Tuesday, November 1, 2022 A7 REDMOND SPOKESMAN Write to us: news@redmondspokesman.com GUEST COMMENT Developers and utilities, spare that farmland! BY LLEWELLYN KING I n nearly every city in the United States, and many around the world, bulldozers are busy making dreams come true: Leveling land for a single-family home on a lot. Who doesn’t want a lovely home with a nice bit of land on some tree-lined street? It is the Amer- ican Dream manifested in bricks and mortar. Trouble is dreams can morph into nightmares. A growing nightmare across the nation is the incursion of homes onto King farmland — land that will be out of pro- duction essentially forever. All around Washington, I watched year after year for decades lovely farms in adjacent Maryland and Virginia being turned into suburbs — sometimes 70 and more miles from the city center. It has been a simple tradeoff: There has been a relentless demand for single-family homes and builders see farms, usually family-owned, as ripe fruit ready for picking. When age is an issue, they almost always sell. Farming is a tough, 365-days-a-year undertaking, and a fat check at the end of a farming career is irresistible. No villains here, but there are consequences. Mark Twain said, “Buy land, they aren’t making it anymore.” Sadly, Twain didn’t take his own advice and instead in- vested in the tech world of the day: He lost a fortune in a company that was trying to perfect the typewriter. Farmers are special to me. They are the real renaissance men and women. They know a lot about a lot, from being able to gauge the pH levels of soil on their tongues to how to birth a calf, repair a tractor, or raise a barn. They also know a thing or two about how the govern- ment works and filling out forms. They are regulated but have no guaranteed rate of return. They are as subject to the weather over their own land as floods around the world. Businesses talk about being rewarded for taking a risk. Farmers take a risk with every seed they plant — and the returns aren’t guaranteed. But, as Gail Chaddock, host, and producer of “No Farms, No Future,” a podcast of the American Farmland Trust, said, “You can’t blame the farmers, and you can’t blame the developers. But the land we’ll need for food production in the future is being taken.” What is happening is the irreversible destruction of mil- lions of acres of prime farmland every year. A reverence for farmland needs to enter the culture, she said. No longer, however, is it just developers buying up farms. Farmland is now being sought by another kind of developer: renewable energy companies. They are buying it for large solar arrays. They also contract with farmers to install windmills which, while not taking so much land out of agricultural use, cumulatively take a lot. But it is solar farms that are the real problem. Britain is thinking of legislating to prohibit the use of agricultural land for energy production. Other countries are waking to the realization that a field of shining solar collectors is not the same as a field of waving wheat or even lowly cabbages. As over time we exported our manufacturing, we also have exported our food production. What was once raised on truck farms around the cities is now raised in neigh- boring Canada and Mexico, or as far away as Chile and South Africa. There is no compelling reason to cover huge acreages with solar panels. Roofs, rights of way, and urban parking lots could be pressed into service. Railroad tracks cry out for a solar canopy. Just because energy or housing is a higher economic use for land today doesn’t mean that it won’t have a higher fu- ture value, feeding future generations. █ Llewellyn King is executive producer and host of “White House Chronicle” on PBS. He wrote this for InsideSources.com. YOUR VIEWS Pipe Columbia River water to fight drought in Oregon and Southwest Now that we again have a drought in south-central Oregon and southwest United States, it seems like it is time to seriously think of long-term solutions. One of these could be pumping water out of the Columbian River to that area. The ocean does not need that water. Bonneville Power could be compensated for the loss of the elec- tricity that would be generated by that water at the Bonneville Dam and The Dalles Dam. A good place to take the water out of the Columbia River would be somewhere be- tween The Dalles and Biggs using two large pipes along Highway 97, dropping off the necessary amount at Klamath Falls and pumping the rest to Lake Shasta near Red- ding, Calif. Two pipes would be better than one, in case something happens to one, the other one would still be working. California has the canals to take it from Lake Shasta. This would not help immediately, but could be part of a long term solution. This drought problem is not going to go away. The sooner we start working toward a long term solution, the sooner it can be done. Bob Mattila Brush Prairie, Washington Fitch outlines platform for mayor Next year we will have a new city coun- cil with limited experience in elective office. Since September, the campaigns for mayor and council in Redmond have been pursued by each candidate with respect for others in the race and provide both hope and promise that the new city council will work together for the benefit of the entire community, in- stead of using their council positions to ad- vance their own personal agenda. There will be many issues the council will need to address in 2023, including housing, homelessness, child care, public safety and the need to plan for and fund needed public infrastructure. I believe that with 40 years of experience in both city government and private business I can provide the best lead- ership for the new council to ensure that the council, with input from the community, will address these and other issues in a fair, open and transparent manor. While I respect my opponents, I do be- lieve that I am the best candidate to lead the new council. I am the only candidate with a proven record of putting together regional partnerships and in successfully obtaining state and