VIEWPOINTS Saturday, January 6, 2018 East Oregonian Page 5A The hardware store next door A ccording to the calendar and the scenery surrounding us, winter has arrived in my neighborhood near Helix. Because I am fortunate enough to have a warm, dry place to sleep and am well-fed, I enjoy many aspects of the season. Christmas music on the radio, breaking ice on the water trough, chopping wood and traveling to watch daughter Annie and her schoolmates play basketball are a few of my favorite things. (By the way, I’d be interested to know the opinion of my neighbors and friends as to whose rendition of “My Favorite Things” is their favorite. My top three are by Tony Bennett, Julie Andrews and John Coltrane.) On a recent jaunt to watch basketball in Wallowa, my wife’s car was out of washer fluid and the road grime accumulating on the windshield made it hard for her to see the road and difficult for me to scan the countryside for old trucks, tractors and farm implements. This situation was easily remedied by a quick stop at one of my all-time favorite places of business — the local hardware store. From the time I was but a wee lad accompanying my father to the family-owned and operated hardware concern in Stanfield to buy a couple of pounds of sixteen-penny sinkers out of the bulk nail bin, I have been enthralled by these important and sometimes under-appreciated supply houses without whom America could not have been built and certainly could not be repaired. Pendleton is blessed with one of the finest hardware stores (on south Main Street) I’ve ever frequented and its no-nonsense approach, incredibly broad inventory selection and knowledgeable staff who actually care about the customer serve as a fine example that, in my opinion, is too seldom emulated by the “big box-store” competition. Like many other hardware stores, it is also a great place to visit with other folks who have been DIYers since way before it became a fad. One of my most unique hardware store experiences occurred in the town of Union. Located just down the street from a beautiful old Carnegie library is a combination hardware and liquor store. I purchased a prybar and a bottle of peach schnapps. Our little town of Helix had a hardware store from at least as early as 1895 when a Mr. Sones (either Pete or Fred, further research required) set up shop. The Norvell family became proprietors around 1905 and for many years sold farm implements, Without hardware stores, America could not have been built and certainly could not be repaired. Drastic management changes aren’t the answer to wildfire L ike a lot of small towns in the were relatively low intensity, and West, my town of Ashland many were likely set deliberately is nestled in a lovely valley by Native Americans, who made surrounded by conifer forests. sophisticated use of fire as a land- The forests grow on public lands management tool. These fires cleared managed by the Forest Service and out dense thickets and fallen limbs the Bureau of Land Management, and maintained a relatively open and last year, as in many recent forest structure in many areas. Decades of fire suppression, years, there were fires on those Pepper coupled with logging that has lands. The town of Ashland was not Trail replaced complex mixed-age forests threatened, but our valley filled with Comment with uniform-aged stands and tree thick, eye-burning smoke for weeks plantations, has certainly made things at a time. worse, increasing the likelihood of severe, It was miserable. Outdoor theater and stand-replacing fires. music events were canceled, drastically But that is increasingly overshadowed affecting the summer tourist season, which is critical for our economy. Folks who would by another factor affecting wildland fire frequency and severity: climate change. usually be out hiking, camping, fishing, There is not a single mention of the role of birding and rafting stayed indoors. Parents climate change in the Westerman bill, so it kept their kids inside. Everyone got cranky. looks like I was too generous to set aside that We’ve never had a summer with smoke as whole cynical exploitation thing. bad as this. Much research now supports the Understandably, people don’t want to correlation between climate change and fire go through this again next summer — or seasons that start earlier and end later, with ever. And so the search is on for solutions. Some are taking this opportunity to advocate more days of extreme “fire weather.” Such fire weather led to the devastating fires of for drastic changes in public-lands forest 2017, in Northern California. Those fires management. The primary vehicle for this burned at least 245,000 acres, destroyed effort is the “Resilient Federal Forests Act,” almost 9,000 buildings, and cost over $3 H.R. 2936, often called the Westerman bill billion. They were almost entirely on private for its primary sponsor, Republican Rep. land, not on national forests. The severity of Bruce Westerman of Arkansas. In the name those fires had nothing to do with a lack of of making forests “resilient” to fire, it would logging. promote logging by sharply curtailing We are kidding ourselves if we think existing environmental laws. Among other provisions, it would we can find a “solution” to wildlands fire restrict citizen involvement in public-lands and the smoke that comes with it. Such management by limiting legal challenges thinking denies fire its place as a natural and under the National Environmental Policy Act inevitable part of this environment where and other laws; greatly expand “categorical we have chosen to live. Our forests need exclusions” in areas of up to 10,000 fire, and there is no way we can exclude acres where logging and post-fire salvage it. Instead of trying to log our way out of could occur without any environmental fire danger, we need to adapt ourselves assessment; and eliminate the “survey to the reality of living in this fire-adapted and manage” program that provides data landscape. We can, and should, practice essential for informed forest management. “fireproof” landscaping around our homes, This truly radical bill has passed the House and carry out larger fuels-reduction projects and awaits consideration by the Senate. in high-risk areas like the wildland-urban Let’s be generous for a moment. Let’s interface at the edge of our towns. say that the Westerman bill is not a cynical But we can’t “solve” fire here in attempt to exploit anxiety about fire to Oregon any more than Florida can “solve” achieve otherwise unattainable amounts of hurricanes. Both are natural phenomena logging, long sought by the timber industry. — and both are bound to get worse with Let’s assume that it’s a genuine attempt unchecked climate change. Our best hope of to solve the problem of fire — which, of a future with ecologically