HoodRiverNews.com • TheDallesChronicle.com • WhiteSalmonEnterprise.com tried to attract workers with health benefits. Time has proven this Continued from page 4 model deeply flawed. For-profit in- surance companies, drug manufac- turers, hospitals and providers have steadily made healthcare benefits youth organizations in this county for more than 10 years, I have seen unfordable for employers, putting them at a big disadvantage in the tremendous community support! world market. The result has been I have also seen that many of our job loss in our country and shrink- children miss out on that support. Too many of our kids in Klickitat ing coverage, coupled with higher County experience substance use copays. And that’s if you are lucky issues, bullying, abuse, and mental enough to be employed. Otherwise, health challenges. Too often these you are just left out on your own: kids land in the court system or Uninsured or under-insured. In that worse. situation, you are much more likely Joanna Turner is a parent and to be unable to manage chronic and recognizes that the youth in our new medical conditions adequate- county need more support. Joanna ly, resulting in avoidable expensive is committed to helping Klickitat hospitalizations that we all end up County support every child with paying for when you are unable to prevention — providing and in- do so. As an ER physician, Tracy Rushing, MD, deals with avoidable creasing services like after-school health crises every day. She is tutoring, mentoring programs, acutely aware that there needs to be youth centers, food support, child a better way. Some form of univer- care, reproductive health educa- tion and support, and in-county sal healthcare is in place in almost treatment centers. These preventive every developed country around services will help us build a safer, the globe. It is affordable; their healthier, more supportive Klickitat healthcare costs are less than half of County, and will ensure all our ours. It works. They live as long or youth have the chance to thrive. longer with better health statistics Joanna Turner’s commitment on many measures. Let’s get behind to our youth and to the longevity someone who will work to make of our county is clear. Please join universal healthcare a reality in me in voting for Joanna Turner for our state. Let’s finally get this right! Klickitat County Commissioner. Vote for Tracy Rushing to represent Marisa Cieloha District 14. White Salmon Robert C. Florek, MD Underwood LETTERS Rushing for Dist. 14 Many seem to believe that health insurance provided through employment is a time-honored concept that was handed down by our founding fathers. In fact, em- ployer-based healthcare only dates back to World War II when wages were frozen by law, and companies Columbia Gorge News shameful that police enforce it. It isn’t the sort of thing that should be made a law in the U.S. of A. Life, lib- erty, and pursuit of happiness. My life belongs too me, not the state. It is unconstitutional, and should be revoked. When something you do is likely to endanger someone else, that’s different. Requiring measures to limit disease spread is part of good government.. It really bugs me that people have criticized employees who demand that patrons wear masks. Every place of business has the right to demand a dress code of patrons. Shoes and shirt are not required by law (except as regards decency laws). Some establishments de- mand that a man wear suit and tie. That is allowed. But unless the dress code is posted at the door, it is ille- gal to refuse service or ask someone to leave for going without tie, shoes, or anything. Masks, that’s different. Adrian Fields Hood River Leviathan government Wednesday,August26,2020 Democrats subscribe to and faith- fully practice this seamless system. On its hind legs, socialism will eventually intellectualize and even spiritualize violence in its drive to create utopia on earth. Jurist Robert Bork wrote that utopian thinking, without regard to actual realities, will instead result in violence and subjegation for all, including the very people it says it values. We now have a front row seat of leftist violence coupled with an overall dull response from too many Republicans. At the same time, we’re faced with those who demand, for their own interests, hy- per-individualism at the same time demanding hyper-collective rights according to their specific preferred group identity. Klickitat County Sheriff, Bob Songer, isn’t popular with some people for the right reason. He places the guarantees of the Constitution ahead of and in place of the destructive tendencies exib- ited by far too many which is why some find him objectionable. Judge Bork also pointed out that our Constitution presents a firewall between our individual liberties at tension with the excesses of the leviathan government. Ironically this is available even for those who want to