Page 6A OPINION East Oregonian Tuesday, November 3, 2015 OTHER VIEWS Founded October 16, 1875 KATHRYN B. BROWN DANIEL WATTENBURGER Publisher Managing Editor JENNINE PERKINSON TIM TRAINOR Advertising Director Opinion Page Editor OUR VIEW State hiding its own scam DOE conceals rationale for energy credit discounts Imagine a government agency the credits program is troubling and that thwarts the will of elected smacks of political favoritism. In the RI¿FLDOVDVLWPDNHVGXELRXVGHDOV wake of these revelations, there has with businesses, then tries to hide been a steady stream of resignations from the public the purported legal RI(QHUJ\RI¿FLDOVLQFOXGLQJWKH rationale for its actions. head of the loan program and the No need to invent such a cagey DJHQF\¶VFKLHI¿QDQFLDORI¿FHU agency. It already exists. Here Gov. Kate Brown has asked the in Oregon. It’s called the state Legislature to review and then shut Department of Energy. down the Business Energy Tax When the Oregon Legislature Credit program. That’s not good passed laws creating enough. A full audit the Business Energy is warranted. Tax Credit program, Gov. Kate Brown Gov. Brown the purpose was has asked the should also order the to encourage release of a recent Legislature to individuals and opinion on the matter businesses to invest the Department review and then by in projects that were of Justice. Energy shut down the RI¿FLDOVKDYH HQHUJ\HI¿FLHQW or would use for years Business Energy claimed renewable sources. that lawyers at Recipients could Justice vetted Tax Credit use the credits to and approved the program. reduce their tax bill. discounted sales. If The credits could that’s the case, why also be transferred to a third party to DUH(QHUJ\RI¿FLDOVDQGWKHJRYHUQRU raise capital. refusing to release that report? The program and the prices Our company, EO Media Group, were to be administered by the along with Pamplin Media Group state Department of Energy. Hillary and The Oregonian, have been Borrud, a reporter with our Capital rebuffed in attempts to obtain the Bureau, uncovered how shoddy that opinion under Oregon’s Public oversight has been. Records Law. That law is aimed at 6KHUHYHDOHGWKDW(QHUJ\RI¿FLDOV ensuring that the public’s business quietly stopped enforcing pricing is transparent to its citizens and and other rules for the credit taxpayers. transfers back in 2011. This allowed 2I¿FLDOVDWWKH'HSDUWPHQWRI private brokers to arrange deals in Energy have ignored directions ZKLFKWKHSULFHVZHUHQHYHUYHUL¿HG from the Legislature and its own by the state. It was later learned that administrative rules. Now they’re some buyers avoided paying capital hiding behind claims of attorney- gains taxes on the transfer. client privilege. It’s past time they Energy’s inconsistent handling of give up this charade. 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. %HQ&DUVRQLVLQVSLULQJ EXWQRWIRUSUHVLGHQW D r. Ben Carson has the most Hands,” he writes that he tries to moving personal narrative in be a role model for young blacks, modern presidential politics. explaining, “These young folks need to His mother, one of 24 children, had know that the way to escape their often only a third-grade education. She was dismal situations is contained within married at age 13, bore Ben and his themselves.” brother, and then raised the boys as an He also offers a tinge of reproach impoverished single mother in Detroit. for those who stumble. Carson likes to As a young boy, Carson was Nichilas cite a poem by Mayme White Miller a terrible student. “Most of my Kristif that suggests: “If things go bad for you classmates thought I was the stupidest ... You have yourself to blame.” Comment person in the world,” he recalls in his Carson acknowledges that his book “One Nation.” “They called me family relied on food stamps — “we ‘Dummy.’” ... couldn’t have made it without them” — but But his mother responded by tightly UHSHDWHGO\ZDUQVWKDWJRYHUQPHQWEHQH¿WVFDQ limiting Ben’s television time and requiring breed dependency. the boys to read two books a week from the One reason he is popular on the right, I library, and then submit book