PAGE A4, KEIZERTIMES, MARCH 31, 2017 KeizerOpinion KEIZERTIMES.COM Deductions, PERS, K-12 & life Another couple of weeks in the nearly 30 years so I constantly hear Oregon Legislature and the days are about the struggles in our K-12 ed- ucation system. I have per- long here at the Capitol, sonally advocated that the but each one seems to go K-12 budget be separated by quickly as they are full from the rest of the budget of committee hearings, and require that it be voted research, and meetings on by March 1, so that our with constituents and local school districts have others regarding specifi c certainty going into their bills. own budgeting process each There are many con- year. I can assure you that versations being had about the budget and from the the minority party and I are very much in favor of what is being called the capitol a much larger budget for “transportation pack- age,” but it’s currently Rep. BILL POST K-12 and want it passed right now. We have been too early to tell what will be included in those bills. While we told the schools are asking for $8.4 are waiting for the details, we are billion. We are asking the co-chairs moving a few bills every day on the to get that to the House fl oor right now for a vote. House fl oor. Recently I had several farmer I am always glad to hear from constituents and recently I have constituents drop by the offi ce to heard from a lot of you on some talk about Senate Bill 779 as well important issues. We are currently as receiving a very good amount of being bombarded by emails from emails from farmers in the St. Paul concerned homeowners regard- area. This bill would provide clarity ing House Bill (HB) 2771 and HB for agricultural employers regarding 2006. Among other things, these the sick leave legislation that passed bills would eliminate the property last year. Many of the farmers in my tax deduction as well as cut the district have reached out to me on mortgage interest deduction. I am this, and I am hopeful that the bill not a fan of discouraging home will come out of the Senate to the ownership, but rather encouraging House where I will be able to vote for it. it. By far however, the bill that I We have received many phone calls and visits regarding PERS. This have heard from you all the most is such a huge issue that impacts our has been HB 3017. It is the ban entire state in many ways. Previous on late term abortion. I have been legislatures have voted to cut ben- gratefully stunned by the number efi ts that were already contractu- of constituents who took the time ally agreed on, and the courts have to thank me for co-sponsoring that struck those down. We need creative bill. I want to thank them for their solutions to solve this crisis, but they support and very kind words. (Bill Post represents House Disd need to be constitutional solutions and I believe we must do it this ses- trict 25. He can be reached at 503d 986d1425 or via email at rep.billd sion. post@state.or.us.) My wife has been a teacher for Popular vote should be rule districts or districts with voter suppression laws in place. Analyses of how the congressional district method might work as- sume all states adopt this method, therefore elimi- nating state choice. The only way to ensure every person’s voice is heard is to base presidential election re- sults on the national popular vote. NPVIC only goes into effect when states with 270 electoral votes sign on. If you want Oregon to sign onto NPVIC, contact Senator Thatcher and your state representative today. Angela Roccograndi Wilsonville letters To the Editor: On February 23, our state senator, Kim Thatch- er, argued in The Times against Oregon signing on to the National Popular Vote Inter- state Compact (NPVIC). NPVIC states allocate Electoral College votes to the presidential candidate with the plurality of votes across the country. NPVIC does not change how the Electoral College works. It changes the way states sign- ing it allocate their votes, a state right under the Constitution. Senator Thatcher seems to prefer the congressional district method that “give[s] the states better rep- resentation within their own geo- graphical diversity.” This method moves the level of control from the state (winner take all) to the district. It does not protect “minority opin- ions or different ways of life” within districts, especially gerrymandered Share your opinion Email a letter to the editor (300 words) by noon Tuesday. Email to: publisher@keizertimes.com How Trump can get his groove back By MICHAEL GERSON The central promise of the Trump administration—the repeal and replacement of Obamacare— has failed. The central premise of the Trump administra- tion—that Donald Trump is a brilliant negotiator— has been discredited. In the process of losing a legisla- tive battle, Trump has lost the theory of his presi- dency. The lessons, however, run deeper. Like other politicians before him, Trump ran for offi ce arguing, in essence: Just give my party control of the elected branches of the federal government and massive change will quickly follow. Many Americans believed in this promise of winner-take-all government. The American system of gov- ernment—with its constipated Senate rules and its complicated House coalitions—is designed to frustrate such plans. But the close- ness of recent national elections has encouraged partisan dreams of po- litical dominance. Republicans had control of the House, Senate and presidency in the 108th Congress. Democrats had the same in the 111th Congress. Now Republicans have it all in the 115th Congress. Total control is intoxicating. The winners feel like they have a man- date, even a mission. But the losers know, if they maintain partisan dis- cipline and prevent achievements of the other side, they have a realistic chance of winning it all back. This leads to a cycle of hubris and ob- structionism. How can this cycle be broken? There is only one way. Someone must do genuine outreach, involv- ing the credible promise of com- promise, from a position of strength. It is the winners who must act fi rst, taking the risk of offering a hand that may be slapped away. Then it is the po- litical losers