202-456-1111 U.S. SENATORS Ron Wyden 221 Dirksen Senate Offi ce Bldg. Washington, DC 20510 202-224-5244 La Grande offi ce: 541-962-7691 U.S. REPRESENTATIVE Jeff Merkley 313 Hart Senate Offi ce Building Washington, DC 20510 202-224-3753 Pendleton offi ce: 541-278-1129 Cliff Bentz 2185 Rayburn House Offi ce Building Washington, DC 20515 202-225-6730 Medford offi ce: 541-776-4646 STAFF SUBSCRIBEAND SAVE Subscription rates: Monthly Autopay ...............................$10.75 13 weeks.................................................$37.00 26 weeks.................................................$71.00 52 weeks ..............................................$135.00 █ CONTACT YOUR REPRESENTATIVES SUBSCRIPTION INFORMATION NEWSSTAND PRICE: $1.50 You can save up to 55% off the single-copy price with home delivery. Call 800-781-3214 to subscribe. goals of agencies to meet their obli- gations of conserving the resource. A collaboration justifi es misuse of the landscape. Best management prac- tices, using science and best available data, should not allow high-impact users the unlimited access they desire, which squanders public land values. Collaboration can only work if everyone agrees that it is about what is best for the long-term values of the resource. There are infi nite examples of those entering into collaborative processes for all the wrong reasons, thus collaborations give bad results. A retired educator and political sci- ence professor wrote that if the future is to be determined by citizen collab- orations, then a parallel track should be implemented based on science that would evaluate natural characteris- tics of the landscape. This track should consider the long-term future of the natural resources and recommend management actions to protect and maintain these values so future gener- ations will experience a natural land- scape as we did because of the eff orts of those who have gone before. Wait! Isn’t that what current laws and reg- ulations already require of land man- agers? Isn’t that what groups involved in collaborations say they believe in? 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 adviser.......... Amanda Turkington Interim editor ....................................Andrew Cutler Advertising representative ..................... 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