reports to her, think, is that many conservatives feel bruised even though she couldn’t read them. by liberals’ jibes that they are closet racists or Carson evolved into an excellent student have no compassion for the poor. Supporting but still suffered from an explosive temper. Carson validates their self-perception as When he was in the ninth grade, he argued good people who are doing the right thing by with his friend Bob about what radio station slashing social programs. to listen to, and, furious, tried to stab Bob The problem is that there’s growing in the stomach. Fortunately, the blade broke evidence that Carson’s policy solutions on Bob’s belt buckle, and Carson had an are plain wrong. Social support programs epiphany that led him to curb his temper. for young children in particular nurture He attended Yale on a scholarship and opportunity and even save public money became a brilliant neurosurgeon and best- in the long run. When done right, these are selling author. He and his wife, Candy, started investments with a high return. a scholarship program, the Carson Scholars Indeed, a careful 2012 study found that Fund, now active in all 50 states, and he won children who received food stamps in the the Presidential Medal of Freedom. He also 1960s (a group that included Carson) had comes across as a really nice guy. better health outcomes even decades later as And now he has surpassed Donald Trump adults. So maybe Carson’s accomplishments to lead in a New York Times/CBS News poll are also a tribute, in some tiny way, to the for the Republican nomination for president. nutritional support he received as a child from In the end, I’m betting that Carson will food stamps. (He’s probably rolling his eyes lose. His candidacy has been propelled by as he reads this!) KLVELRJUDSK\DQG¿UVWUDWHGHPHDQRUQRW More broadly, Carson’s rise from by policies, and he has largely avoided close inner-city poverty is inspiring but not easily scrutiny. That will change as he tops polls. replicable. Muggsy Bogues became an NBA Carson has a penchant for over-the-top star even though he was 5 feet 3 inches tall, statements, such as that Obamacare is “the but short people are still at a disadvantage in worst thing that has happened in this nation basketball. since slavery.” His assertions that Jews were Inner-city black children, especially slaughtered in Europe because they didn’t boys, face similar long odds. The reasons have guns, or that we need guns in the home are complex and have to do with family today to defend ourselves from Islamic structure, poverty and education, and also with militants — well, “kooky” is a polite way to discrimination. Devah Pager, a sociologist, describe those views. sent out young black and white men to pose as Then there are his policy proposals, which job applicants and found that the whites were are mostly vague or absurd or both. Carson twice as likely to get callbacks as identically wants to end Medicare and replace it with TXDOL¿HGEODFNPHQ$ZKLWHPDQZLWKD health savings accounts, and that pretty much felony conviction had as good a chance of makes him unelectable, although he’s now getting a callback as a black applicant with a backing away from his position. So my hunch clean record. is that the betting markets are right and that So by all means let’s celebrate Carson’s Sen. Marco Rubio will ultimately emerge as achievements. But he’s better as a role model the nominee. than as a policymaker. But maybe the more interesting question is Ŷ what Carson says about America. He seems Nicholas D. Kristof, a columnist for The to see his rise as an indication that America Times since 2001, is a two-time Pulitzer Prize QHHGVQRWVRPXFKVRFLDOSURJUDPVDV¿UPHU winner who writes op-ed columns that appear character. In his moving memoir, “Gifted twice a week. OTHER VIEWS 3XEOLFUHFRUGVDUHWKHSXEOLF¶VUHFRUGV of records for candidates for president of Oregon Health & Science University. The problems with Oregon’s laws are not just When government has good news, it’s beating WKHH[HPSWLRQV,W¶VKRZRI¿FLDOVUHDFWZKHQWKH\ down the doors to tell the public about