A4 THE ASTORIAN • TuESdAy, MARcH 16, 2021 OPINION editor@dailyastorian.com KARI BORGEN Publisher DERRICK DePLEDGE Editor Founded in 1873 SHANNON ARLINT circulation Manager JOHN D. BRUIJN Production Manager CARL EARL Systems Manager GUEST COLUMN Oregon goes with its gut T he governors of Oregon and Washington state both say that science has guided their response to the COVID-19 pandemic. However, a Seattle Times columnist thinks that Oregon “went more with its gut” when Gov. Kate Brown moved K-12 educa- tors to the front of the line for coronavi- rus vaccines. By doing so, colum- nist Danny Westneat wrote last week, Oregon got it right: “What happened is, Oregon ignored all the barbs and went ahead DICK and got the shots for HUGHES its teachers. When that didn’t lead to immediate school reopenings as hoped, the gover- nor last week brought down the hammer. “‘Whether or not public schools should return kids to the classroom this spring is no longer up for discussion,’ she said. “How’s that for some clarity?” Hmm. “Clarity” is not how some Oregonians would define Brown’s whip- lash approach to coronavirus leader- ship. Perhaps clarity is in the eye of the beholder. Or maybe it takes an outsid- er’s perspective to awaken us. A year ago Brown closed Oregon school classrooms because of the pan- demic. Her administration followed that up with some of the nation’s toughest state requirements for allowing schools to reopen. Later, she switched, saying those requirements weren’t mandates after all — only advice — and so it was up to local school districts and com- munities to determine when to resume in-person classes. On Friday, Brown was back with a statewide mandate. She declared that all schools must reopen this spring for some form of in-person learning. In his column, Westneat chided Washington Gov. Jay Inslee for failing to prioritize educators for vaccinations until President Joe Biden had told states to do so. “Inslee went along, but it means that Washington is weeks behind in getting its teachers the shots,” Westneat wrote. “Meanwhile Oregon went from mocked to national policy model in the span of six weeks.” His column concluded by calling on the Inslee administration to accelerate vaccinations for educators: “(Brown’s) argument from the start Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin Sydney Murphy, a third grade teacher at Silver Rail Elementary in Bend, receives her first dose of the COVID-19 vaccination from volunteer Val Leonardo, a registered nurse and nursing coordinator at the Shepherd’s House, during a vaccination clinic in January at the Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center in Redmond. the infamous Measure was that it would take ‘WHETHER OR 5 and other property so long to vaccinate NOT PuBLIc tax limits. all the seniors that Perhaps, we gazed by then the school ScHOOLS south so much that year would be lost, so why not pause the SHOuLd RETuRN we neglected to look north. seniors for a couple KIdS TO THE Little-brother of weeks? She got state? That stings. accused of selling out cLASSROOM THIS It’s bad enough that the state’s old people, Washington this week and maybe she got a SPRING IS NO was named the best little lucky, but she LONGER uP FOR state in the nation for turned out to be right. the second year in the “There’s still time, dIScuSSION.’ row by U.S. News barely, for us to swal- low our pride and Gov. Kate Brown and World Report, copy little-brother whereas Oregon is Oregon.” No. 22. Not speaking of California …: For perspective, we’re also behind Throughout the late 20th century, Ore- such western colleagues as Utah, No. gonians were obsessed with Califor- 3; Idaho, No. 5; and Colorado, No. 16. nia, contending bad ideas flowed north But we’re ahead of California, No. 24; from California like an infectious politi- Hawaii, No. 25; Montana, No. 33; Wyo- cal disease. ming, No. 35; Nevada, No. 36; and Ari- zona, No. 39. For example, our infamous income Louisiana is No. 50. tax “kicker,” which might flow again As for Tennessee, a state that some to taxpayers next spring, was created Oregon lawmakers are rumored to be by the 1979 Oregon Legislature to stop talking of moving to, it’s No. 29. California’s tax rebellion from tak- ing root here. The kicker has worked Fighting over political lines: The to deprive the Legislature of spending Oregon Legislature is deeply engaged in unexpected state revenue. But it didn’t what might be for naught — redrawing quell the tax rebellion, which produced the boundaries of legislative and con- gressional districts using the new pop- ulation numbers from the 2020 cen- sus. These districts are supposed to be roughly equal in population, though not area. The catch — at least one of them — is that the census numbers aren’t expected until long after the 2021 Leg- islature adjourns. If the Legislature doesn’t redraw legislative districts, or the governor vetoes the plan, that job falls to Secretary of State Shemia Fagan. Either way, Democrats win because they control the Legislature and Fagan is a Democrat. Gerrymandering lives, whether by Democrats in Oregon or Republicans in Texas. The courts handle congressional redistricting if the Oregon Legislature also fails there. So rare is agreement among legis- lators and with the governor, that their redistricting plans have been enacted only three times in the past 110 years. 