appropriate forest course, implies: (1) that fire is a problem; fires and tolerable levels of smoke is to take and (2) that it can be solved. immediate action to limit climate change. Most Western conifer forests, except What do you say, Congress: Want to focus those along the rain-drenched Pacific Coast, on a real problem for a change? are adapted to frequent fires. That is true ■ of my region of southern Oregon, where Pepper Trail is a contributor to Writers studies of tree rings have shown that fires on the Range, the opinion service of High historically returned to a piece of ground Country News. He is a writer and forensic every 15-20 years or so. Most of those fires biologist in Oregon. including P&O and, later, Oliver plows. We have one such plow purchased in the 1930s in our collection. John Freeman Young bought out Norvells in the early 1950s and was also an insurance agent. For a time, he was also a dealer in Calkins farm equipment. I have a receipt for a rod-weeder purchased by my grandfather for $388.50. When I moved to Helix in 1993, Bob Fowler was the proprietor and still had the best selection of carriage-bolts in Umatilla County. Most of the windmills in our area were either sold through or shipped to local hardware stores. Flint & Waling, Fairbanks- Morse, and the ubiquitous Aeromotor were some of the brands marketed locally and brought in by rail to long-forgotten sidings such as Ring Station, Warren and Hillsdale. We have in our supply a new-in-the-crate Fairbanks Morse Model 40 mill that was shipped to the hardware department of Touchet Valley Grain Growers. It may appear foolish to some (thankfully, not including my wife) that I would possess a “new old stock” windmill, but you never know when you might have a need for one. The same can be said for nine ladders, seven cordless drills, 11 hammers, eight sawhorses, four large boxes of electrical supplies, six coffee cans filled with plumbing fittings, three bolt bins, and a pair of pliers and a shovel in all seven pickups on the place. Nearly all of the aforementioned came from hardware stores and help satisfy my primal urge to be surrounded by tools. I see the Powerball jackpot is at $400 M att W ood FROM THE TRACTOR million now. If I win, I think I’ll head back over the mountain — there was a “Business for Sale” sign in the window of the combination hardware/auto parts store in Wallowa. ■ Matt Wood is his son’s hired man and his daughter’s biggest fan. He lives on a farm near Helix, where he collects antiques and friends. Use TV white space for rural internet access S ince 1913, the Oregon country. Let’s use it for broadband. Cattlemen’s Association has Not only is this technology been working daily to assist maturing and available for use, it’s and represent all cattle producers also affordable. We do not need to throughout the state. We work hard build new infrastructure, we just to protect our communities and have to harness a portion of the assure that our voice is heard in all spectrum that already touches rural areas affecting the industry. communities. A study conducted by Internet access is one of Microsoft estimates that using TV Jerome those areas, which is why OCA white space to deliver broadband Rosa is proud to have joined a new, Internet in rural areas would be 80 Comment national coalition called Connect percent cheaper than fiber optic Americans Now, which is cable, and 50 percent cheaper than dedicated to closing the digital divide. LTE wireless technology. The internet has become as important The Federal Communications a tool for a rancher as a horse or Commission and our leaders in the rope. Ranchers need real-time market federal government should support the information when development and making business deployment of this decisions, ranging technology. The sooner from the price of our members can take grain to the price advantage of affordable of cattle, to buying broadband access, the necessary equipment sooner their operations, and accessing key their families and their government statistics. communities can begin The internet provides to benefit. Specifically, the FCC the quickest and most should be encouraged efficient means for to ensure that three channels below 700 obtaining this information. This, of course, depends on access to MHz are available for wireless use on an broadband technologies. In the rural parts unlicensed basis in every market in the of our state where many of our ranches country. This is what it will take for TV are located, high speed internet options are white space technology to succeed. Agriculture is the lifeblood of numerous limited or nonexistent, depriving ranchers small towns and communities across of important, internet-based technologies. Oregon and across this country. As such, Our members also care deeply about their it is critical that our elected officials communities and rural patches of our state support policies that promote healthy, that are without high speed internet miss productive agricultural businesses and out on critical educational tools, global rural communities as a whole, as well as information, economic opportunities and innovative business plans to help achieve healthcare services. success. If this trend continues — with some America’s ranchers know firsthand communities developing broadband access how valuable communications is in the at a rapid pace, and others continuing agricultural world. Being online has to operate without such access — then supercharged, for example, the sale barns the rural divide will continue to grow, — live auctions in which cattle and other leaving many residents and businesses livestock are sold to the highest bidder — at a disadvantage, in many aspects of that we rely on for our economic survival. commercial and societal life. Getting sale barns online has allowed us Connect Americans Now has an to expand our reach around the world. innovative way to bridge the digital And a slower, unreliable, and immobile divide. The technology exists to transmit broadband only holds us back. broadband through the TV white space TV white space technology represents spectrum, using the same type of a way for our members to stay successful technology that allowed the old rabbit ear via increased productivity, they just need antennas to pick up far off TV signals, but the means to access that technology. Please now we can utilize an unused portion of that telecommunications spectrum to serve join OCA in supporting the development of TV whitespace as a broadband vehicle. broadband to rural communities. ■ This TV white space spectrum already Jerome Rosa is president of the Oregon exists and reaches 80 percent of the Cattlmen’s Association. underserved rural population in this The internet has become as important a tool for a rancher as a horse or a rope.