A4 THE ASTORIAN • SATuRdAy, dEcEmbER 12, 2020 OPINION editor@dailyastorian.com KARI BORGEN Publisher DERRICK DePLEDGE Editor Founded in 1873 JEREMY FELDMAN circulation manager JOHN D. BRUIJN Production manager CARL EARL Systems manager WRITER’S NOTEBOOK Virus project aims to connect community T his year has been relentless. We’ve seen businesses close. Events canceled. Sports post- poned. Lives lost. Dreams deferred. It can be easy to forget all the ways people on the North Coast have adapted during the coronavirus pan- demic. Hosting events on Zoom. Donating time and money to those in need. Staying the course when it’s hard to see an end. “Hunker/rise/surge: Coronavirus 2020,” a special section produced by The Asto- rian, seeks to show how the North Coast has managed the pandem- ic’s unrelenting waves and where it goes from here. JONATHAN The project will visu- WILLIAMS ally show how the virus has reshaped the region and how locals have adapted. Through interactive content with readers, it will show leaders on the North Coast what people want going into 2021. Readers will have a chance to be a part of the project through submitting photos of themselves wearing masks. The photos will be used with others on the cover. Readers can also write what they want local leaders to know and do about the virus going into 2021, as well as what readers are looking forward to in the new year and how they’ve man- aged through this year. Teachers, stu- dents and those who have lost jobs will also have a chance to contribute. Hailey Hoffman, The Astorian’s visual journalist, will take portrait-style photographs of local restaurant and business owners. Hoffman will select images from this year that strikingly show the biggest moments related to the coronavirus. John Bruijn, The Astorian’s produc- tion manager, will work with the team in designing a timeline of notewor- thy events related to the virus that uses Hoffman’s photos to illustrate it. Many have faced incredible hard- ships this year. One thing the coro- navirus has starkly made clear is the already existing issues in Clatsop County: affordable housing, child care and homelessness. The project will include a focus on local health care workers, social service agencies and nonprofits that have helped those in need, as well as those who have lost jobs. There will also be a section of quotes from local teachers and students on how learning has changed and what they’ve done to adapt. Hailey Hoffman/The Astorian A nearly empty Commercial Street in downtown Astoria in March. Many businesses and restaurants closed or were only open for takeout because of coronavirus restrictions. HOW TO PARTICIPATE Go to: bit.ly/hunkerrisesurge Participants will be entered into a drawing for a gift card to a local restaurant. Questions? Contact Jonathan Williams at jwilliams@dailyastorian.com or 971-704-1720. Alyssa Evans, the editor of Coast Weekend, will show how local arts and culture organizations have adapted, what they’ve lost and what they’ll carry with them as they move forward. Gary Henley, The Astorian’s sports reporter, will show how local athletes have persisted through the virus. He’ll also talk to college and professional athletes with ties to the North Coast on what life has been like since the start of the pandemic. Time and life march on even as virus restrictions come and go. The aim of this project is to document a remark- able moment in the North Coast’s his- tory for readers of today and tomorrow to look back on. While residents tee- ter on the edge of a new year filled with its own challenges and possibilities for change and a return to normal, now is the time to look back on where we’ve been. Most things only last as long as those who care to support them. This project succeeds if people write about what matters to them and how next year can emerge as one of the North Coast’s strongest. We hope you’ll choose to participate. Jonathan Williams is the associate editor of The Astorian. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Freedom of speech T he Astorian needs to reevaluate the process it uses to decide which opin- ion letters to publish. I strongly believe in freedom of speech and the importance of hearing viewpoints other than my own, but recently The Asto- rian has published multiple opinion letters that blatantly disregard facts and spread misinformation to citizens, despite saying that it will edit for “factual accuracy.” As conservative bots on social media will tell you, you are entitled to your own opinions, not your own facts. The Astori- an’s opinion section has become a place for conspiracy theorists to spread false ideas about mass voting fraud (only in states that turned blue, apparently), and The Astorian has been enabling them and helping spread these theories. A statement from the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency on behalf of top federal and state election officials, including some nominated by President Donald Trump, confirmed that this was the “most secure election in U.S. history.” There was no mass voter fraud. The lawsuits have failed. States have recounted and certified their vote tallies. There is no question of who won this election, and The Astorian needs to stop giving con- spiracy theorists a platform to spread misinformation. Opinion sections are meant to voice opinions, not invent facts. It’s time that The Astorian stops giving a platform to voices trying to undermine our democracy. JENNA TRAVERS Astoria Misguided priorities S o, while America enters a worse-case scenario phase of the pandemic, the Trump administration is hosting multiple holiday parties for supporters. Couldn’t we use that money to equip pharmacies across the country with COVID-19 vaccine-ready refrigerators instead? DONNA LEE ROLLINS Astoria Very real problems T o Suzanne Weber: Congratulations to you in your election as the represen- tative of Oregon House District 32. While I did not vote for you, you certainly have the opportunity to earn my vote over the next two years. A great start would be your willingness to address two very real prob- lems in our Oregon elections. Candidates should be concerned with serving the needs of the voters in their dis- tricts. Our District 32 campaign attracted such a huge amount of outside money for both parties that, regardless of which can- didate won, voters are now left to wonder how much influence those donors have on the winner. Representative-elect Weber, please show you are unencumbered by the demands of outside donors by support- ing strict campaign finance limits. Voters will be more likely to trust legislators if we make this change. You claimed in your campaign to be an independent forced by our current elec- tion model to run as a Republican. You would have been able to run a more hon- est campaign as a candidate with indepen- dent views if Oregon switched to a ranked choice system. You can prove your independence by putting your full support behind this mea- sure as well. An added bonus: Studies sug- gest campaigns in ranked choice elections take on a more conciliatory tone, and run fewer attack ads. Wouldn’t that be great. Good luck in the hard work it will take for our state and our district to not only recover, but to thrive. We depend on you. CHERYL CONWAY Astoria