federal to help pay for our needed public improvements. I hope you will vote for me for the position of mayor. Finally, I want to thank the many volun- teers who helped on my campaign and to the citizens who patiently listened to the debates, became informed about the candi- dates and measures and welcomed us when we went door-to-door. Ed Fitch Redmond City councilor, mayoral candidate Fitch right choice for mayor I am supporting the election of Ed Fitch for the Mayor of Redmond. My husband Jon and I moved to Red- mond eight years ago when the population was about 15,000 people. Redmond’s popu- lation has doubled in that time. Exorbitant growth for any city. Jon and I saw this first- hand in Tigard. Many of the same issues and concerns are in Redmond today. Planning has been done on many issues. Council, mayor and staff need to imple- ment solutions. We are not a city of 15,000 anymore. I have seen Fitch connect with the council to open up their meetings for actual citizen input and he has pledged he will be more transparent on this issue. With his experience as mayor, I am confi- dent that Fitch can and will bring this trans- parency to the city and the council to nav- igate current and future issues of growth, quality of life, and all of the things we citi- zens talk about every day. Fitch knows and has been at the table with decision makers in the past. He was there for the first bypass of Redmond. Now he is working with the council to plan and secure right-of-way and funding for a re- route not only Redmond, but to move the high volume of regional traffic that passes through our city. This won’t happen tomor- row or the next day, but securing the future right-of-way is huge as it will lock in a route. We need Ed Fitch for the way he has nav- igated those issues and many other issues both noted and unforeseen. But I am confi- dent that he can lead, listen and empower the council, as well as all citizens of Redmond. We need a leader to deal with the complexities of our city for 2022 and beyond. Judy Fessler Past chair of the Redmond Landmarks Commission, past president of Greater Redmond Historical Society GUEST COLUMN Counting down to election day H ave you been count- ing the minutes until election day when your neighbors can remove all those campaign signs from their lawns for another two years? Yes, these are midterm elec- tions, just as serious as the presi- dential election yet to come two years from now, but not as inter- esting. Why not? Because the great candidate Vermin Love Supreme only runs for president and doesn’t mess about trying to be someone’s governor. V.L., who appears to be a bearded cross between Archime- des and Alexander Graham Bell, tends to stand out in a crowd. That is largely because he’s usu- ally wearing a boot on his head and is carrying a giant tooth- brush. Unlike most politicians, who basically ask us to vote for them because they have their names on several yard signs and can prove it, Ol’ Verm isn’t afraid to to delve into time travel, 3. Inves- tigate the possibilities of a Zom- bie invasion, and 4. Give a pony to everyone in the country. Lest you be scratching your head over the time-travel expen- ditures, Vermin Love Supreme is quick to point out that once sci- ence has whipped time travel, he can then go back in time and kill Adolf Hitler. How can you beat a campaign face his country head-on and tell slogan like that? Not only is it us what we really need. Last time around, while trying fun, but just picture 250 million to wedge his goals into the New people riding ponies around and showing off their shiny teeth. Hampshire primaries, Vermin made no bones of his platform: Just two more years … we can do 1. Passing a national law that ev- it. Two more years. Slim Randles is a nationally eryone must brush their teeth, 2. Dedicating millions of tax dollars syndicated columnist. █ CONTACT YOUR PUBLIC OFFICIALS Redmond Mayor George Endicott: George.endicott@ redmondoregon.gov, 541-948-3219 Deschutes County County Commission Chair Patti Adair: Patti.adair@ deschutes.org, 541-388-6567 County Commission Vice Chair Tony DeBone: Tony. debone@deschutes.org, 541-388-6568 County Commissioner Phil Chang: Phil.Chang@ deschutes.org, 541-388-6569 Your Legislators Rep. Jack Zika (District 53): 503-986-1453; 900 Court st. Ne, H-387, salem, or 97301, rep.JackZika@ oregonlegislature.gov Sen. Tim Knopp (District 27): 503-986-1727; 900 Court st. Ne, s-425, salem, or 97301, sen.TimKnopp@ oregonlegislature.gov State Oregon Gov. Kate Brown: 254 state Capitol, salem, or 97310; 503-378-3111; www.governor.oregon.gov. Oregon State Treasurer Tobias Read: oregon. treasurer@ost.state.or.us; 350 Winter st. Ne, suite 100, salem or 97301-3896; 503-378-4000. Oregon Attorney General Ellen F. Rosenblum: Justice building, salem, or 97301-4096; 503-378-4400. Oregon Legislature: Legislative documents and information are available online at www.leg.state.or.us. Federal President Joe Biden: The White House, 1600 Pennsylvania ave., Washington, d.C. 20500; 202-456- 1111; to send comments, go to www.whitehouse.gov. U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley: d.C. office: 313 Hart senate office building, u.s. senate, Washington, d.C., 20510; 202-224-3753; fax 202-228-3997. Portland office: one World Trade Center, 121 s.W. salmon st. suite 1250, Portland, or 97204; 503-326-3386; fax 503-326-2900. baker City office, 1705 main st., suite 504, 541-278- 1129; merkley.senate.gov. U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden: d.C. office: 221 dirksen senate office building, Washington, d.C., 20510; 202-224- 5244; fax 202-228-2717. La Grande office: 105 Fir st., No. 210, La Grande, or 97850; 541-962-7691; fax, 541- 963-0885; wyden.senate.gov. U.S. Rep. Cliff Bentz (2nd District): d.C. office: 1239 Longworth House office building, Washington, d.C., 20515, 202-225-6730; fax 202-225-5774. medford office: 14 N. Central avenue suite 112, medford, or 97850; Phone: 541-776-4646; fax: 541-779-0204; ontario office: 2430 s.W. Fourth ave., No. 2, ontario, or 97914; Phone: 541-709-2040. bentz.house.gov.