PAGE A6, KEIZERTIMES, JANUARY 25, 2019 Opinion First Citizen and other winners exemplify motto Pride. Spirit. Volunteerism. Three powerful words. Three words that grace the fountain at Newton-Mc- Gee Plaza at the corner of River and Chemawa Roads in downtown Keiz- er. Three words that are, also, the mot- to of the city of Keizer. Those three words also exemplify the winners of the annual awards present- ed by the Keizer Chamber of Commerce at the First Citizens and Awards Ban- quet held Saturday, Jan. 19. The Chamber (and its predecessor, Keizer Mer- chants Association) have been honoring Keizerites since the 1960s. The list of Keizer Citizen re- cipients is a Who’s Who of the city’s leaders in business, community and philanthropy. Vickie Jackson, who’s community resume includes two terms as presi- dent of the Rotary Club of Keizer, volunteer bookkeeper for PTAs and the McNary High School gradua- tion party as well as her work with Keizer’s Distinguished Young Wom- en program and her untold hours of volunteerism with various schools as her two sons made their way through elementary, middle and high school. The announcement of Vickie Jackson as winner of the First Citizen award was met with a sustained stand- ing ovation from the 200 attendees at Saturday’s banquet. Jackson thanked her husband, Randy Jackson, and sons Nick and Cody, for allowing her to spend time away to volunteer. She said that she received more than she gave through her volunteering. Vickie Jackson is proud of the town she calls home, she does good work with enthusiasm and she volun- teers just about anytime anyone asks. Kyle Juran, owner of Remodeling by Classic Homes, was announced as merchant of the year for his work for the community and the Chamber it- self. Juran and his team contributed more than $3,000 of the $13,000 raised at 2018’s Percey Presents event that funds Keizer Network of Wom- en’s Christmas Giving Basket pro- gram. That $3,000 came when Juran raffl ed off a life-size playhouse. All the proceeds from the raffl e benefi t, in the end, families and chil- dren in need during the holidays. Juran used his expertise and talents to help the Chamber pre- pare and move into its new quarters on Riv- er Road. Like all good Keizer volunteers, Kyle Juran never says no when asked to help his com- munity. Keizer native Brian Aicher was surprised when he was announced as the winner of the Service to Ed- ucation Award. Like the past few education winners, the focus was on youth sports and its effect on the development of our kids. Aicher, a Salem Electric employee and a long- time mentor, has coached hundreds of Keizer kids. Whether his time was spent coaching, administering or lift- ing a hammer or shovel, Aicher has lived the city’s pride, spirit and volun- teerism motto to his core. Each year the Chamber’s leader chooses a recipient for the President’s Award. Bob Shackleford named long- time KeizerFEST and Keizer Iris Fes- tival volunteer Larry Schmidgall for the honor. Anyone who visited the Keizer- FEST tent has seen Larry Schmidgall, who, with his connections oversaw the beverage sales in the tent during the festival for years. He was pressed into service to do other chores during the festival, always with a smile. Congratulations to all four hon- orees, who have given selfl essly and with a smile. Models for all volun- teers. — LAZ our opinion KEIZERTIMES.COM Web Poll Results Will you be doing any volunteering on National Day of Service on Monday, Jan. 21, to mark Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday? No: 84% Yes: 16% Vote in a new poll every Thursday! GO TO KEIZERTIMES.COM Keizertimes Wheatland Publishing Corp. 142 Chemawa Road N. • Keizer, Oregon 97303 Phone: 503.390.1051 • www.keizertimes.com MANAGING EDITOR Eric A. Howald editor@keizertimes.com SUBSCRIPTIONS One year: $35 in Marion County, $43 outside Marion County, $55 outside Oregon ASSOCIATE EDITOR Matt Rawlings news@keizertimes.com ADVERTISING Paula Moseley advertising@keizertimes.com PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY PRODUCTION MANAGER & GRAPHIC DESIGNER POSTMASTER Publication No: USPS 679-430 Send address changes to: Andrew Jackson graphics@keizertimes.com LEGAL NOTICES legals@keizertimes.com BUSINESS MANAGER Leah Stevens billing@keizertimes.com EDITOR & PUBLISHER Lyndon Zaitz publisher@keizertimes.com Keizertimes Circulation 142 Chemawa Road N. Keizer, OR 97303 Periodical postage paid at Salem, Oregon RECEPTION Lori Beyeler INTERN Lauren Murphy facebook.com/keizertimes twitter.com/keizertimes Parties must feel heat to end shutdown By DEBRA J. SAUNDERS The partial government shutdown will end when both sides think they are losing the political war that start- ed it—and not before then. Yes it can end if one side caves, or if President Donald Trump declares a national emergency to fund a border wall, but that is not likely to happen within the next pay pe- riod or two, if at all. Partisan rancor has herded voters into two corners so that both the Republican and Demo- cratic bases don’t want their leaders to cut a deal. Republicans