PAGE A4, KEIZERTIMES, MAY 22, 2015 KeizerOpinion KEIZERTIMES.COM Every opinion supported by web K-9 program gets festival boost To the Editor: Copper Creek Mercantile hosted the 2015 Crown the Hound event with the Iris Festival. Raffl e tickets were sold and $2,500 of the proceeds was donated to the Keizer Police Department’s K-9 pro- gram. We thank the following retailers for selling tickets: Creekside Veteri- nary Clinc, Big Town Hero, The Cot- ton Patch, Keizer Sub Shop, Uptown Music, R. Bauer Insurance and Town and Country Lanes. The seven raffl e winners recieved a year’s supply of pet food. The winners were: Dawn Thomas, Eileen Taylor, Kim Lucey, Samantha Paxin, Debbie West and Jolene. We congratulate the winners and thank the above retailers for helping sell tickets that raised money for the K-9 program. Dennis Blackman Copper Creek Mercantile Keizer Chamber responds To the Editor: Keizer Chamber of Commerce is a working partnership of its businesses, citizens, government and community volunteers. Simply put, we work as a team to advance and develop jobs and economic good in the Keizer area. To see the headline in the May 15 Keizertimes (Chamber request gets no vote), and then to read the selected, bare snippets of on-going discussions between city offi cials and Chamber leadership, we are obligated to tell a better story. Conversations on re-directing ef- forts in economic development started over two years ago. City staff were in- structed to present a plan. City Man- ager Chris Eppley asked the Chamber for help. Could there be a public/ private partnership? The Chamber ex- ecutive director and city development director researched the numerous other partnerships between Chambers and municipalities. As a result, Keizer City Council appointed two Keizer Chamber members (local businesses) to its newly-formed Economic De- velopment Commission (EDC). In support of the EDC, the Keizer Chamber started engaging with many Keizer businesses about what barriers exist for expansion and how to at- tract new businesses and tourism to Keizer. We contracted for professional services and initiated Community Conversations with existing business- es, healthcare providers, educators, and construction contractors. Throughout the process, city council leaders and staff were and are involved. To be clear, the Keizer Chamber of Commerce does not need city funds to operate. Our members and events (Keizer’s Iris Festival) support By DON VOWELL In the 1950s it was announced that a vaccine had been found ef- fective in preventing poliomyelitis. Parents were relieved and widespread vaccination programs were begun. I remember parading through the Whittier Elementary library with my classmates hoping I wouldn’t be the one to break down in tears. Mom and dad trusted government to know best. There is fairly wide belief that this vaccine was responsible for virtually eliminating poliomyelitis, a terrifying disease. Smallpox vaccina- tion was even more effective at wip- our budget and ing out a deadly threat. many commu- If Internet access had been avail- nity activities. able to my parents in 1955 maybe The Chamber’s they’d have seen an article that the request for funds Salk vaccine infrequently had serious to continue to side effects. Smallpox vaccines also revitalize small had rare bad effects. Instead, a sense and local businesses, parallels the goals of communal trust and shared re- of city government and Keizer’s busi- sponsibility prompted them to have ness community. Councilor Dennis the four of us join all our school- Koho’s comment at the budget com- mates in getting shots. The greater mittee presentation is spot on: “I want good was served. to see us turn it back around some- Americans trusted their leaders. how, where the city identifi es what we Through the 1960s a majority trust- can use the help of the chamber for.” ed their government to do the right The city’s fi rst fi le cabinet was do- thing always or most of the time. nated by the Chamber—dba Keizer That level of trust reached a new Merchant Association—and the motto low of 13 percent very recently. That “Pride, Spirit & Volunteerism” came corresponds to polling now fi nding from a merchant who was active in that only 17 percent of respondents our organization. In fact, merchants believe that corporations/business of Keizer rallied with others in seven different public votes to form the city government for Keizer. Our working partnership of business, government, and community volunteers really is By JANET CARLSON & what the Chamber is all about. Our LORE CHRISTOPHER goal is to help keep Keizer livable and The Big Toy at Keizer Rapids economically strong, and we’re doing Park is about building our commu- it. The many years of working togeth- nity and improving our children’s er should be celebrated. health. As a community, we are con- Audrey Butler, cerned about childhood obesity that Chamber President has more than doubled in children Christine Dieker, and quadrupled in adolescents. The Executive Director Big Toy at Keizer Rapids Park will make possible healthy, active out- door play for Keizer’s and Marion County’s children. This is the right project at the right time to improve the future of our children and fami- To the Editor: lies. I’m tired of being considered an Keizer Rapids Parks began with extremist because I support gun con- the vision of connecting Keizer and trol—major gun control. Let me ask the broader region with the Willa- you, “Why do we even need guns?” mette River. Seventeen federal, state There was a time when gun owner- and local partners joined together, ship