2011 brought bipartisan agreement because the Legislature was almost evenly divided between the parties. Last week, state House Republicans and allies put forth an alternative: Fol- low the lead of two dozen or so other states and create an independent, non- partisan citizen commission to oversee redistricting. Creation of such a com- mission would require voter approval of a ballot measure, which the 2021 Leg- islature could write. A similar initiative from People Not Politicians failed to reach the ballot last year. Most Democrats, who are in control, don’t like the idea. After all, Democrats make up only 35% of the electorate, yet are 61% of legislators. For them, the system works. As former state representative Jeff Barker, a Democrat from Aloha, said, “The party in power wants to keep the power,” regardless of which party it is. He was among those speaking at a press videoconference in favor of turn- ing redistricting over to an indepen- dent commission. Also backing the idea were House Republican Leader Chris- tine Drazan, of Canby; Rep. Shelly Boshart Davis, R-Albany, vice chair of the House Redistricting Committee; and Andrew Kaza, co-chair of the Indepen- dent Party of Oregon. Full disclosure: I was born in Wash- ington state. I’ve only lived in Oregon for 50 years. dick Hughes has been covering the Oregon political scene since 1976. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Still waiting I ’m not sure what your experience has been with getting the vaccination for the COVID-19 thing. For me it’s been like loaves of bread being thrown out to starv- ing peasants. Then the feeding frenzy starts; some get fed, and some go hungry. At this writing, I’m still waiting to be fed. DALE FLOWERS Warrenton Not one ongress has finally passed legislation to provide much-needed and long- awaited assistance that Americans have been desperately waiting for since last year. Not one Republican voted for this legislation. Not one. This disaster exists because the Trump administration and its supporters chose to do nothing and allowed it to happen. Nearly 30 million Americans have been or are sick, and more than 530,000 Amer- icans are dead. Additionally, each state, and the country as a whole, is struggling to vaccinate the population and keep the number of cases and deaths not just con- tained, but from increasing. This is significant, and must be at the forefront of all discussion regarding Republicans. What exactly are their prior- ities? Why do they care so little, not only about the people they supposedly repre- sent, but also this country as a whole? If Republicans want to walk out of their jobs, want to support sedition, want to vio- late the oaths they took to uphold the Con- stitution and the laws of this country, and most of all, want to endlessly betray the people of this country by doing nothing but obstruct any and all legislation that does not serve them personally and finan- cially, they need to go. This country is going to be forever changed by the irreparable damage done by the Trump administration, and every Republican who supported it. It is beyond time for this country to C get rid of the Republicans responsible for destroying this country by any and all means possible. CHRISTINA BUCK Seaside Politics of personal destruction W e have a tendency to see a lot of let- ters to the editor disparaging our former president. He has repeatedly been compared to some of the most heinous criminals in history. I suspect that there are few letters disparaging anyone else with such vitriol. It is my opinion that those letter writ- ers lack cogent arguments about the policy and achievements of the man. He was not a politician. He was not a member of the elite. For that, he must be punished. So they instead attack his abrasive per- sonality for the way he fought for the American people. They name-call and charge crimes without context, substance or evidence. The impeachments were a sad sham. The U.S. Capitol riot was an expres- sion of outrage at the unfair way he was treated. I expect a lot of “OMG,” but more people died, and more destruction of fed- eral property was ignored, during the sum- mer of “peaceful” protests. Even now, after the election, he is attacked in editorials and cartoons. They try to erase his achievements in a snow- storm of name-calling. It is a sad reflection on today’s politics of personal destruction, and a dangerous swing toward stifling dissent and enforcing some sort of political correctness. Think and act like us, or we will hurt you. ROBERT LIDDYCOAT Seaside