A4 Wednesday, February 12, 2020 HOOD RIVER NEWS | Hood River, Ore. hoodrivernews.com OPINION Our Readers Write ‘The Four Agreements’ This January seemed un- usually long and dark to me. Walking the dogs in the morn- ing and evening with my head- lamp and their flashing neck- laces lost its novelty for me a few weeks ago as personal and national controversy took over my thoughts. In the midst of my angst, I remembered to pull out a little book that a wise friend turned me on to: “The Four Agreements” by Don Miguel Ruiz. The subtitle is “A Practical Guide to Personal Freedom.” Its timely messages are: Be im- peccable with your word; don’t take anything personally; don’t make assumptions; and always do your best. Sounds simple, doesn’t it? Not so much. “Black magi- cians,” as he calls them, are everywhere, nationally as well as closer to home: From nar- cissistic bullies to a seeming- ly friendly acquaintance that suddenly turns sour, it’s easy to feel personally targeted. “The Four Agreements” can help to liberate you from this depressing predicament. It can help you to manage the per- vasive fear that these people feed to you every day, and to block those people’s spread of personal poison — anger, jeal- ousy, envy and hate. So, I would suggest to you to read and live the suggestions brought to us by Don Miguel Ruiz. It’s a lot of work and a life- time of practice, but it will change your life and the lives of those around you. Peace to you. Peace to the dogs. Diana Beterbide Hood River podcasts that could be used for Earth Month, click on the “Share Earth Month Ideas” link. We are holding the next or- ganizing meeting at the Hood River Library Meeting Room, downstairs, this Saturday, Feb. 15 from 3-4:30 p.m. Please show up to volunteer or to share potential events or ideas. We will also be dis- cussing Earth Month at our monthly CGCAN potluck and meeting at Riverside Church in Hood River on Monday Feb. 17 from 6-8 p.m. You are welcome to come to April 22 will be the 50th either meeting. Peter Cornelison anniversary of Earth Day. For 2020, Columbia Gorge Climate Hood River Action Network (CGCAN) is joining with others to celebrate our Earth and the Columbia River Gorge, not just for a day or even a week, but for the en- The United States is a De- tire month of April. mocracy, it’s form of govern- Using the Gorge Happi- ment is a is a Republic. We ness Month concept (www. still have both. But thanks to gorgehappiness.org), we will Trump, his administration and list earth centered events and today’s Republicans our coun- shareable ideas from through- try is now become just another out the Gorge on our website Banana Republic. for the month of April. It saddens me to see this The goal is to celebrate, great country fall so low over honor and show our love for a single regressive political the Earth and build commu- ideology. Gary Fields nity. Hood River To list events, go to www. CGCAN.org and click on the “List Earth Month Events” link. To share ideas, media or Earth Month ‘Our Country’ ‘Reps, make ERA happen’ As we know all too well, women continue to face dis- crimination on the basis of sex. Finally, a long-overdue consti- tutional treatment for this per- vasive illness is within reach — the Equal Rights Amendment. Virginia recently became the 38th state to ratify the ERA, crossing the three-fourths threshold of support required of states for the amendment to become law. When the ERA passed Congress in 1972, lawmakers attached a 1977 ratification deadline to it, which they later extended to 1982. Removing that deadline is the final obstacle to accept- ing the ERA as part of the US Constitution. HJ Res. 79 has been introduced in Congress to do just that. It is heading to the House for consideration and, hopefully, passage — at long last. It is hard to imagine in 2020 that any legislator would vote against finally passing the ERA. How could an elected official really vote to continue unequal pay, workplace harassment, pregnancy discrimination, do- mestic violence, and limit- ed access to comprehensive healthcare for 51 percent of his/her constituents? I encour- age all Oregonians to write to your U.S. Representative and encourage him to vote YES on HJ Res. 79, the ERA bill that is coming before them. Hopefully your represen- tative in the House will make history happen with the ERA. Daniel Fritz Mosier ’I will fight the president’s reckless budget proposal’ By JEFF MERKLEY Oregon U.S. Senator Jeff Merkley issued the following statement after President Don- ald Trump released his pro- posed fiscal year 2021 budget: ■ At Donald Trump’s events, he talks and talks and talks but never listens. If he did a town hall in every county in Oregon every year, like I do, and actually listened to people, maybe his budget wouldn’t make life worse for people in all the ways they’re already most worried about. When I talk to folks, I hear concerns about the cost of health care and pharmaceu- tical drugs. This budget would cause millions of people to lose health care coverage, with massive cuts to Medicare, Medicaid, and the Children’s Health Insurance Program — all while Americans are suf- fering from ever-increasing drug and health care costs. Just as perplexing: In the midst of the global coronavi- rus outbreak, the president wants to cut the Centers for Disease Control budget. In rural communities, the economy is still pretty pre- carious. Yet just as rural com- munities are beginning to be connected with broadband internet — vital for growing opportunity in rural educa- tion and economies — the president wants to eliminate $50 million from the program. In another gut-punch to rural economies, his budget elim- inates the $46 million Rural Business Program grants. afford for housing and people are sleeping under overpass- es and on medians. But the president wants to decrease affordable housing funding by more than 15 percent and slash support for rural hous- ing by $92 million. He would eliminate housing programs that are critically important to Oregon communities — in- cluding the rental assistance, low-income housing con- struction, and Community Development Block Grants that I fought to increase in the 2020 budget. Not even hungry children were spared: The president proposes eliminating the pro- Millions of Oregonians are grams that make sure kids paying more than they can get fed during the summer ‘This budget ... turns a blind eye to the real issues that real Oregonians and Americans are facing.’ months and get breakfast during the school year, and further cuts food assistance for families by $181 billion over 10 years. Somehow, this president who fancies himself a billion- aire and has spent nearly a third of his presidency hang- ing around with rich people at country clubs, could find enough money to give the super-rich and giant corpo- rations a trillion dollars in tax breaks. But working families across Oregon, and especially in rural communities, are hang- ing on by the fingertips, and President Trump, instead of giving a hand up, is stomping on their fingers. Budgets are a statement of values. Our job in govern- ment should be making sure every person who works hard can get ahead. Instead, this budget does the opposite, turning a blind eye to the real issues that real Oregonians and Americans are facing. The rich and powerful are doing just fine; the last thing we should be doing is stack- ing the deck even more in their favor. I will do everything I can to fight the president’s reckless proposal and make sure we’re investing in our people, our communities, and our future. ON THE AGENDA These are the regular meeting p.m., Hood River City Hall Coun- times of governing bodies for cil Chambers, 211 Second St., these agencies: second and fourth Mondays of the month. Cascade Locks Hood River Soil and Water Cascade Locks City Coun- Conservation District Board of cil, 7 p.m., City Hall Council Directors meeting, 4 p.m., OSU Chambers, 140 W. WaNaPa St., Extension Service Building, 2990 second and fourth Mondays of Experiment Station Road, first Thursday of the month. the month. Hood River Valley Parks Cascade Locks Planning Com- mission, 7 p.m., City Hall Council and Recreation District, 6 p.m., Chambers, 140 W. WaNaPa St., Aquatic Center, 1601 May St., third Wednesday of the month. second Thursday of the month. Cascade Locks Port Commis- Place subject to change. Urban Renewal Agency meet- sion, 6 p.m., City Hall Council Chambers, 140 W. WaNaPa St., ing — second Monday of each first and third Thursdays of the month 6 p.m . month. Urban Renewal Advisory Committee — third Thursday of Hood River the month 5:30 p.m. Both meet at City Hall, Second City of Hood River Planning Commission meeting, 5:30 p.m., and State streets. Citizens may learn more about Hood River City Hall Council Chambers, 211 Second St., gen- city meeting updates by singing erally the first and third Mondays up up for Hood River Connect at: ci.hood-river.or.us/connect. of the month. Place and dates subject to change. Hood River Port Commission, Hood River County 5 p.m., 1000 E. Port Marina Drive, Hood River County Board of board room, first and third Tues- Commissioners regular session, days of the month. 6 p.m., work sessions start at Hood River City Council, 6 4 p.m., 601 State St., first floor conference room, third Monday of the month. Time subject to change. Library District Board meet- ing, 7 p.m., 502 State St., con- ference room, third Tuesday of the month. Hood River County Plan- ning Commission meeting, 5:30 p.m., 601 State St., first floor, generally second and fourth Wednesdays of the month. Hood River County Water Planning Group, 2 p.m., 601 State St., first floor conference room, generally first Wednes- day of the month. Hood River County School Board, 6:30 p.m., meets at schools and district facilities on a rotating schedule (visit ho- odriver.k12.or.us for location), second and fourth Wednesdays of the month unless school vacations or other holidays in- terrupt the schedule. Hood River County Trans- portation District, 9 a.m., Hood River County Transportation District Board Room, 224 Wasco Loop, second Wednes- day of the month. It’s not too soon to be asking: Do you need a Real ID? Something big is happen- ing Oct. 1 of this year, notes Oregon D epar tment of Driver and Motor Vehicles Services in a press release: If you aren’t paying atten- tion, it might mean missing your flight out of PDX or any other airport across the U.S. On that date, the Trans- portation Security Admin- istration, or TSA, begins requiring a new type of identification to board a commercial aircraft. The new ID must be compliant with something called the Real ID Act. It’s designed to keep us safer in the air, but if you try to board an air- craft using your current Or- egon driver license starting in October — it won’t work. That’s because the current Oregon driver license is not Real ID compliant. Oregon DMV will begin offering a Real ID option on July 6. To fulfill the demand of nearly one million Orego- nians who will want the Real ID option, DMV would have to issue 32 licenses a second every business day from July to October. That’s just not possible. If you don’t have a Real ‘If you aren’t paying attention, it might mean missing your flight out of PDX or any other airport across the U.S.’ ID compliant form of ID at the airport, TSA will put you through an alternate identi- ty verification process that could take an hour or more, and you could miss your flight. There is an answer for Oregonians : Obtain and use a passport or passport card. The cost of getting a new passport card is rough- ly equal to that of getting a replacement license with the Real ID option — and you can apply now at one of over 76 acceptance sites across Oregon. To find out more, visit www.Oregon.gov/ REALID. By the way, Washingto- nians already have the op- tion of getting a Real ID com- pliant driver license. If you are a Washington resident, go to id2020wa.com to find out more.