Page 4A OPINION East Oregonian Thursday, June 18, 2015 Founded October 16, 1875 KATHRYN B. BROWN Publisher JENNINE PERKINSON Advertising Director DANIEL WATTENBURGER Managing Editor TIM TRAINOR Opinion Page Editor OUR VIEW Demolition offers opportunity In January, Pendleton should be create as many as 80 jobs. What the new owners of 20 acres of prime should the city do with it? development land. One of the properties has The property, which was home obvious industrial or manufacturing to the Blue Mountain Recovery potential. Located next to Keystone Center and a nearby training center, RV and Eastern Oregon Correctional had long been off the tax rolls and Institution, it’s not a good spot for owned by the state of Oregon. much-needed rental housing. Its But due location near the to legislative highway lends it maneuvering, and more toward some City officials the work of former manufacturing, have said the light Rep. Bob Jenson or transport and and current Rep. transfer facility, land could Greg Barreto and rather than retail. create as many Sen. Bill Hansell, While the BMRC that land is set to site seems limited, as 80 new jobs. the old transfer to the city training when the calendar center has a wider ÀLSVWR7KH¿QDOKXUGOHLV variety of possible uses. It’s located a signature from Governor Kate north of Westgate, on the BMCC Brown, but there seems to be no side rather than the EOCI side. That GHVLUHIURPKHURI¿FHWRNHHSSHQ means it would be more attractive from paper. to the college crowd and to prison The second advantage given to employees. An apartment complex the city is that the state has agreed to that could provide new, affordable IXOO\¿QDQFHGHPROLWLRQRIWKHWZR housing for students and working buildings, which are ill-suited to the class people would shore up a major kind of development the city wants missing piece in the Pendleton to attract to the space. livability puzzle. Falling into ownership of two The city is in the catbird seat. level, build-able lots in a good They have an asset on their hands location is a real opportunity for the and the ability to court the kind of FLW\RI3HQGOHWRQ&LW\RI¿FLDOVKDYH development they want to a long- said the newly available land could forgotten part of town. Unsigned editorials are the opinion of the East Oregonian editorial board of Publisher Kathryn Brown, Managing Editor Daniel Wattenburger, and Opinion Page Editor Tim Trainor. Other columns, letters and cartoons on this page express the opinions of the authors and not necessarily that of the East Oregonian. OTHER VIEWS 7U\LQJWR¿QGFRPPRQJURXQG on a transportation bill The (Albany) Democrat-Herald O ne of the big questions remaining on the Legislature’s docket as it races toward its conclusion is whether it will be able to reach some sort of deal on transportation. You’ll remember that a transportation SDFNDJHWR¿QGPRQH\WRSD\IRUEDGO\ needed improvements on state roads, bridges and other infrastructure was a top priority for former Gov. John Kitzhaber and his successor, Kate Brown. In fact, Brown said she wouldn’t let legislators leave Salem until they had crafted a transportation package. But then Democrats passed, and Brown signed, a bill extending the state’s controversial clean-fuels program, a measure meant to cut carbon emissions. Republicans vehemently opposed the bill, arguing that it was certain to increase the cost of gas — and they went on to make it clear that they could not support a transportation package funded by an increase in the gas tax. The clean-fuels program, coupled with a gas-tax increase, Republicans argued, would mean that consumers would have to cope with two separate increases in the price of gas. Because any increase in the gas tax would require votes from Republicans, even with the majorities Democrats enjoy in the Legislature, that appeared to be the end of chances that the session would reach a deal on a badly needed transportation package. And, in fact, that’s still one likely result. But The Oregonian reported over the weekend that longshot discussions on the issue between Brown’s advisors DQGOHJLVODWRUVRIERWKSDUWLHV²¿UVW reported a month or so ago — are continuing. The participants were generally mum on the details, but the frequency and length of the meetings (sometimes twice a day, with at least one meeting stretching over seven hours) suggest that momentum for a deal might be building. The Oregonian was able to report on the general outlines of the potential deal, and they won’t come as much of a surprise to people who have been following the debate: The negotiators are considering rolling back, to some extent, the clean-fuels program in a bid to win enough Republican votes to pass a gas-tax increase. That means lawmakers are looking for methods to reduce carbon emissions that wouldn’t result in an increase in gas prices. With less than a month to go before the Legislature’s scheduled July 11 adjournment, though, this will be a tricky bit of business. For many Democrats (and some of the well-heeled supporters who contributed to their campaigns), the clean-fuels program was a top priority. 5DQNDQG¿OH'HPRFUDWVPD\ZHOOEH unwilling to accept a compromise that would gut the program. But they should keep an open mind on the matter. We think a well-designed transportation package could do more to reduce carbon emissions than the clean fuels program ever will. And the transportation package also could help deliver good-paying jobs all through the state, especially in its more rural areas. It’s still a long shot that the Legislature will come up with a transportation deal. But the fact that these talks still are going on is one of the rare bits of good news the session has delivered thus far. With less than a month to go before adjournment, this will be a tricky bit of business. OTHER VIEWS The GOP’s blinkered contenders S AN DIEGO — The Republican admonished and interrupted them. Party keeps announcing its new And his Republican rivals, modernity, declaring its new beneath their playlists and campaign inclusiveness, swearing that it has choreography, aren’t so impressively changed and then showing that it in touch with the