A4 THE ASTORIAN • TuESdAy, July 5, 2022 OPINION editor@dailyastorian.com KARI BORGEN Publisher DERRICK DePLEDGE Editor Founded in 1873 JOHN D. BRUIJN Production Manager SAMANTHA STINNETT Circulation Manager SARAH SILVER Advertising Sales Manager GUEST COLUMN Work group to examine Oregon chicken rules F or decades, I watched as legisla- tors punted when a difficult issue defied resolution: They appointed a task force. Ah, a task force! As if lawmakers had accomplished something instead of doing nothing. Until the digital age arrived, all those let’s-at-least-convene-a-task-forces were a boon to the bookshelf industry. The resulting reports had to gather dust somewhere. Purposeful task forces do have value. They come with all the trim- mings of official legis- latively decreed goals, membership, staffing DICK and budgets. HUGHES However, in recent years, there’s been a shift from sometimes-questionable task forces to informal work groups. Task forces can take months to formally cre- ate, have limited membership, and can cost $10,000 to $20,000 to staff and run. In contrast, work groups can be put together quickly at little or no cost and with whatever participation is deemed appropriate. The idea is to get diver- gent stakeholders together, try to work out key differences and agree as much as possible on legislation. Work groups also have operated out of public view — a plus or minus depending on one’s perspective. Some work groups succeeded brilliantly, such as recently finding common ground on housing legislation. Others failed famously, such as on mandatory over- time for farmworkers. In the current interim between legis- lative sessions, a bunch of work groups are underway, along with various public task forces. Another kind of work group also is unfolding this summer, with more of a fact-finding mission. It deals with chickens. State Sen. Jeff Golden, D-Ash- Brian Hayes/Statesman Journal A chicken on a ranch near Scio. land, who chairs the Senate Environ- ment and Natural Resources Commit- tee, announced the work group members in June and said they would examine the potential effects of large-scale poul- try operations. The issues include water supply, air and water quality, impacts on neighbors and whether such facilities are appropriate on high-value farmland. Confined animal feeding operations – known as CAFOs – are controver- sial in Oregon, though most discussion has been around dairies. The proposed chicken CAFOs have now raised the hackles of neighbors, farmers and pub- lic officials. During Legislative Days in June, Golden’s committee and the House Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee held informational meetings to learn about such operations. Millions of chicks could be coming to the mid-Willamette Valley each year. They would be raised in facilities built on undeveloped farmland and then sent to slaughter as fully grown chickens. One CAFO applicant has received initial approval from the Oregon Department of Agriculture but still has other condi- tions to meet. Golden tapped Sen. Michael Dem- brow, D-Portland, to lead the work group. Dembrow is such a believer in bringing contrasting people together to achieve good public policy that he’s sometimes referred to as “Mr. Work Group” or “Mr. Task Force.” He’s involved in several at the moment, including a group he convened to address the shortage of educators. The poultry work group won’t cre- ate possible poultry legislation. Instead, it will assess the current regulations and laws affecting potential megaoperations and share that information with Gold- en’s committee, which could use it to shape concepts for the 2023 Legislature. Such advance work may prevent unin- tended consequences if a bill becomes law. “My job will be to make sure that we fully understand the existing rules and statutes, understand the different per- spectives on where they may or may not be appropriate for the proposed poul- try megaoperations, that we understand the potential impacts of any changes to them, and that all voices are heard,” Dembrow said. And unlike many work groups, this one will not operate behind closed doors. The public can watch the meet- ings, which will be online, and at one least session will be reserved for public comment. dick Hughes has been covering the Oregon political scene since 1976. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Hogwash I must reply to Nello Picinich’s letter (“Obfuscating,” June 25) regarding the evils of gillnets. He states that the issue is not about recreational angling vs. com- mercial fishing, but about selective fishing. Hogwash. Hooks are much less selective in the Columbia River than the gillnet. The National Oceanographic and Atmo- spheric Administration Fisheries estab- lishes the allowable kill of nonlocal wild and natural-spawn salmonids intermin- gled with hatchery and healthy wild stocks, under Endangered Species Act stan- dards. Between 70% and 80% of those fish, depending upon the stock, have been assigned by the states to the sport fishery. Despite the fact that recreational fish- ery has by far the most fish and allowable fish kills assigned to it, it frequently over- shoots its quota of wild fish kills. Gillnet- ting continues on the main stem Colum- bia because no other gear meets both ESA standards and is economically viable. In 2012, Oregon and Washington reallocated main stem fisheries to the recreational sec- tor, and select area fisheries to the commer- cial sector. At that time, promises were made to the commercial fishery, including more select areas, plus substantially increased produc- tion, neither of which occurred. The main stem fishery still comprises about 40% of the industry income. A balance of recreational fishing and commercial fishing provides fish for sports fishers, a relatively small group, and the fish-consuming public, a much larger pop- ulation. Picinich’s desire for a sport fish- ery that takes the entire allowable catch is an example of the urban view of how the rural-urban divide affects Washington and Oregon, right in our own communities. KENT MARTIN Skamokawa, Washington LETTERS WELCOME Letters should be exclusive to The Astorian. Letters should be fewer than 250 words and must include the writer’s name, address and phone number. You will be contacted to confirm authorship. All letters are subject to editing for space, gram- mar and factual accuracy. Only two letters per writer are allowed each month. Letters written in response to other letter writers should address the issue at hand and should refer to the headline and date the letter was published. Discourse should be civil. Send via email to editor@dailyasto- rian.com, online at bit.ly/astorianlet- ters, in person at 949 Exchange St. in Astoria or mail to Letters to the Editor, P.O. Box 210, Astoria, OR., 97103. Choices T he world is going to hell in a handbas- ket. I remember thinking that was a strange thing to say when I was a child, but now I get it. Between the massive greed, our rights being violated, the cost of every- thing from food to gas to just living, the homeless in our town — the list is long. How are we, as a community, going to tackle these issues without stepping back and looking at history, and not making the same mistakes over and over again! Let’s take just one problem: the home- less. It breaks my heart and many others’ to see the plight of the homeless. It is time to revisit the decision to close mental health hospitals and spend the money, the time and the energy to reopen those hospitals and give the mentally ill the help they need. Why has our humanity diminished so much that we can’t see that as the very first step? We have to look at each issue one at time, and work together to make good changes and good choices. Do I support my community and buy all of my goods right here in my town? These are the kinds of choices we can make that will make a difference. If we all do our best, and work together, we can make this world a better place without violence. Choose love; love always wins in the end. MARY HADREAS Astoria Browser’s beware Y ou might be a browser like me. I love browsing my way through City Lum- ber, Homespun Quilts and garden stores. Sad to say, though, the proposed remod- eled Astoria Library will no longer be a haven for book browsers like me, and many of you. The current plan, originally presented several years ago at public meetings, is that most books will be in closed stacks, off-limits to patrons. After you request a specific book, a staff member will get it from the closed stacks. This won’t work for me. Since child- hood, I’ve picked nearly all my books by chance as I’ve roamed the stacks. I’ve rarely gone to the library with a specific title in mind. Mayor Bruce Jones described the pro- posed remodel in the June 23 Astorian: “It’s a place for people to convene, hear presentations, to hear music, to study, to do job applications, to do all kinds of learn- ing and tutoring. A library could be a great community gathering space if it has the right amenities and the right functionality.” Not a word about books. The shift to a new-style facility is underway. City staff are getting rid of books to make room for the remodel. I hope the plans will change before the November bond election to include more books, more open stacks and browsing. If not, then I ask the city to acknowl- edge that this bond issue is to finance a community center, not a library. LAURIE CAPLAN Astoria