Page 4A East Oregonian Friday, April 13, 2018 KATHRYN B. BROWN Publisher DANIEL WATTENBURGER Managing Editor TIM TRAINOR Opinion Page Editor Founded October 16, 1875 Tip of the hat, kick in the pants A tip of the hat to a bill before the U.S. Senate that would legalize hemp. The bipartisan bill — spearheaded by Oregon Democratic senators Jeff Merkley and Ron Wyden along with Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), is known as the Hemp Farming Act of 2018. It would legalize and clearly define hemp as an agricultural commodity and remove it from the list of controlled substances. This is long overdue — hemp has no intoxicating agents and has a long list of uses in agriculture and manufacturing. It could be a benefit to farmers and entrepreneurs right here in Eastern Oregon. The legislation would also give states the opportunity to become the primary regulators of hemp, allow hemp researchers to apply for competitive federal grants from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and make hemp farmers eligible to apply for crop insurance. These are the important steps that kept hemp from being studied and utilized while it was on the list of controlled substances And as more Republicans join the growing majority of Americans who support legalizing hemp and marijuana, Oregon will once again be a trailblazer (cough, cough) in a growing industry. A kick in the pants to a continued stretch of fatal traffic accidents in our area. Two people died in accidents in a close radius outside Stanfield this week, one killed while she was trying to cross Interstate 84 in the early morning light. Another man was killed while running across Highway 101 on the coast this week. And a crash Thursday on Interstate 84 near Deadman’s Pass closed part of the highway for much of the morning. These are terrible accidents, resulting in death and destruction. And they are much too common. We’re elated by the multi-million dollar plan to make the stretch of interstate between Pendleton and La Grande a safer route of travel. It’s long overdue. Better lighting, better messaging, better snow and ice technology, better infrastructure that keeps out-of-control vehicles from crossing the medians — these are all ways to reduce collisions and death. But as we’ve tried to say, much of the responsibility lies with us. Some accidents cannot be helped, but we should do everything in our power to AP Photo/Mary Esch In this 2016 photo, Dan Dolgin, left, and Mark Justh examine seeds from hemp plants on their JD Farms in Eaton, N.Y. The crop is the first legal hemp harvested in the state in a pilot program that’s part of a national resurgence of the hemp industry. focus on the job at hand when we are behind the wheel or near a roadway. Our lives, and the lives of others, depend on it. A tip of the hat to the “text to 911” service now available in Umatilla County. Texting has become the critical way of communication via cell phones, and it is helpful for people who cannot use standard phones — either because they are in an emergency situation and that is not possible, or they are hearing or speech impaired. Old-fashioned voice calls should remain the standard for those able to make such an action — it’s the best way to get important information out quickly. But for people who cannot do so, texting is a critical alternative. We’re happy local residents now have that option. OTHER VIEWS Staring down on Syria O YOUR VIEWS Idaho Power project is old technology I own property in La Grande that is in the crosshairs of at least two of the proposed Boardman to Hemingway routes between Hilgard and Ladd Canyon. I am also a NIMBY. Initially this fueled my opposition to Boardman to Hemingway. Over the last 10 years, having taken note of advances in nascent technologies (including but not limited to storage, conservation, rooftop solar and microgrids), and the proponents’ seeming aversion to them, I greatly oppose this project turning up in anyone’s back yard. At one point, the proponents told us California, having the highest mandate for renewable power sources, needed connection to this new grid. At another point they told us demand was rising. The former didn’t pan out, and the latter isn’t. Preferring to build a multi-billion dollar project, instead of embracing the new innovations, seems tantamount to not switching to an AC powered grid a century ago. It also seems likely that transmission will become less problematic than previously conceived. Pursuing this project in lieu of real modernization indicates an indifference to fish and wildlife habitat, cultural and archaeological landmarks, as well as viewscapes. Ceding stewardship of some 9,000 acres of Oregon to those who care so little about them would be more than folly. John Williams La Grande Rob Collins for circuit court judge I am writing in support of Rob Collins to be our next circuit court judge. I believe that he has the right combination of broad legal experience, judicial temperament and community involvement to be an outstanding judge. Rob has practiced law in Pendleton Unsigned editorials are the opinion of the East Oregonian editorial board. Other columns, letters and cartoons on this page express the opinions of the authors and not necessarily that of the East Oregonian. since 1981. He has represented clients in a broad cross-section of cases, both civil and criminal. He knows his way around a courtroom, and as a judge he would “hit the ground running.” He has served as a pro-tem judge for many years, and is knowledgeable about courtroom procedure and Oregon law. Rob Collins has deep roots in this community, serving on the Round-Up Board of Directors and the Oregon East Symphony, as well as many other Umatilla County activities. Having served as a judge myself, I appreciate the fact that a good trial judge is one who treats all litigants, attorneys and jurors who come into court with courtesy and respect. I believe that will be one of Rob’s greatest assets as a judge — the ability