LET TERS
OREGON PROUD
In spring of this year, the Wayne Morse
Historical Park Corporation announced
the recipients of the Integrity in Politics
Award. Oregon senators Ron Wyden and
Jeff Merkley were named the co-winners.
We believe Wyden and Merkley embody
the collaborative and intellectual spirit of
the late Sen. Wayne Morse, which is desper-
ately needed as this nation faces the rapid
decline in its moral and civic fiber.
Further, Morse famously declared his
independence with his voting record, stat-
ing on the plaque to be awarded to the
senators that he would “cast my vote free
of political pressure and unmoved by the
threats of loss of political support.”
Details of the award presentation are still
being ironed out, but Meerah Powell’s Aug.
30 cover story on Merkley shows why Or-
egonians should be proud of the work that
Wyden and Merkley have done, not just for
the state, but for all of the nation.
Johnny Earl
Eugene
THE TRUTH ABOUT MERKLEY
The Eugene Weekly’s promotion of
Senator Merkley to be a presidential candi-
date (cover story, 8/30) omitted key facts.
Merkley supported Trump when Con-
gress met to ratify the Electoral College.
Congress, not the voters, makes the
formal determination of who is presi-
dent. When they met to ratify the result
on Jan. 6, 2017, a few on the House side
spoke in opposition to confirming the al-
leged electors due to suppression of mi-
nority voters (gregpalast.com) and voting
machine tabulators that flipped the results
in key swing states.
No senator, not even Merkley nor
Wyden, dared join the dissidents on
the House side and therefore no debate
on Trump’s illegitimacy was permit-
ted. Therefore, Democratic senators share
responsibility for the loser of the election
being installed as the president.
Sen. Merkley, like the rest of the Or-
egon Congressional delegation, supported
the Obama administration’s $226-million
subsidy of NuScale corporation, our lo-
cal nuclear power startup. Since there is
no “solution” to nuclear waste, generating
more is a crime against future generations
of all species.
“President Merkley” seems like wishful
thinking. He is probably not enough of a
militarist for the Pentagon and CIA to sup-
port. (Obama had a CIA background and
escalated military interventions, including
drone warfare.)
The last U.S. president who called for
an end to militarism was extra-judicially
removed from office on Nov. 22, 1963. No
president since Kennedy has dared chal-
DEMOCRACY AND EDUCATION
lenge the Empire in a meaningful way. Au-
thentic political “change” would require
honesty and courage about our predica-
ments.
Mark Robinowitz
Eugene
THIS IS EUGENE
Dear Eugene City Council: What the
hell are you doing? Really.
Let’s review. You allowed homeless
people to be banned from public property,
until someone realized it was heartless and
unconstitutional. Nice.
You realized broken, homeless people
were hanging out with their dogs down-
town, so you banned them for a while (is
that still a thing?) Very cool.
You noticed that homeless people
smoke, so you’re sending cops to track
down anybody smoking on public prop-
erty. Twilight-Zone cool.
You gave the finger to a new state law
that would help people suffering from the
housing crisis, making it frustratingly diffi-
cult to build an additional unit to rent out to
someone on your property. (Special thanks
to Emily Semple for that punch to the poor.)
You’re trying to sanitize the city with
boot and fist when most of us just need a
hand. We’re tied to the tracks here, and
you’re shoveling coal into the engine of a
silent train coming straight at us.
I recently was no-cause evicted and I
see few housing options — virtually none
are affordable — and I’m a little pissed.
Yes, there are negative impacts to Eu-
gene businesses with downtown Hoover-
villes. Forcing more of us onto the streets
isn’t helping. So come and work for us!
Do your job and run The People’s business
rather than running poor folks off the only
property they have — public property.
Steven Coatsworth
Eugene
CREAMY AND LIGHT
Thank you for Art Johnson’s account
of what happened to the millrace (Letters,
9/6), but there’s a bit more to the story.
When I entered the university in 1945,
the millrace was already damaged, maybe
by a flood. The 1946 Oregana quoted the
ASUO as having funds to start the stu-
dent union and also repair the millrace.
Even though boating was impossible, the
Anchorage cafe had good food — notably
their delectable Anchorage cream pie.