it. When get records requests. government has bad news, it’s building a fortress Remember what former Gov. John Kitzhaber’s RIGHOD\DQGFRVWVWREORFNWKHSXEOLFIURP¿QGLQJ strategy was with requests out what happened. before he resigned. Delay, Last week, Oregon Attorney General Ellen “Since 1973, when delay, delay. Oregon needed to get a new governor before 5RVHQEOXPFRQYHQHGWKH¿UVW meeting of a task force set up our public records law many of the records were to make recommendations for was enacted, hundreds released. State law essentially has no deadlines to actually improving Oregon’s public of exemptions have comply with a records request. records laws. is another issue. A “Since 1973, when been added. Now is few Cost years ago, The Bulletin our public records law was enacted, hundreds the time to examine requested copies of emails between Bend-La Pine Schools of exemptions have been whether we have and the Chalkboard Project, added,” she said in a news DQRQSUR¿WHGXFDWLRQJURXS release. “Now is the time to gone too far.” There were almost 2,000 pages examine whether we have of emails. The district claimed gone too far.” — Ellen Rosenblum, it needed to charge The Some of the exemptions Oregon attorney general Bulletin nearly $2,000 in legal FDQEHMXVWL¿HG3URWHFWLQJ fees to review them. Costs like trade secrets of businesses and KRPHDGGUHVVHVRISXEOLFVDIHW\RI¿FHUVFDQPDNH that can be just another way of declining a request. Of course, there can be legitimate reasons to vet a lot of sense. records before they are released to the public. But But other exemptions are highly questionable. also consider this: The district had already paid the 2QHKXUWVWKHSXEOLF¶VDELOLW\WR¿QGRXWZKDW lawyer his set fee for the year. And the district still happened when public employees are disciplined claimed The Bulletin needed to pay for that same for misusing taxpayer money or violating staff time. the public trust. Another exemption enables The guiding principle of Oregon’s public JRYHUQPHQWRI¿FLDOVWRFODLPWKH\DUHRQO\ records is supposed to be that openness prevails. engaged in preliminary discussions about changes Censorship of public information needs to justify in public policy and don’t have to release what itself, not the public’s right to know. WKH\GLVFXVVHG7KHUHLVDOVRDVSHFL¿FH[HPSWLRQ The (Bend) Bulletin, Oct. 29 YOUR VIEWS %R\FRWWEORRG\¿OPVRIK\SRFULWLFDO7DUDQWLQR Quentin Tarantino has made a fortune making extremely violent movies where torture and murder are common themes. “Pulp Fiction,” “Kill Bill,” “Natural Born Killers” and “Reservoir Dogs” give you an idea of what he is capable of putting on the screen. And he has been rewarded for this by earning an Oscar (“Pulp Fiction”). The more bloody, gruesome and violent, the better Tarantino likes it. At the recent New York rally of the “Black Lives Matter” folks in Washington Square Park, Tarantino led the rally against the police. Addressing the “Rise Up October” crowd, Tarantino yelled out through the microphones, “If you believe there’s murder going on you need to rise up and stand up against it.” He continued, “This is not being dealt with in any way at all. If it was being dealt with, these murdering cops would be in jail or at least facing charges.” The crowd loved it and cheered loudly in agreement as they waved the “Murder By Police Is Still Murder” signs. As Tarantino preached his hatred, New York cops and a good share of the QDWLRQZHUHVWLOOPRXUQLQJWKHUXWKOHVVFROGEORRGHGPXUGHURIRQHRIWKHLU¿QHVW ²2I¿FHU5DQG\+ROGHUDOVRDEODFNPDQ²MXVWIRXUGD\VSULRUWRWKLV³UDOO\´ 2I¿FH+ROGHUDWKLUGJHQHUDWLRQSROLFHRI¿FHUZDVDQVZHULQJWKHFDOORI an armed robbery by a gang member and career criminal — also black. Holder was shot in the forehead and died instantly. That makes the fourth murder of a New York City Cop in just the last 10 months, and makes over 100 deaths of SROLFHRI¿FHUVQDWLRQZLGHWKLV\HDU The New York Police Department is calling for a boycott of all Tarantino ¿OPVQRZDQGLQWKHIXWXUH6RSOHDVHLI\RXDJUHHWKLVDWWLWXGHLVZURQJDQG hateful, don’t even rent one. 'DYLG%XUQV 3HQGOHWRQ 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.