to listen, and have people feel that they have truly had “their day in court.” Having known Rob Collins and his family for many years, I can vouch for his integrity, his deep knowledge of the law and his sense of fairness and justice. I would highly recommend him to you as our next circuit court judge. Jeff Wallace, retired Circuit Court judge The Dalles Re-elect Larry Givens county commissioner I encourage all Umatilla County voters to reelect Larry Givens to his fourth term as county commissioner. Mr. Givens is a practical and common sense man who has done an admirable job as commissioner. He also is highly regarded throughout the state and nation and has served as president of the Association of Oregon Counties and is a board member of the National Association of Counties. Mr. Givens is exactly the type of commissioner we need. He patiently listens to everyone and then takes sensible actions for the betterment of all the county. I could not recommend him higher. George Anderson Hermiston hours or days. n Saturday I took my family But the truth about current U.S. to have a closer look at policy is worse. For starters, there Syria. is no policy: The president and his This was on the Golan Heights, commanding general in the Middle from a roadside promontory East, Joseph Votel, have offered overlooking the abandoned Syrian flatly contradictory statements town of Quneitra. The border is very green at this time of year, about what the U.S. intends to do in a serene patchwork of orchards Syria. We long ago pulled the plug Bret and grassland, and it was hard Stephens on supporting relatively moderate to impress on our kids that hell Syrian rebels fighting President Comment on earth was visible in the quiet Bashar Assad. And the absence of distance. policy itself runs counter to what is But I wanted them to see it — to know supposed to be Trump’s overarching goal that Syria is a place, not an abstraction; of blunting Iran’s regional ambitions and that the agonies of its people are near, not forcing a renegotiation of the nuclear deal. far; that we should not look away. Later To adapt Churchill’s line about that day, in a suburb of Damascus, Syrian Russia, Trump’s approach to Syria is an forces apparently again gassed their own impulse wrapped in indifference inside an people. incoherence. It makes Barack Obama’s It’s fortunate for Israel that it did not failed Syria policy look savvy, since at bargain the Heights away during the least the former president’s reluctance ill-fated peace processes of the 1990s: Had to get involved was consonant with his it done so, the Islamic State, Hezbollah overarching desire to improve relations or Iran might in time have trained their with Tehran. guns on Israeli towns below. The strategy A limited missile strike that slightly of withdrawal-for-peace has not been degrades Assad’s military capabilities will vindicated in recent years, whether in Iraq, change none of this, just as last year’s Afghanistan or the Gaza Strip. It’s a point U.S. strike changed nothing. What could Donald Trump obviously missed when work? In a column I wrote for The Wall he insisted last month on U.S. withdrawal Street Journal in 2013, I argued that the from Syria, likely encouraging the apparent U.S. should target Assad and his senior chemical attack he now threatens to punish. lieutenants directly in a decapitation strike, As it is, the chances of a wider and just as the U.S. attempted in Iraq in 2003, bloodier war over Syria have grown in and against Osama bin Laden in 2011. recent days. Syrian tanks and artillery have Nothing that has happened in the reportedly entered the demilitarized buffer intervening five years has changed my zone near the Israeli border, in brazen view about this. If we are serious about violation of the 1974 disengagement restoring an international norm against the agreement, as they prepare to sweep rebel use of chemical weapons, then the penalty forces from the rest of the border area. for violating the norm must be severe. Israel did very little to deny its attack And if we are serious about confronting Monday on an air base used by Iran in Iran, Syria remains the most important central Syria, and Jerusalem is threatening battlefield. An extended U.S. air campaign more aggressive steps to keep Tehran to destroy Tehran’s military assets in the from further entrenching itself militarily country would send the message that we in its client state. The Iranians have vowed will not tolerate its attempt to colonize retaliation for the attack, which they Syria and threaten its neighbors. It could are sure to make good on, probably via also help avert the looming war on their proxies in Hezbollah. And tensions Israel’s north and persuade Russia that its between Israel and Russia are at their adventure in Syria won’t pay long-term highest point since the Cold War, in part results, especially if Assad is gone. because Israel did not notify Russia in None of this will solve Syria’s advance of Monday’s attack. problems. But it can begin to solve the So where is the United States in all of problems Syria has caused for us — as a this? violator of moral norms, a threat to our As Michael Doran pointed out in an regional allies, and an opportunity for our astute New York Times op-ed on Tuesday, most dedicated enemies. There’s a new Trump seems to have violated his own national security adviser in the White ostensible rules for winning in recent House, and a final chance for American days. First he promised to withdraw U.S. initiative in this devastated land. forces, which would eliminate what little ■ military leverage we have with Syria (and Bret Stephens won a Pulitzer Prize for Turkey), and then he telegraphed the kind commentary in 2013. He began working of feckless missile strike he seems intent as a columnist at The New York Times in on carrying out sometime in the coming April. 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. 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.