who have the responsibility to re- ward good faith. Obamacare—passed in a partisan quick march and viewed by some Republicans as the focus of evil in the modern world—may not be the most promising ground for agree- ment. The same may be true for tax reform, which involves a thousand well-funded special interests. But genuine negotiation might be pos- sible on an infrastructure bill. The same might be true on legislation designed to increase the skills of 38 percent of American workers whose jobs are threatened by automation. And at least one culture-war issue belongs on the list: religious liberty. Many religious conservatives imagined they would, at this point, be in a defensive crouch. Instead, unexpectedly, religious conserva- tives fi nd themselves in a position of relative strength, as one of the main contributors to Trump’s vic- tory. It is possible they will squan- der their standing on repeal of the Johnson Amendment that restricts political endorsements from the pulpit -- a change that few have demanded and none really need. Instead, they could use their infl u- ence to encourage genuine plural- ism, with benefi ts that are shared and nonsectarian. What would the elements of a legislative compromise look like? michael gerson It would need to allow institutions motivated by a religious mission, including religious schools and charities, to maintain their identity. Religious liberty involves, not just the freedom of individual belief but the freedom to create institutions that refl ect a shared belief. But any realistic agreement would also need to include broad anti-discrimination protections in employment and services—in- cluding for gay people—outside of the strong carve-out for religious nonprofi ts. Religious conservatives would need to accept sexual orien- tation as a protected group in eco- nomic interactions. This is consistent with what Jonathan Rauch calls “the obvious compromise: protections for gay people plus exemptions for reli- gious objectors.” In practice, this would allow religious people to or- ganize colleges, hospitals and chari- ties according to their beliefs. But the cake baker would need to bake for everyone. The fl orist would need to sell to everyone. The strongest advocates on both sides of this issue will fi nd any com- promise abhorrent. But it could be powerful for religious conservatives to attempt outreach from a position of political strength, And Donald Trump, oddly, may be the leader to get this kind of deal. He broke ground among Republicans in rec- ognizing LGBT rights in his con- vention speech. But he is also close to religious conservative leaders. And just about now, Trump needs a way to reconstitute the meaning of his presidency. (Washington Group) Post Writers I choose more cops over parks By ROBERT CONAHEY I am writing in response to the recent article in the Keizertimes about a proposal to add fi ve offi cers to the Keizer Police Department. I exceptionally and greatly sup- port this proposal; it is greatly needed and over- due. I only wish that there could be more offi cers added. I enjoy the system of parks that the city of Keizer has and they are very nice but I think that it is more important to have additional police protec- tion. The recent burglary covered in the March 24 issue of the Keizer- times illustrates this point. More po- lice means more coverage and more coverage means less crime. Suspects are more likely to be caught and locked up. By having more offi cers on the streets the word will go out through the criminal network that Keizer is not open for busi- ness. Criminals will not be welcome here and they should just move on and go somewhere else to commit their crimes. I have been a vic- tim of crime and reported it to the police. If there had been more offi cers and more resources available to the de- partment and the of- fi cers then maybe the case could have been resolved instead of going cold and me having to pay out of my own pocket for a private investigator and lawyer with my limited resources. It is important to have a safe community and for the residents and others to know that they are safe and well protected. New resi- dents and businesses, es- pecially those that pro- vide good living wage jobs will not come to an area that is not safe and well protected. I think that we all aggree that Keizer is growing and will con- tinue to grow and that employers who provide good jobs that pay a living wage with benefi ts are what we seek and they will not come to an area that it not safe and well pro- tected. guest column Keizertimes Wheatland Publishing Corp. • 142 Chemawa Road N. • Keizer, Oregon 97303 phone: 503.390.1051 • web: www.keizertimes.com • email: kt@keizertimes.com SUBSCRIPTIONS MANAGING EDITOR Eric A. Howald editor@keizertimes.com ASSOCIATE EDITOR Derek Wiley news@keizertimes.com One year: $25 in Marion County, $33 outside Marion County, $45 outside Oregon PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY ADVERTISING Publication No: USPS 679d430 Paula Moseley advertising@keizertimes.com POSTMASTER Send address changes to: PRODUCTION MANAGER Andrew Jackson Keizertimes Circulation graphics@keizertimes.com 142 Chemawa Road N. LEGAL NOTICES Keizer, OR 97303 legals@keizertimes.com EDITOR & PUBLISHER Lyndon Zaitz publisher@keizertimes.com BUSINESS MANAGER Laurie Painter billing@keizertimes.com Periodical postage paid at Salem, Oregon RECEPTION Lori Beyeler facebook.com/keizertimes twitter.com/keizertimes I don’t mind paying more taxes to have good police and fi re protec- tion. If that is what it takes to make and maintain Keizer as a safe and vibrant community and the place we all want it to be. Long-term I would like to see the Keizer Police Department be staffed so that there are two offi cers in the car at all times. In the short term during the hours of darkness there should be two police offi cers per car. It helps with offi cer safety and productivity As for parks, the city of Keizer prides itself on volunteerism. What is wrong with having volunteers, churches, youth groups such as the various scout groups and those re- quired to do community service perform these tasks. (Robert Conahey lives in Keizer.)