support a shutdown that JP Morgan CEO Jamie Di- mon warned could drive economic growth to zero if it continues. They only want to end it if they win fund- ing for a wall. Democrats also don’t want to end a stalemate that is separating 800,000 federal workers from their paychecks. Having funded border barriers in the past, Democratic leaders now say funding for Trump’s wall is a deal killer. Party leaders’ energy is going to- ward making the other side look bad, not ending the stalemate. Trump has pulled back on what his own negotiators had thought were good faith offers; his unreliabil- ity inhibits Republicans and Demo- crats from sticking their necks out for a measure that easily could fail. Already burned, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell says he won’t bring a measure to a fl oor vote unless Trump commits to it. No worries. Trump supporters say his behavior shows he is no creature of the swamp. Only insiders care if the president is short-sheeting his own team. At least Trump is willing to stand by a campaign promise, the Trump voter argues. As the sage Henry Olsen of the Ethics and Public Policy Council put it, Trump is “showing that he can re- sist political pressure.” The shutdown has changed nothing. “The people that are with him are with him,” quoth Olsen. “The people that are against him are against him.” In a play to differentiate themselves, House Demo- crats engage in the charade of passing spending mea- sures that have zero chance of being enacted to demon- strate that they at least are willing to do something. When they get tired of that ploy, they go to the Senate to demand McConnell put unpassable bills to a fl oor vote. So yes, they are willing to do something—stunts. Another stunt: Speaker Nancy Pe- losi’s letter effectively telling Trump not to bother delivering a State of the Union address in the Capitol on Jan. 29 because of security concerns for a “national special security event” during a government shutdown. It helps if you forget she invited Trump after the shutdown began. The Democratic base approved Pelosi’s move as fervently as Trump’s voters cheered when he yanked the military plane that was supposed to take Pelosi and fellow Democrats to Brussels and Afghanistan. Pelosi’s claim that she always has been a supporter of “securing our border” defi es credulity. Pelosi also has called a border wall “an immo- rality. It’s not who we are as a nation.” Fox News anchor Bret Bai- er pressed House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer to say if he shared Pelo- other voices si’s view on the wall’s morality or the claim by former Congressman Beto O’Rourke of Texas, that a border wall is “racist.” Hoyer, the poor guy, hemmed and hawed about walls being immor- al when they keep people prisoner when they shouldn’t be prisoners. The problem, as Trump put it when he addressed the Pentagon Thursday, is the Democratic Party “has been hijacked by the open-bor- ders fringe within the party.” What will it take to end the shut- down? Roll Call taped a town hall given by Rep. Anthony Brown, D-Md., as he addressed a room that included furloughed federal workers under- standably fearful about how they can survive without paychecks. “What exactly do you want folks to do out here?” a young woman asked him. “Should we be pressuring Sen. McConnell? What do we need to be doing to get things resolved?” She meant well, but when federal workers direct their ire at Repub- licans and not Democrats, they be- come unwitting enablers. Fun fact: McConnell doesn’t care if federal workers in Maryland send him nasty emails. He cares about the core values of his constituents in Kentucky, where 62.5 percent of voters supported Trump. Likewise Pelosi listens to her San Francisco homies, not the “Make America Great Again” voter. Voters who want to see an end to the shutdown have one recourse: They can turn the heat on their own party. When progressives lean on Pe- losi and conservatives lean on Trump and GOP lawmakers, the shutdown will end. (Creators Syndicate) Hopeful even while being in minority way the idea is going out The 80th legislative from both sides of the session has begun! After building. Both bills have a week of orientation, broad bi-partisan support. training and opening cer- • HB 2302 would pro- emonies, we now begin vide “guaranteed assis- the actual work of legisla- tance” to those who are tion. That means commit- the most needy in Ore- tees meet, bills are heard gon. It would be a small and debated, and House investment in covering and Senate fl oor voting those things that current sessions begin. from the public assistance doesn’t First of all, I thought I cover, i.e., diapers and would highlight some of capitol other day-to-day necessi- the legislation I am work- ties. ing on. Always remem- By BILL POST • HB 2299 address- ber, you can fi nd all bills, es those who attempt to all committees and live/ elude police and cause recorded video of every- thing we do in the Capitol on the high speed chases endangering our OLIS site: https://olis.leg.state.or.us/ law enforcement as well as anyone else liz/2019R1/. It’s a tremendous tool on the road. • HB 2300 addresses those who try for tracking all that goes on here. The to harass others by sending nude pho- bills I introduced are: • HB 2297 which would be a re- tos by text or social media. • HB 2295 would look at youth in ferral to the voters to have Oregon join with other west coast states to go corrections who may have “earned” a to permanent daylight savings time. review of their sentence. • HB 2314 tackles a long time is- There is real consensus to move for- ward with this and Sen. Kim Thatch- sue for motorcyclists called “lane split- er has a similar bill in the Senate, that ting/sharing, allowing motorcycles to “split” a lane in very specifi c traffi c situations. Finally, after so many people reached out to me after the 2017 ses- sion, telling me their stories of buying Sudafed products in the states around us, I am running HB 2303 the “Su- dafed bill” again. This would not re- turn us to the days of “over the count- er” but have us join the vast majority of America in making these products behind the counter and the purchas- er having to show a picture ID, sign a form, be logged into a system and then get a small amount of the prod- uct. Over 40 states use the system that is proposed in HB 2303. Oregon cur- rently requires you to visit a doctor and have them prescribe the product at a much higher price than it would be behind the counter. I hope you’ll come to visit your Capitol this session and participate in the political process. Please call my offi ce with questions or concerns at 503-986-1425. (Bill Post represents House Dis- trict 25. He can be reached at 503- 986-1425 or via email at rep. bil- post@ oregonlegislature.gov.) Seven things I’ve learned about education By CHIP CONRAD After my fi rst year of teaching here are the things I have learned about public education: 1.) I didn’t know teachers had so much freedom to customize their curriculum. Each course has fi ve to 10 different theories that a student must learn by the end of the semester. How you get there and what else your students learn along the way is essentially left up to the educator. 2.) The students are not as addicted to their phones as you might think. I don’t have issues with phones in my classroom yet I have no posted or known cell phone policy. I see it as a barometer for my level of engagement. The more I keep them engaged the less they are on their phones. If I start seeing phones come out I know I need to ramp up the wow of the lesson. 3.) As a teacher you don’t talk to other teachers very much. Teaching can be a very solitary job if you let it. I got lucky and the teacher in the room next to me is a veteran in the education world and is very fun to be around. We chat often. 4.) Teaching seems like a repeti- tious job but it’s not. As it turns out teaching is a very dynamic voyage. Yes, I get up every day at 5:30 a.m. and I get back from school every day around 4:30 p.m., but I found the hours in between are highly unpredictable. You never know what the day is going to hold, except that it will be different than the day before. In addition to its unpredictability is the pace. The pace that a teacher must work to stay ahead of the tidal wave of responsibilities is incredible. Yes, I look at the clock a lot but it’s never be- cause I’m hoping it’ll move faster; quite the opposite. 5.) There’s a large fo- cus on the teacher from the school administration. I’ve never seen an indus- try where administration is worried so much about the worker. I’m constantly be- ing asked how I’m doing. I am almost inundated with personal development events and opportunities to rejuvenate. 6.) Teachers get very possessive of their students. I’ve become so posses- sive of my students that if by chance I need a sub for one of my absences the sub has specifi c instructions not to instruct. My classroom is set up that if I’m not there student leaders will lead their group through the curricu- lum. This is how I make sure they do not fall behind when I’m not there. But seri- ously… Don’t in- struct my students. 7.) As a teacher, teach- ing is not your guest column fi rst priority. I went into this career with the mantra that “my goal is not to teach. It’s to connect and then to teach.” I thought this was a novel ap- proach to education but it is most—if not all—educators’ mantra. Connect- ing with the student requires you to actually care about the student and where they’re at in life. You’re con- stantly asking yourself “What was the student’s morning like? What’s going on with their relationships? How are they feeling? Where is this person’s anxiety level? What are they going home to after school?.” I think as adults we can forget how stressful the high school years are. Anytime you enter a new arena you are presented with the unexpected. Your hope is that these issues are mostly positive. In my case the good, by far, outlays the nega- tive. Lucky me! (Chip Conrad lives in Salem and is a substitute teacher with the Sa- lem-Keizer School District.)