Page 4A OPINION East Oregonian Thursday, March 9, 2017 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 Office Manager MIKE JENSEN Production Manager OUR VIEW Pendleton takes step forward with tourism Pendleton has had a recognizable brand with its own legion of loyal followers, is the title sponsor of this and lucrative brand name for year’s Pendleton Bike Week. the better part of a century. The Maroon 5, one of the biggest Round-Up, the blankets, the saddles and more recently the whiskey have touring acts in the country, is playing the Pendleton Whisky Music Fest carried the connotation of quality, at the Round-Up Arena. That will toughness and fine craftsmanship. help prove that you For decades, the don’t always need a city was content It’s move that cowboy hat to party to revel in its in Pendleton. well-worn identity. will pay off And you can But recently its economically look backward, tourism offerings to see how have branched out, and in quality too, this evolution and widening the tent to bring in world-class expansion has of life for talent and brands moved Pendletonians. slowly forward: Zac Brown that expand what Band serenaded Pendleton is known roaring crowds, for. It’s a welcome move forward, and Ursula K. Le Guin read at the First Draft Writers’ Series, cyclists one that will pay off economically welcomed riders from around and in quality of life for the Northwest, a yogi and brewer Pendletonians. invited fellow enthusiasts to events Consider what the city will at the rodeo arena. showcase in the next few months: The Pendleton Chamber of An exhibit of work by Chuck Commerce deserves much of the Close, one of America’s most credit for expanding the idea of famous living artists, is showing at what tourism and entertainment can the Pendleton Center for the Arts with the help of one of the premier be in Pendleton. The Round-Up collectors of modern art in the deserves credit for recognizing the world, Jordan Schnitzer. grounds can do so much more than One of Pendleton’s greatest host a rodeo. People like Pat Beard, connections to World War II will Roberta Lavadour, Doug Corey and be celebrated at the Eastern Oregon Andy McAnally deserve credit, too, Regional Airport next month, for always thinking bigger and better bringing crowds to celebrate aviation and working hard to turn those big history that will hopefully build ideas into reality. into a permanent museum to draw When people think Pendleton, tourists. they might always think of rodeo, Live Wire, a regionally significant blankets, saddles and whiskey. But radio show, will record here and now they will think of other things spotlight regionally significant too: motorcycles, music festivals, painters and local musicians. art, literature, museums and fun, and that Pendleton is always a great Harley-Davidson, the most famous American motorcycle place to spend a weekend. 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 The cost of prescription drugs The (Yamhill Valley) News Register A ccording to the Milliman Medical Index, the pre-insurance cost of health care for the typical American family has more than tripled since the turn of the 21st century, rising from $8,414 in 2001 to $25,826 last year. Popular targets of blame for unaffordable health care include global pharmaceutical giants known collectively as Big Pharma, along with biotech startups eager to cash in and real life villains like Martin Shkreli. Given that lineup, it’s easy to see why reducing drug prices is a major target for politicians. Drug outlays account for just 16 percent of overall health care costs. However, they are rising the most rapidly, and are among the easiest to identify. A group of Oregon legislators is championing a price-control measure proposed as a potential national model — House Bill 2387. Introduced by Rep Rob Nosse, D-Portland, it would require pharmaceutical firms to reimburse insurers for any “excess costs” associated with a drug. The bill defines excess costs as those exceeding the so-called “foreign price cap” — the highest price paid for the drug in any developed country other than the U.S. If a cancer drug wholesaled for $10,000 per treatment, while the highest developed world price outside the U.S. ran $6,000, the manufacturer would have to reimburse insurers $4,000. It sounds logical, right? Except, there is nothing in the bill to ensure the savings are passed on to the consumer. The bill does nothing to reduce the cost for families or employers, only for insurers. It won’t shock you to learn, then, that the director of legislative affairs for Regence BlueCross BlueShield of Oregon was on hand for the bill’s introduction. A sibling bill was introduced to provide relief to pharmacy benefit managers, who are hired to negotiate drug prices on the behalf of insurers. PBMs are far from just an administrative client. They wring billions of dollars in rebates from manufacturers. But the PBMs also play a role in rising drug costs, as most of their dealings go undisclosed. That makes it difficult to exactly gauge the extent to which rebates are actually being passed on to the customer. Put the puzzle pieces together and check some campaign finance contributions. You’ll find these two bills don’t protect consumers from an “evil profiteer.” They simply take from the rich and give to the rich, creating loads of additional regulations in the process, all on the public’s dime. That sounds like politics as usual to us. Pharmacy benefit managers wring billions of dollars in rebates from manufacturers. 