Page 4A OPINION East Oregonian Thursday, October 20, 2016 Founded October 16, 1875 KATHRYN B. BROWN Publisher DANIEL WATTENBURGER Managing Editor TIM TRAINOR Opinion Page Editor MARISSA WILLIAMS Regional Advertising Director MARCY ROSENBERG Circulation Manager JANNA HEIMGARTNER Business Ofice Manager MIKE JENSEN Production Manager OUR VIEW Marijuana means money for local government Oregon’s experiment in legalizing The fact is that $160 million of marijuana that would have been sold marijuana has been an unmitigated in Oregon by cartels and local drug success, and local voters should dealers was sold over the counter, allow their municipality to the state taking its cut with each and participate in a growing industry. According to the Department of every purchase. In addition, those Revenue release from earlier this businesses are paying employees, week, the state has already overseen who are in turn paying income more than $160 million is marijuana taxes, which in turn is fueling the sales that have brought in $40.2 economic engine. million in tax money. City councils in Pendleton, Yet many of those dollars won’t Hermiston and Milton-Freewater reach us here in northeast Oregon, each have the ability to right their because every council’s wrong by municipality opted overturning their local out instead of cashing ban. Representatives Umatilla in when they banned of other cities and both County could Morrow and Umatilla both marijuana retail sale and commercial didn’t think have collected counties growth. Governments enough of their that did so include constituents to even $120,000 Umatilla and Morrow give them the option. for law counties and each and Rural Oregon every city in those enforcement. cannot continue to counties. complain about the It has been a costly lack of economic error. advantages when we don’t to pick Just using the nine month up a successful business opportunity numbers, the decision by Umatilla when it is laid at our feet. Marijuana County commissioners has already might not be your cup of tea, but kept about $120,000 from going allowing and regulating its sale is to its law enforcement department. the best way to have more control That doesn’t even take into over it and fund support services consideration an additional 3 percent at the same time. Also, it allows local tax that could be instituted, medical users easier access to what were a dispensary to open with makes them feel better. county limits. Still, no matter what voters decide Even a small town like Pendleton in November, we should remind would be staring at a roughly readers that possessing and using $26,000 check — not enough to marijuana remains legal for adults pave the streets in gold, but if it everywhere in Oregon, as is growing instituted its own local tax it could at it for personal use. The only thing a least pave a few potholes. ban does is keep local governments These municipalities better have a from seeing any beneits. darn good reason to turn down good Voters have a choice: If they want money — but we can’t ind one. Eastern Oregon to have a business The dire warnings about the friendly atmosphere, to increase effects of marijuana legalization its tax base and bring in jobs, then have not come true. There have been marijuana businesses — both zero deaths, few serious injuries recreational and medical — can be (those to people making hash oil, not a solution. A ban just continues an users) no rise in crime, no cultural age-old problem that will never get degradation — no nothing. better. 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 Clinton promises major wealth redistribution E ven by the standards of liberal igure, $250,000, is one that has given Democrats, Hillary Clinton Democrats its in their previous efforts is running the most frankly to raise taxes. redistributionist presidential campaign In 2008, candidate Barack Obama in years. She promises massive new pledged to raise taxes on couples spending initiatives and balanced making more than $250,000 a year budgets, achieved by raising taxes on and individuals making more than higher-income Americans in ways that $200,000. The idea was that in 2010, other Democrats have rejected in the when the Bush tax cuts on all U.S. Byron recent past. earners were set to expire, taxes on the York At a fundraiser in Seattle Friday wealthiest would go up. Comment night — with her growing lead over It didn’t happen. By the time Donald Trump, Clinton holds few the Bush cuts expired, Obama had actual campaign rallies — Clinton described already raised taxes on higher earners through her spending agenda: the “biggest investment Obamacare, and some key Democrats joined in jobs since World War II,” higher spending Republicans in opposing another hike. on prescription drugs, billions more for Clinton’s old New York colleague in the Obamacare, pre-school, family leave, college Senate, Charles Schumer, and the Democratic affordability, roads, bridges, tunnels, ports, leader in the House, Nancy Pelosi, proposed airports, a new electric grid to “distribute all to raise taxes only on households above $1 the clean, renewable energy we’re going to be million. With the economy still in a terrible producing,” half a billion new solar panels, trough in late 2010, Congress declined to raise advanced manufacturing, climate change, and taxes on anybody. In 2012, Obama came back, with a proposal more. to further extend the great majority of the Bush Clinton conceded that was a lot to pay for, cuts but again to raise taxes on families with but argued America’s wealthy have more than enough cash to hand over to the government. income above $250,000. Schumer and a bunch of other Democrats facing re-election balked. Chief among them, Clinton said, is her Obama compromised, and the inal deal raised billionaire opponent, Donald Trump, whom taxes on families making more than $450,000. she promises to target after the election. Now Clinton, with an eye on her left lank “When people ask me, so how are you after a primary ight with Bernie Sanders, going to pay for infrastructure jobs and paid proposes to go back to the old $250,000 family leave, I say well, I’m telling you I’m threshold for tax increases. Whether that will going to pay for everything,” Clinton told the succeed is anybody’s guess; on the other fundraiser audience. “I’m not going to add a side of the Democratic divide will again be penny to the national debt. We’re going to go Schumer, this time leading the party in the where the money is. We’re going to make the Senate, either as minority or majority leader. wealthy pay their fair