made some sense— when people creating a 150-acre expanse of nat- needed them to provide food or pro- ural beauty for residents to enjoy. tection for themselves and their fami- Opening in 2006, the park features lies or for the common defense. Such hiking trails, bike paths, a disc golf needs do not exist today. area, boat ramp, Keizer Rotary Am- It is time to grow up, put away our phitheater, and dog park. At Keizer macho toys and recognize that the Rapids Park you can already expe- ready availability of guns is the prob- rience free concerts throughout the lem and not the solution—to any- summer, RIVERfair, and Shake- thing. speare in the Park. And now, start- Art Burr ing June 14, Keizer Rapids Park will Keizer proudly launch a destination play area refl ecting our region’s unique history and culture. letters Gun control is not an extreme view Endorsements for sale? To the Editor: I fi nd it very questionable that your newspaper ( and I use the word loose- ly ) endorsed Colleen Busch the same day that candidate purchased a half page advertisement. You also withheld an endorsement mailed to your staff on behalf of the other candidate. Did Mr. Stevenson need to take a half page ad to get equal treatment from your publication? Richard Stevenson Keizer Wheatland Publishing Corp. • 142 Chemawa Road N. • Keizer, Oregon 97303 phone: 503.390.1051 • web: www.keizertimes.com • email: kt@keizertimes.com Lyndon A. Zaitz, Editor & Publisher One year: $25 in Marion County, $33 outside Marion County, $45 outside Oregon PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY Publication No: USPS 679-430 important to me than my family. Something has made us each believe the other clueless. Cognitive dissonance—the men- tal discomfort of facing inconsistency of one’s thoughts, beliefs, perceptions, and behaviors. In a result described as backfi re, when confronted by facts disproving something you believe it sometimes reinforces that belief. Pictures of the president’s birth cer- tifi cate, and endless bi-partisan Beng- hazi investigations only serve to show the dark depth of the deception. I won’t pretend that I am immune to cognitive dissonance, only that I am not so wed to my beliefs that I am immune to their change. In looking for writings about why people believe as they do I found an interesting test embedded in an ar- ticle. Most parents have strong beliefs about spanking. Do you think you would change your beliefs if research shows you to be wrong? In the end you won’t have to. Spanking can be effective on children under 7, if used infrequently and in private. Research also shows that positive reinforce- ment, timeouts, and other strategies work just as well and don’t require violence. Choose the facts that fi t your personal morality and carry on. More than 3,400 chil- dren from every Keizer elementary school en- gaged in fo- cus groups where they drew pictures of what they wanted in a Big Toy play area. Landscape architects then took those drawings and spent hours compiling the children’s ideas, re- sulting in a playground design that features Keizer’s and Oregon’s histo- ry. Big Toy components include the Oregon Wallace House log cabin, Smith Rock climbing wall, an east- ern Oregon dinosaur dig, Salem- Keizer Volcanoes slide, paddle boat, and Willamette Valley fi re trucks with misters. Adaptive play equip- ment expands the Big Toy’s appeal to youth of all abilities and all ages. The Big Toy at Keizer Rapids Park has strong support from area Rotary clubs, Chambers of Commerce, fi re departments, Salem-Keizer Transit, neighborhood associations, and area businesses. We are grateful for fi nan- cial support from the City of Keizer, Keizer Rotary Club, Marion Coun- ty, Oregon Community Foundation, Keizer Parks Foundation, and many, many organizations and individuals who adopted components, bought a fence picket, or simply made a do- nation. What we need now is manpower. On June 10 to14, more than 700 vol- unteers will build this 15,000 square foot playground. We expect to com- plete the build in just fi ve days. No skills needed. We have skilled con- struction captains who will train and oversee each four-hour shift. In ad- dition to construction help, we need volunteers for children’s activities, art, and child care. We need help feeding 200 volunteers three meals each day. There is something for ev- eryone to do. Then join us at the soft opening in the late afternoon of June 14 or at a free concert honoring our vol- unteers at the Keizer Rotary Am- phitheater on June 27. You, your friends, your children, and your grandchildren can enjoy the new Big Toy playground, along with other park amenities, all through the summer. For more information, or to sign up for the community build, visit www.keizerbigtoy.org. services. In the end, from their view, all the ef- fort at the Capi- tol yielded only modest savings (as some re- forms will stand but not the denial of the 2 percent COLA) forcing policy makers “to confront the very problem they and their predecessors worked so hard to tackle in 2013.” What is the size and shape of the problem? There’s the gap between the system’s obligations to retirees and its on-hand assets. The court’s decision reads that there’s an added cost to the state’s 2017-19 budget. There’s a projected loss to schools, state and local government because of money that will need to be divert- ed to cover higher PERS costs. Really now, there must be other ways to address the shortfall between what the state has promised its retir- ees and its fi nancial resources. One entertaining feature of the moaning and groaning that’s