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 211 S.E. Byers Ave. Pendleton, OR 97801 or email editor@eastoregonian.com. OTHER VIEWS A public health crisis we can fix T Raquel Rosete was walking on the he federal judge and legal sidewalk. Brittanie Johnson, Brianna scholar Guido Calabresi likes to pose a conundrum to his law Robinson and her sister Jade Robinson, students. He asks them to imagine a none of whom was yet 20, were deity coming forth to offer society a passengers returning home from a wondrous invention, one that would vacation. Every one of them was killed make everyday life more pleasant in by a distracted driver. almost every way. Unfortunately, stories like these This invention comes with a cost, David won’t persuade most people to however. In exchange, the deity would Leonhardt give up distracted driving. We are choose 1,000 young men and women overconfident about our own driving Comment and strike them dead. abilities. (I’m just going to glance at Calabresi then asks the students if my phone on this straightaway.) And they accept the deal. In 30 years of giving the smartphones, with their alerts, are so darn lecture at Yale, the answer is almost always enticing. no. At which point he delivers the lesson: “This is a really difficult traffic safety “What’s the difference between this and the problem, unlike any other one,” says David automobile?” Teater, a Michigan business executive who Modern society is impossible to imagine became an anti-distraction advocate after his without the automobile, yet 12-year-old son, Joseph, was it’s also one of the biggest killed. Drunken driving and destroyers of life. In the seat belt-less riding don’t United States, crashes claim tempt drivers at almost every 1,000 lives every nine days. moment. Phones do. Last year, 40,000 Americans Like most public-health died, about as many as from crises, this one requires a breast cancer and more societal solution. Today, not a than twice as many as from single state has a sensible law. murder. Most forbid holding a phone We put up with these while driving, but penalties costs because we imagine and enforcement are weak them as unavoidable human — and hands-free use is still imperfection. We are willing dangerous, studies show. The to make some changes, like distraction, not the physical wearing seat belts and driving act of holding a phone, creates sober, which have caused deaths to decline the problem. gradually for decades. But we assume there Think of it this way: Allowing hands-free is no cure. We’ve accepted the deity’s offer: talking and texting is akin to forbidding modernity in exchange for 1,000 lives, again drivers from getting drunk on liquor yet letting and again and again. them have a few beers before getting behind The digital revolution, however, is the wheel. Some companies, including Exxon changing the calculation. Mobil and Johnson & Johnson, have a better It is both making the problem worse approach. They have banned employees from and creating a potential solution. First the all smartphone use while driving. bad news: Vehicle deaths are surging, up The other answer is technology. “There is 14 percent in the last two years. It’s the strong, robust technology available that could first significant rise in a half century, which solve a lot of the distracted-driving problem qualifies as a public-health emergency. The immediately,” Teater points out. Apple and recent increase, by itself, exceeds the entire wireless phone companies could install a annual toll from skin cancer. driving mode on phones, much like airplane The only plausible cause is the texting, mode, that would allow only directions, music calling, watching and posting that people now and podcasts. It would turn on automatically do while operating a large piece of machinery. in a moving car (and passengers could Insurers understand that, as The Wall Street override it). The companies’ refusal to do so Journal reported, and are raising rates. suggests that they take convenience more The stories of individual deaths — and I seriously than safety. read many while reporting this column — are Long term, technology can also take over awful. They make you think of your family, more driving duties, like automatic emergency your friends and, guiltily, your own distracted breaking. I realize “driverless cars” make driving. many people anxious. But automation has Five-year-old Moriah Modisette was in made airplanes vastly safer, and it will for her parents’ Toyota Camry near Dallas when cars, too. a man driving an SUV, and using his iPhone, Remember Calabresi’s lesson: Even slammed into the Modisettes, killing Moriah. before distracted driving, cars claimed a toll Megan Goeltz, a pregnant mother of a that would be shocking if it had not become 3-year-old girl, was in her Ford Fusion at normal. Technology has now given us the a stop sign in Minnesota when a distracted choice between making a terrible problem driver’s car flew over an embankment and worse and saving a lot of young, healthy lives. crushed her. ■ Joseph Tikalsky was getting the newspaper David Leonhardt is an op-ed columnist for out of his mailbox one morning. Ten-year-old The New York Times. We put up with these costs because we imagine them as unavoidable human imperfection. YOUR VIEWS People who don’t like Trump can leave the country This letter is in response to the ignorance you published in the March 1 East Oregonian. The letter stated our president is “a dictator.” The author stated also that he is “the most corrupt president in history.” Americans have woken up. We have elected a new leader who is for the American people. We will become a greater America because someone finally gave legal Americans a voice again. You don’t like what he’s doing, or what he’s saying? The solution to your “problem” is simple: Go back to where you came from and let America be great again. Andrea Zendejas Umatilla