share. And we’re going Even if all Democrats agree to “go where to inally close those corporate loopholes. the money is,” it seems unlikely they’ll be able And it would be a good idea to start with my to agree on precisely how to do it. opponent.” At about this time in the 2008 campaign, It’s not clear whether Clinton meant there Barack Obama had a brief encounter with an might be some speciic retaliation against Ohio man named Joseph Wurzelbacher, who Trump under her administration or whether later became known as Joe the Plumber. “Your Trump would simply pay more taxes along new tax plan is going to tax me more, isn’t it?” with other wealthy Americans. Joe asked the Democratic candidate at a stop in Clinton often uses the phrase “go where Holland, Ohio. the money is” to describe her tax-raising “It’s not that I want to punish your success, proposals. (The phrase comes from a legendary 20th Century criminal, Willie Sutton, who was I just want to make sure that everybody who is behind you, that they’ve got a chance for asked why he robbed banks and supposedly success, too,” Obama answered. “I think when replied, “Because that’s where the money is.”) you spread the wealth around, it’s good for Clinton used the phrase at three separate everybody.” rallies last month, as well as over the summer For Republicans, Joe the Plumber became when she was asked on CBS’s “60 Minutes” the embodiment of opposition to Obama’s what the term “middle class” means to her. redistributionist plans. But Obama back then “Well, we say below $250,000 because here’s was vastly more subtle than Clinton is today; what we want to do,” Clinton said. “We want rhetorically, “We’re going to go where the to go where the money is. Most of the wealth money is” is a hard-edged threat compared to increase, the increase in income, both active “spread the wealth around.” and passive, has gone to the very top of the Clinton doesn’t need subtlety. With the income scale.” political world ixated on all things Trump, Of course, $250,000 per year, while more than the vast majority of American households she could resurrect Willie Sutton himself, and threaten to sic him on everyday Americans, make, is also not the “very top of the income and it’s possible nobody would notice. Clinton scale.” A household bringing in that amount is being blunt about her intentions because she would be in the top 3 percent of American can. earners nationwide. In some areas of the ■ country, like Secretary Clinton’s home, the Byron York is chief political correspondent New York metropolitan area, it would be in the for The Washington Examiner. top 5 percent. In any event, Clinton’s precise YOUR VIEWS Sheriff Rowan makes the tough decisions For 15 years I managed an Oregon State Emergency Management Program out of Pendleton and worked directly with local law enforcement leaders in both Umatilla and Morrow counties. In my opinion, Sheriff Terry Rowan has always been honest and transparent in communicating with the citizens of Umatilla County. He will tell the truth about what happened, even though the truth is not always popular. He is not afraid of conlict and doesn’t avoid meeting with members of the community, even when they have issues with local law enforcement. His ability to communicate and address those controversial issues publicly is why you elected him and why we need to keep him in ofice. He does not (and will not) avoid making tough decisions when necessary. I also believe that he is not willing to compromise his principles just to get re-elected! Finally, Sheriff Rowan is the type of sheriff we need at a time in our country when domestic policing is being challenged by controversy and civil unrest. As an elected oficial, he knows that public support is what got him elected and public support is needed to keep him in ofice. Therefore, I urge the citizens of Umatilla County to vote once again for your current sheriff, Terry Rowan. Chris Brown Heppner Lehnert will answer the call as sheriff As the wife of a career law enforcement oficer, a mother of three children, an educated working professional and resident of Umatilla County, I have various lenses through which to see the world. I have the privilege (and sometimes the burden) of supporting my husband as he works some of the most heartbreaking and violent crimes in our county. It is tense and there is stress and fear: stress on law enforcement to make the ‘’perfect” choice every time, even at the risk of their own safety; fear that our children are safe; and fear in OUR county that when you call for help in your most desperate hour, help will not come. Ryan Lehnert and my husband, Robert Guerrero, entered this race because they see a growing lack of conidence in leadership at UCSO. They observe irst-hand the erosion of relationships affecting the service we receive through simple things such as the sheriff’s failure to attend interagency meetings, workshops and local advisory committees. He boasts that having a seat at the table is important. That seat is only important when it is illed. Through this process, we cannot lose sight of neighbors like Jim Williams, whose daughter has left our community because she was scared. She was scared for her life on a desolate county road near a place she used to call home. Mr. Williams shared his powerful testimony at the candidate forum Oct. 14, where he explained he had lost conidence in the UCSO, as he made multiple attempts to contact them, including Sheriff Rowan, and received no response. Sheriff Rowan dutifully apologized, saying, “I would just have to sincerely apologize and look at the more global things that we have been able to accomplish in just a short amount of time.” What is more “global” than safety and security? This theme is not new. Sheriff Rowan has been working on what he generally referred to as “lack of response” since his 2012 campaign. He has been in leadership at the UCSO since 2005. If he has not successfully remedied this in his 11 years, he cannot and will not. I support a candidate that will address the more “global” things: ensuring a system that never allows for a call for help to go unanswered so that no one in our community — neighbor, friend or family member — is left helpless in their most desperate hour. Christa Guerrero, Hermiston Benghazi deaths preclude Clinton “What difference, at this point, does it make?” — Hillary Clinton, Jan. 23, 2013. Here are four reasons why Hillary Clinton shouldn’t be elected president: Ambassador Chris Stevens, Sean Smith, Glen Doherty and Tyrone Woods. Hillary lied after these four Americans died. Renee Dick, Salem