destroy it. Mike Goodpaster Goldendale 5 the reliability of mail-in ballots. This action is particularly reprehensible during a pandemic, when voting by mail is a safe way for people to exercise their constitutionally guar- anteed right to vote. The Post Office is enshrined in the US Constitution and is a beloved and essential institution in America, with as high as 90 percent approval ratings. For so many of us, the post office is a lifeline, providing timely delivery of crucial medicines, ballots, information, financial mat- ters, personal correspondence. I am outraged by the wanton decommissioning and destruction of 500 barcode sorters and the re- moval of many mailboxes. This has wasted millions of dollars in tax- payer money. All of this equipment belongs to the American people. I encourage everyone who cares about our Post Office to speak out and stand up for this vital service and for free and fair elections. Our very democracy is at stake. Carole Anderson The Dalles No electricty? I heard on the radio that we may very well experience brownouts due Provided it doesn’t suffer from to the shutting down of the [elec- constant deconstruction and revi- tricity generating] coal plants. sion, history can be insightful. In Climate changers responsible 1932, perhaps the worst year of the for the shutdowns had said there Depression, Louisiana Democrat would be a replacement. to take the and demagogue Senator Huey Long place of the coal thereby giving us was asked if fascism was likely to electricity, but apprently that hasn’t come to America. He replied, “Sure happened. but it will be called anti-fascism.” Who is responsible? All shades of socialism are in I am shocked and deeply con- Patricia Ward Making a law that kids have to cerned by the blatant dismantling of The Dalles wear seatbelts was good. But when essence uncomfortably similar our US Postal Service by the Trump someone is given a license to drive, economically, socially, and politi- cally in that eventually, to borrow a administration and Postmaster they should also have the right to decide whether or not to wear a seat phrase, there can be nothing above General Louis DeJoy. The President has made clear that his motivation belt. It disgusts me that Oregonians the state and nothing outside the state. Statist Republicans as well as is voter suppression by reducing voted to make that a law. It is Dismayed by USPS actions On masks Mid-Columbia Center For Living seeks to end services to residents with developmental disabilities ■ By Dennis Ziemer For the last 30 years, Wasco, Hood River, and Sherman coun- tries have collectively organized a County Developmental Disabilities Program funded by the Oregon Department of Human Services, which has been run by the Mid- Columbia Center for Living (MCCFL). County Developmental Disabilities Programs provide eligible adults and children with intellectual and developmental dis- abilities with services like case man- agement of an individual support plan, resource referrals, 24-hour care, assisted living services and employment support. Now, in the midst of a global pan- demic when the residents of these counties need these services more than ever, MCCFL has claimed that it can no longer run this program and will be laying off 11 employ- ees, 10 of whom are considered essential. In canceling the program, MCCFL has not identified anyone to take over the program, leaving their clients without the vital ser- vices they need. “As front-line workers serving some of our communities’ most vulnerable individuals, this decision in the midst of a global pandemic, fire season, and the transition for students to begin remote learning, is more than disconcerting” said Sarah Smutz, a service coordinator at MCCFL. As recently as June, MCCFL ne- gotiated reimbursement rates that more than cover the cost of the pro- gram and the dedicated staff who serve the adults and children with developmental disabilities who rely on our services. Anne Lamb, a mother of a child with special needs who lives in the area, sees the disruption of services as the most consequential result of MCCFL’s decision. “As a mom of a special needs child who’s experienced barriers since birth, knowing that my child is comfortable with their case manager for years and then to have that security yanked away when it’s already hard for them to have a voice, is cruel. This is taking their stability away. It’s an outrage to mess with kids when they already have difficulties.” As a public entity, before closing this program, MCCFL should have set up a time for public comments, obtained board approval, or at the ! l l a F s i h T g n i m o C very least, provided the public with notice. In closing the program, they did none of these things. Furthermore, MCCFL is continuing to make decisions about the use of public funds and resources behind closed doors. 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