underway now that the court has ruled is what Mr. Green of the Oregon School Boards Association (OSBA) has quipped about retirees doing well while school kids suffer. The Oregon School Boards Asso- ciation should clean up its own house since it does nothing about local school boards all over the state, most recently in Portland, but in Salem- Keizer and elsewhere in Oregon, too, that give superintendents and their central offi ce administrators huge salary, double-digit increases that cause raging among taxpayers who must pay these tabs. The OSBA does nothing about these outrages while denouncing 2 percent raises for pub- lic retirees. Justice would never ar- rive for PERS retirees if they were at the mercy of the OSBA. Then there’s the basic question in this matter. Why is it that Or- egon’s legislators and former gover- nor fi nd the only answer to fi nancial shortfalls is by going after those who worked for peanuts for years serving Oregon’s citizens and must now, by their logic, pay for yearly increases in the cost of schools and all public services? We have a state where the wealthy are given a pass to pay their taxes by minimum tax burdens and can practically write everything off through manipulation of the tax laws. Why not reform the tax laws and make the cost of doing private sector business in Oregon an equitable sys- tem of fairness where every taxpayer, including those who’ve acquired considerable riches, pays according to salary in a progressive rather than regressive taxation system? Now that’d be real reform. John Tapogna, the president of ECONorthwest, an economic con- sulting company, was said to “cor- rectly” sum up the court decision by saying, “Oregon made a generational mistake in public policy, and the court has essentially ruled that we have to live with it.” No, Tapogna, you don’t have to live with what the court ruled. You can put your head together with oth- er smarty-pants Oregonians to fi nd solutions other than trying to free ride for your tax relief on the backs of former public employees. a box of soap (Don Vowell gets on his soapbox regularly in the Keizertimes.) Big Toy will change future of Keizer Keizertimes SUBSCRIPTIONS always or most of the time do the right thing. It seems those two bodies are now seen as one. As recently as a couple of hours ago a Facebook acquaintance posted an article reporting that President Obama knew about the Benghazi at- tack several weeks before it happened. He is still posting articles claiming at last to show defi nitive evidence that the president’s birth certifi cate is fake. As an odd aside this post hopefully adds that 20,000 “likes” will start the impeachment process. This friend of mine, a good employee for his whole career and a reliable, faultless fam- ily man, most probably has the same hopes as I do for the future of this country our children will share. It scarcely seems possible that we could agree on the leadership necessary to realize those hopes. We’ve been suffocated with facts. My Facebook pal believes that Obama/liberals/Democrats are de- stroying his country. He has no trou- ble fi nding a website supplying facts to bolster his belief. I’ve never asked him how he accounts for the differ- ence in our beliefs, assuming he’d grant that I was, like him, an honest employee and that nothing was more POSTMASTER Send address changes to: Keizertimes Circulation 142 Chemawa Road N. Keizer, OR 97303 Periodical postage paid at Salem, Oregon guest column (Janet Carlson is a Marion Coun- ty Commissioner; Lore Christopher is a former mayor of Keizer. Carl- son can be reached at jcarlson@ co.marion.or.us and Christopher at chrisfam1@msn.com.) Keeping a promise to those with PERS Some Oregon newspaper writers have contracted ‘beat a dead horse’ syndrome. Those among this group just cannot give up the effort to fi nd fault for all the state’s problems in the retirement benefi ts earned by former public employees PERS retirees who worked long enough for the state of Oregon to have been vested. What happened to deny those folks extor- tion rights on PERS retirees was that the Oregon Supreme Court found unconstitutional the “grand bargain” that was legislative action and guber- natorial sign-off on reforms main- ly to deny PERS retirees an annual cost-of-living (COLA) at a whole 2 percent. Some have written a surrender to what was undone by the court. Those newspapers recognize a deal is a deal and former Governor John Kitzhaber and a majority of mem- bers of the Oregon Legislature vio- lated that deal. The court’s ruling throws a shadow over the second half of the current legislative session that is trying to fi nancially help local governments and school districts and address the now increased cost of PERS contributions that would have realized relief through the reforms. Other state newspapers were less generous, referring to the court as having “gutted hard-won reforms.” For some journalists, the court’s 87 page opinion was a “slog,” infer- ring that the court took too long to announce its fi nding of unconsti- tutionality. It quoted, as have other newspapers, a deputy executive di- rector of the Oregon School Boards Association (OSBA), Jim Green, who was awarded ‘right on’ status by these folks when he said, “Retirees did very well. Kids did very poorly.” PERS retirees are viewed by some folks as causing a “crippling burden” on schools and other public gene h. mcintyre (Gene H. McIntyre’s column ap- pears weekly in the Keizertimes.) The Keizertimes welcomes all points of view. E-mail a Letter to the Editor to: publisher@keizertimes.com by noon each Tuesday