I have never been able to duplicate
that pie. It was both creamy and light. My
guess is that it contained gelatin. Does any-
one have the recipe? Wouldn’t wonderful
to celebrate the return of the millrace with
the Anchorage cream pie?
June Goetze Quincy
Eugene
BY COLLEEN HUNTER AND ROSCOE CARON
Lost in Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood
TODAY'S CORPORATE EDUCATION WOULD BREAK FRED ROGER'S HEART
F
or weeks, Broadway Metro packed the house with viewers of Won’t You
Be My Neighbor?, the heartwarming film about Fred Rogers, aka Mr.
Rogers. The movie’s resonance is perhaps rooted in nostalgia, or perhaps
it’s a fervent desire to celebrate kindness in the mean-spirited Trump era.
At any rate, there’s nary a dry eye in the house when the credits roll.
The movie details Rogers’ philosophical grounding in child development and
appropriate early childhood education. What Mr. Rogers understood was this: The
thoughts and feelings of children are real. They matter. They deserve to be ac-
knowledged and to be taken seriously. Adults need to listen to children and respond
respectfully.
For those of us who have questioned what has happened to public education in the
data and metrics-driven “corporate reform” era, the film also is a painful reminder of
how tragically far we have ventured from Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood — so far away
that we are now lost.
As the school year begins, Oregon’s Kindergarten Readiness Assessment is kick-
ing into gear. This was mandated by 2012’s HB 4165 and is now in its fifth year. In
the first weeks of kindergarten, young children, new to the big school experience,
will be taken out of their classrooms and tested in literacy, math and for “social-emo-
tional approaches to learning.” This data will be stored in the Oregon Department
of Education’s Consolidated Collections: Big data about little people. The testing-
sorting-tracking of these children will be underway.
Additionally, local school districts will administer a series of standardized assess-
ments throughout the school year. District 4J will use the easyCBM tests to monitor
whether the children are on track to reach their third grade literacy goals. The “Blue-
bird,” “Robins” and “Sparrows” reading groups of the past are now on steroids.
Kindergarten testing is just the warm-up for what’s to come. At some local low-
income (Title I) schools, the first graders are tested three times a year in both read-
ing and math with district-mandated tests. The “low” readers are taken from the
class for remediation every day, the “somewhat low” readers are tested (“progress
monitored”) every two weeks and ranked accordingly. Their teacher must attend a
4
September 13, 2018 • eugeneweekly.com
monthly data team meeting — during the school day — to go over the latest testing
data with the administrator, counselor, Title I Coordinator, subject area leader and
testing coordinator.
Where is Mr. Rogers’ neighborhood in all of this incessant data collection? Where
is the time for learning for the pure joy of learning? What are the students, especially
the “low readers” experiencing? For that matter, what are their teachers experienc-
ing?
Learning to read is of tremendous importance, no doubt. But, remember, children
are people. They learn at different rates, just like big people do. Children should not
be labeled through “scientific” testing because they learn to read at their own pace.
Teaching children the subsets of reading skills is the hard work of reading educa-
tion. It’s a complex, highly professional skill. But teaching children to love to read
is of paramount importance. Yes, teach reading. But teach the love, the joy and the
magic of reading above all else.
Most of our schools no longer have librarians, but they all have testing coordina-
tors. That would break Mr. Rogers’ heart.
Aside from the corporations who make fortunes in the testing industry, most early
education data-based “experts” are certainly sincere. They want children to be able
to read by third grade so that they will be successful in school and in life. But many
of them have lost their way. They have lost sight of Mr. Rogers’ wise insights: That
the thoughts and feelings of children are real. They matter. They deserve to be ac-
knowledged and to be taken seriously.
The children in our neighborhood deserve to have their first year of public school
filled with joyful learning. They and their teachers must be defended from the current
over-testing insanity.
Colleen Hunter is a retired Springfield School District elementary school teacher. Roscoe Caron is a retired Eu-
gene School District middle school teacher. They are members of the Community Alliance for Public Education,
which works “to defend public education from the damaging practices of ‘reformers’ and corporate interests.”
CAPE meets the first, third and fourth Wednesdays at Perugino; oregoncape.org.