Image provided by: SEIU Local 503; Salem, OR
About The Oregon state employee. (Salem, Oregon.) 1944-195? | View Entire Issue (March 1, 1947)
22 D Q O REGONIANS CARE? In the February 1947 issue of Harper’s Magazine there appears an ar ticle by Richard L. Neuberger pf Port land, entitled “ I R un for Office.’’ . Apparently people have a tendency to »be either far-sighted or near-sighted and too infrequently geared for dual- distance sight. "Indeed, two campaigns for a seat in, the Oregon Legislature,” says Mt. Neuberger, "have made me wonder whether people really care much at all about local government. Have we thought about the atomic bomb to the exclusion; of the schoolhouse on the corner?” "I spoke at mote than five hundred meetings during the 1946 campaign and found no genuine interest in the problems of our home tqwn. People wanted England to do something about India und Palestine, but would ”dio noth ing themselves to clean up the pollution choking the salmon in the fiver which flowed thrOUgh the center of our city (Portland). The atomic bomb and our relations w ith Russia were exciting; sewage disposaKih the Willamette river was hufndrum— and, even more de pressing, it required the assessment of local taxes. In fact, when I mentioned pollution at one or two meetings, peo ple dismissed the topic w ith a single comment: " 'W e’ll get a federal grant ^to take care of'-it « a z : A fter discussing the incompatibility of a political and a writing career, Mr. Neuberger concludes, "The case'against making politics my career is strong . . . Yet the argument is only 99 44-100 percent pure. The other fraction dis turbs me occasionally. When I see Ore gon’s teachers paid -the lowest salaries on the .Coast, when I . see a private utility Company selling the power from the dam at Bonneville w h ich 1 the peo ple built and paid for, when I see a Japanese-American soldier w ith forty- dne blood transfusions denied; a hotel room on a rainy night;, when I see a million-dollar race track rising while veterans cannot construct homes-—-then my blood pressure rises, too, and I won der if any cáse is strong enough to im pel abdication in favor o f those who tolerate these things.” Neuberger has more to say in his article, which many Oregonians might like to read. TEACH ER SALARY PROBLEM | FOR 1947-48 (Ekcerpt from Sierra Education News, California Teachers Association) California Teachers Association in 1946 made a thorough survey of the cost-of-living as it affects the economic status of teachers. The CTA report, is sued in March 1946, revealed th at the cost-of-living, based on, the reliable data of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, was; up 33% , using the average for 1935.-1939 as It is of stark significance, in the light of this increase, that, only a few salary schedules prevailing' this year, 1946-4^%show the same percentage of increase over prewar salaries. Since the study was made the picture has become still more' gloomy, because salaries set iii the spring of 1946 naturally took no account of the sharp increase in the cost-of-living during,- the past six months. The cost-of-living index at the close of 1946 was 153, or 20 points higher than , that of last spring.. As'¿he result of the wide difference between increases in the cost-of-living and the increase , in their salaries* teach ers during this school year have experi enced ' the most difficult financial stringency of any year since . the war began. , A recent study, reported in United States News of December 1946, states that fulj-time earnings of indus trial) employees have increased 7 ^ S . since 1939, while those pf teachers in creased only 31%. T h rift is the greàtest of all virtues,;— especially if 'i t was practiced by our immediate ancestors. — Highways of Happiness