Page 4A OPINION East Oregonian Wednesday, August 30, 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 OTHER VIEWS AP Photo/Gerald Herbert A man carries children after being rescued by members of the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries and the the Houston Fire Department after residents were stranded by floodwaters due to Hurricane Harvey. Rising to the emergency We occasionally remind our Harvey also offers a reminder of readers to be prepared for emergency what we do in times of emergency. situations, come what may. If we are lucky enough to be spared, In Oregon, we’re often thinking of we help those in need. Cascadia — an off-coast earthquake There are ways to donate money, and resultant tsunami. Or perhaps food, time — and even your blood we imagine another devastating — to those who need help. Please, Pacific Northwest volcanic eruption. consider it, knowing sometimes it Or maybe it’s a could be you on dam breach, or an other end of the If we are lucky the extended drought, disaster. or a wildfire roaring You can donate enough to be down your rural to the Hurricane spared, we help Harvey Relief canyon. Our advice is which is those in need. Fund, relatively the same: administered by the have an emergency Greater Houston plan, proactively set aside some food Community Foundation. Or you and water, batteries and a flashlight, could donate to the Houston Food make sure your children and parents Bank. know what to do if the emergency The Texas Diaper Bank in San happens during school, in the middle Antonio is asking for diapers and of the night, during summer or wipes, which can be mailed to winter. 5415 Bandera Road, Suite 504, San But human nature being what it Antonio, TX., 78238. is, we convince ourselves that will The United Way of Greater never happen to us. That it will Houston flood relief fund will be never happen here. That it will never used to help with immediate needs as happen in our lifetime. well as long-term services like minor Perhaps the people of Houston home repair. Visit their website to and coastal Texas and Louisiana donate or text UWFLOOD to 41444. felt the same way, but their lives You can also donate to national and communities will be forever organizations that are working in changed by Hurricane Harvey and its the affected area. The American Red continued effects. Cross is accepting donations on its People have died, homes have website, or you can text HARVEY been lost, possessions destroyed, to 90999 to donate $10. Catholic infrastructure washed away. And Charities provides food, clothing, there is no end in sight — six shelter and support services to those straight days of rain have brought from all religious backgrounds. You more precipitation to Houston in a can donate to the Salvation Army by week than Seattle sees all year. And calling 1-800-SAL-ARMY (1-800- the rain keeps falling, and the rivers 725-2769) or texting STORM to and reservoirs keep rising. 51555. So perhaps with this news AABB, which coordinates a task jumping off the page, or screaming force to manage blood collection into your ears and eyes from radio efforts during disasters, put out a and television, it’s a good time to get call on Sunday for blood donations across the importance of emergency in the aftermath of Harvey. Most in planning. Being prepared may demand: those with type O-positive save your life, and the lives of your blood. Contact your local blood family and loved ones. center to set up an appointment. 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. Harvey, the storm that humans helped cause E and it’s evident this week. Residents ven before the devastation from are checking up on neighbors and Harvey, southeastern Texas was enduring a year unlike any saving people they’d never met before. before. The stories are inspiring. The daily surface temperature of They’re inspiring because they the Gulf of Mexico last winter never involve people coming together to dropped below 73 degrees. You can protect one another. And how can probably guess how many previous people come together to protect one times that had happened: Zero. David another from future storms and floods? This sort of heat has a specific Leonhardt The answer starts with getting real effect on storms: Warmer weather about climate change, which is the Comment causes heavier rainfall. Why? When main reason storms are doing more the seas warm, more moisture damage than in the past. evaporates into the air, and when the air Obviously, some extreme weather events warms — which has also are unrelated to climate been happening in Texas — change. But a growing it can carry more moisture. number appear to be related, The severity of Harvey, including many involving in other words, is almost torrential rain, thanks to the certainly related to climate warmer seas and air. change. “The heaviest rainfall Yes, I know the sober events have become heavier warning that’s issued and more frequent, and the whenever an extreme amount of rain falling on the weather disaster occurs: heaviest rain days has also No individual storm can increased,” as the National be definitively blamed on Climate Assessment, a climate change. It’s true, federal report, found. too. Some version of Harvey “The mechanism driving probably would have these changes,” the report happened without climate explained, is hotter air change, and we’ll never stemming from “human- know the hypothetical truth. caused warming.” But it’s time to shed some of the fussy Heavier rain can then interact with higher over-precision about the relationship between sea levels to increase flooding, as seems to climate change and weather. James Hansen, have happened with Harvey. In Houston’s the eminent climate researcher, has used the particular case, a lack of zoning laws has led term “scientific reticence” to describe this to an explosion of building, which further problem. Out of an abundance of academic worsens flooding. The city added 24 percent caution — a caution that is in many ways more pavement between 1996 and 2011, admirable — scientists (and journalists) have according to Samuel Brody of Texas A&M, obscured climate change’s true effects. and Houston wasn’t exactly light on pavement We don’t display the same fussiness in in 1996. Pavement, unlike soil, fails to absorb other important areas. No individual case water. of lung cancer can be definitively linked to Add up the evidence, and it smoking, as Heidi Cullen, the chief scientist at overwhelmingly suggests that human activity Climate Central, notes. Few vehicle accidents has helped create the ferocity of Harvey. That can be definitely linked to alcohol, and few message may be hard to hear — harder to saved lives can be definitively linked to seat hear, certainly, than stories of human kindness belts. that is now mitigating the storm’s toll. But it’s Yet smoking, drunken driving and seat- the truth. beltless riding each created a public health Beyond Harvey, the potential damage from crisis. Once the link became clear and widely climate change is terrifying. Disease, famine understood, people changed their behavior and and flooding of biblical proportions are within prevented a whole lot of suffering. the realm of possibility. Unfortunately, stories Climate change is on its way to becoming a of potential misery have not been enough to far worse public health crisis than any of those stir this country to action. They haven’t led to other problems. Already, it has aggravated a Manhattan Project for alternative energy or a droughts, famines and deadly heat waves. In national effort to reduce carbon emissions. the United States, global warming seems to be So when we are faced with actual misery contributing to the spread of Lyme disease. that stems in part from climate change, we Now we have Harvey. It has brought should be honest about it. yet another flood that’s being described as What’s happening in Texas is unprecedented. It is terrorizing thousands heartbreaking, and yet it will be a more of Texans and submerged large parts of the frequent part of modern life unless we do nation’s fourth-largest city, Houston. something about it. That, ultimately, is the The immediate priorities, of course, are most compassionate message about Harvey. protection and rescue, and many Texans are ■ rising to the moment. Houston has a certain David Leonhardt is an op-ed columnist for friendly swagger, a mix of old Texas and new, The New York Times. Climate change is on its way to becoming a far worse public health crisis than smoking, drunken driving and seatbeltless riding. 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 phone number. Send let- ters to 211 S.E. Byers Ave. Pendleton, OR 97801 or email editor@eastoregonian.com. OTHER VIEWS Forest collaboratives include wide range of constructive voices T he Blue Mountains Forest Partners is a nonprofit organization that consists of loggers, ranchers, contractors, conservationists, landowners and others from Grant County and across eastern Oregon who care about public lands and rural communities. We’ve been working together since 2006 to create and implement a shared vision to improve the wellbeing of forests and communities in the Blue Mountains on the Malheur National Forest. We have worked with the United States Forest Service to keep the last remaining timber mill (Malheur Lumber Company) in Grant and Harney counties operating, increase the Forest Service’s capacity to restore large landscapes with the addition of more than $4 million in new federal dollars from the Collaborative Forest Landscape Restoration Program, and increased We insist that voting membership be tied to respectful, courteous, informed participation. the timber harvest to 75 million board feet — more volume than in recent decades. These successes have not come without hard work and controversy. However, Blue Mountains Forest Partners believes that by working collaboratively to achieve socioeconomic and ecological outcomes, our federal lands and the communities that depend on them will be better off in the long run. Because passions can run high when discussing forest management, the partners insist that all of our voting members adhere to a basic code of conduct for civil dialogue. In today’s heated political environment, we take this requirement seriously. We ask that voting members: refrain from personal attacks and counterproductive “backroom deals;” respect each other in and outside of meetings; and treat disagreements as “problems to be solved” rather than “battles to be won,” among other commonsense conditions. Individuals who demonstrate their ability to meet these expectations are welcomed as voting members; those who unable or unwilling to adhere to our civil discourse standards may still express their perspectives as nonvoting participants. In this way, the Partners listen to all voices that have a stake in the management of the Malheur National Forest, even when those voices substantively disagree. Mr. George is right that Eastern Oregon collaborative groups should welcome all input into federal forest management (Forest collaboratives need to welcome all input, EO, August 25). But the Partners are also right to insist that voting membership must be tied to respectful, courteous, and informed collaborative participation. ■ Glen Johnston is president of the Blue Mountains Forest Partners, and owns and operates Backlund Logging in John Day. Susan Jane Brown is vice president of the Blue Mountains Forest Partners, and wildlands program director and staff attorney for the Western Environmental Law Center in John Day and Portland.