times either. hasn’t. Although more than 70 percent Witness Rand Paul, who is of American adults under 35 support supposed to be one of its fresher, same-sex marriage, not one candidate unconventional faces. LQWKHVSUDZOLQJ5HSXEOLFDQ¿HOGKDV Frank He spoke at a dinner here Saturday, explicitly taken that position, and Bruni in a blazer and khakis instead of a suit, most have expressed impassioned Comment and once again presented himself as opposition. a Republican unusually in touch with Although an increasing fraction the sensibilities of younger voters, especially of American adults, including about a third concerned about the welfare of minorities of those under 35, pronounce themselves and uniquely positioned to expand the party’s UHOLJLRXVO\XQDI¿OLDWHGWKHUH¶VQRVHQVHRI reach. that drift in the emphatic religious testimonials It was a refreshing of most of the Republican pitch — until a medieval candidates, including Bush, metaphor revealed an Rubio and Scott Walker, antiquated mindset. who introduces himself as a He was describing preacher’s son. people’s need to feel that Almost all of them are at their personal information in odds with young Americans’ cyberspace is as safe from belief in climate change and indiscriminate government stated desire for immigration snooping as the documents reform. in their dwellings have long And none of the leading been, and he mentioned the contenders has a pitch that adage that “a man’s house is VWURQJO\UHÀHFWVDUHFHQW his castle.” *DOOXSSROO¶V¿QGLQJWKDW Then he updated it: more Americans label “Now we would say a man themselves socially liberal or a wife’s home is their castle.” WKDQDWDQ\SRLQWLQWKHODVW\HDUV7KHVH A man or a wife’s? $PHULFDQV¿QDOO\PDWFKWKHSHUFHQWDJH Aiming for a less sexist, more sensitive of those who call themselves socially vocabulary, he came up with a more sexist, conservative. less sensitive one, casting women as Where’s the Republican presidential auxiliaries of men. contender for them? This was no way to rebrand the party, no Where’s the Republican candidate who way to retire any image of it as a preserve for can enter into an important, necessary debate old white guys. DERXWWKHVL]HUROHDQGHI¿FDF\RIJRYHUQPHQW But it was emblematic. For all the party’s without being weighed down by a set of VHOIFRQJUDWXODWLRQDERXWD¿HOGRIRI¿FLDODQG statements and positions on social issues that XQRI¿FLDOSUHVLGHQWLDOFDQGLGDWHVZKRGHSDUW seem tailored to placate the religious right from the fusty norm, the truth is that they and to survive the primaries, not to capture don’t depart nearly enough. voters in the center? You’re not allowed to say Yes, they’re a racially diverse group, George Pataki unless he reaches 5 percent in including Bobby Jindal, who is Indian- the polls. Last I checked, he’s about 4 points American; Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz, who shy of that. are Cuban-American; and Ben Carson, who is Yet again there’s a void, and Hillary African-American. Clinton and her advisers have certainly noticed Yes, Rubio and Bush speak Spanish, as it. That awareness informed her own speech Bush did in Miami on Monday during his Saturday, on Roosevelt Island, where she formal campaign announcement, which had made many references to young Americans, WKHPXOWLHWKQLFÀRXULVKRID&RFD&ROD6XSHU to LGBT Americans, to minorities, to working Bowl commercial. women. Her remarks constituted a road map Yes, Cruz and Rubio are both under 45. of the precise terrain that Democrats want to Rubio in fact looks young enough to be Bernie keep — or put — beyond Republicans’ reach. 6DQGHUV¶JUDQGVRQ+HDGYHUWLVHVDQDI¿QLW\ And she sought to counteract the for hip-hop and rap. He name-checks Pitbull familiarity of her presence with the novelty and Nicki Minaj. of her promise. She pictured a woman in the Paul, an ophthalmologist, highlights his 2YDO2I¿FH travels to Central America to perform eye On the other side of the country, Paul surgery on indigent Guatemalans. He cuts pictured a woman in a castle — and all he saw his own hair. And he urges criminal justice was a wife. The ophthalmologist needs better reforms, including lighter punishments for vision. So does his party, if it wants passage marijuana possession and use. across the moat to the White House. But he came across as more backward- Ŷ acting than forward-looking during that Frank Bruni, an Op-Ed columnist for The strange sequence of interviews with female New York Times since June 2011, joined the journalists a few months ago, when he newspaper in 1995. This was no way to rebrand the party, no way to retire an image of the GOP as a preserve for old white guys. YOUR VIEWS Pick up your dog poop and condoms from city parks My dogs and I just got back from our morning walk in our Pendleton Community/McKay parks. As usual I carry my doggie poo bags and pick up after my own dogs along with other dogs. Here lately I have had to pick up lots of drink containers where people won’t go a few feet out of their way to throw them into the many trash cans provided. Plus I have picked up condoms with my doggie bags. I’m glad they are practicing safe sex. But it would be nice if all would practice using the trash cans. Our parks are family parks. Children and adults use our parks. No one wants to step in a dog pile, or see trash all around our park or their children seeing used condoms. Please, the summer has just begun. If you use our parks do your part in keeping them clean and safe for all. Virginia Beebe Pendleton LETTERS POLICY The East Oregonian welcomes original letters of 400 words or less on public issues and public policies for publication in the newspaper and on our website. The newspaper reserves the right to withhold letters that address concerns about individual services and products or letters that infringe on the rights of private citizens. Submitted letters must be signed by the author and include the city of residence and a daytime phone number. The phone number will not be published. Unsigned letters will not be published. Send letters to Managing Editor Daniel Wattenburger, 211 S.E. Byers Ave. Pendleton, OR 97801 or email editor@eastoregonian.com.