VIEWPOINTS Saturday, December 15, 2018 East Oregonian A5 A poem for a friend in need O f all the things Oregon Poet Lau- reate Kim Stafford told us when he read at the First Draft Writers’ Series last month, these words touched me the most: “Someone in your life needs a poem, right now.” I thought of the people in my life. Could I write such a poem? Stafford’s friend Sharon had needed a poem, he said, when the circumstances of her life presented her with overwhelming challenges. How did he know? She told him so. He found her mes- sage one morning at work, but she had written it at 3 a.m. “In the wee hours of the morning it struck me that I am in need of a poem — a prescription that would hearten my soul and give me strength to face these days …” She was simply asking him for a favor- ite poem, something Stafford might rec- ommend that “through humor or empathy or drawing on Spirit, brings a little Light and Hope.” You might have a favorite poem, too, words you lean on in times of loss or fear. After the deaths of September 11, 2001, many Americans turned to poetry, an almost instinctive search for ways to understand our feelings. Auden’s “Sep- tember 1, 1939” was a favorite. When my mother was suffering after surgery, she and I recited Yeats’ “The Lake Isle of Innis- free” together — a comfort to us both. How many of us have Kentucky poet- farmer Wendell Berry’s “The Peace of Wild Things” taped to the wall above our desks or pinned to a bulletin board in our houses? “When despair for the world grows in me … I go and lie down where the wood drake / rests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds.” There’s more — I hope you will find that poem, if you don’t know it yet, and I hope it helps you, too. But sometimes people need words that can come only from us. From you and me. Stafford, knowing this, gath- ered poems for Sharon from his own writing. “Turns out,” he writes in the small collec- tion he would title “Circum- ference: Poems of Consolation and Bless- ing,” he had “many little spells to sustain my own buoyancy in the face of hard news and daily assaults to heart and mind.” One such spell he calls “Improvisational Salva- tion.” Remembering what Miles Davis had said about playing the wrong note — when you play the wrong note, it’s the next note that makes it right — Stafford says, “So / stay awake / & play.” Another of my favorites from this col- lection is “Allegiance” (“I pledge alle- We all know the winter holidays can be a challenge for those dealing with pain or loss. giance to the doomed life, / clumsy per- son, old salmon struggling up / a shallow stream”), which ends with another Stafford story. “Once I had a sweetgrass bag, and I gave it away / to a stranger. ‘You have a sorrow,’ she said. / ‘Don’t be afraid to see how deep it goes.’” Stafford has written more than a dozen books, including a prize-win- ning essay collection and powerful mem- oir. But the book that quickly disappeared from the sale table after his reading was “Circumference.” “Don’t worry,” he said. “I’ll send more.” Roberta Lavadour has several cop- ies waiting at Pendleton Center for the Arts, a gift for those who knew this was the book they needed. It’s not easy, writing a poem for the per- son in your life who needs to hear these particular words. Stafford was asked to write a poem for the surgical waiting room in Doernbecher Children’s Hospital — for parents who would be waiting in that nearly unbearable situation. What could he say? Not that all would be well, because it might not be. Somehow, though, he made a gift for those people. And sometimes, he told us, he goes up to the eighth floor to read that poem himself. We all know the winter holidays can be a challenge for those dealing with pain or loss. It may be that in this season Staf- ford’s assertion is more relevant than ever. Whether or not we consider ourselves poets, I suspect he’s right: Someone in our lives needs a poem. Or just a word, a word B ette H usted FROM HERE TO ANYWHERE from us. And after all, that’s what poems are made of. Bette Husted is a writer and a student of T’ai Chi and the natural world. She lives in Pendleton. First step in forest revision was positive mental groups, industry, and business — all of whom seek assurances that the Forest Service will protect their priority resources. ear objectors, interested persons, During the initial meetings the Forest and Blue Mountains community Service heard a lot about a wide range of members: topics, including access; aquatic and ripar- ian conservation; elk security and big- I recently had the privilege of meet- horn sheep; fire and fuels; fish, wildlife and ing many of you during the first round of plants; livestock grazing; local government objection-resolution meetings for the Blue cooperation and coordination; public par- Mountains Revised Forest Plans. I want to ticipation; social and economic issues; tim- sincerely thank everyone who participated. Over 300 objectors, interested persons, and ber and vegetation; and wilderness, back- public observers attended meetings in John country, and other special areas. Digging into these topics in person gave the For- Day, Pendleton, Wallowa, Baker City and est Service the opportunity La Grande. I am grateful for to explore issues that were the time and effort invested not as prominent in the writ- by each of you. I hope you Spending time ten objection letters. From will agree that this first round the dialogue, some issues of resolution meetings was a in Eastern appear to be close to resolu- positive step. tion while others will require The meetings were led by Oregon further discussion, so there objection reviewing officers be more steps to take in based in Washington, D.C., improved much will this process. The Forest Ser- with support and coordina- tion from the Pacific North- more than our vice knows that many topics west Regional Office as well are interrelated, and we will as the Malheur, Umatilla and understanding work to pull together the Wallowa-Whitman national related topics for discussion of the issues forests. The goal for these in future meetings, so all of initial meetings was to bring can better see the connec- identified in the us tions and consider the trade- clarity and mutual under- standing to the Blue Moun- offs of potential resolutions. objections. tain Forest Plan objection The Forest Service also issues. The dialogue helped understands that not all Forest Service leadership and objectors and interested per- sons were able to attend the first round of staff to better understand your values, con- cerns and views. meetings or have their voices represented Spending time in Eastern Oregon by others. So, as we navigate these next improved much more than our understand- steps, the Forest Service will work ensure ing of the issues identified in the objec- we are as inclusive as possible in future tions, though. Through our initial discus- objections-resolutions meetings. sions we also gained a deeper appreciation Over the coming weeks the review- of local residents’ special relationships with ing officers will be studying the notes and reflecting on what we heard in the first the land. We had it affirmed that, for many round of resolution meetings and we will of those who live in and around the Blue be helping the Washington office in sched- Mountains, these national forests are not uling the next round of objections-resolu- just places to visit and recreate — the for- ests are a vital part of your community life, tions meetings. We will be in touch again identity, heritage and livelihoods. The For- to announce the next steps. Thank you for est Service is striving to honor these special your contributions, and I look forward to relationships in the Blue Mountain Forest making more progress together in the near Plan’s resolution process. In doing so, we future. will better respect the views of many differ- ——— ent community members — including our Glenn Casamassa is the Pacific Tribal neighbors, the states of Oregon and Northwest regional forester overseeing the Washington, county and other local govern- Malheur, Umatilla and Wallowa-Whitman ment representatives, user groups, environ- national forests. By Glen Casamassa National Forrest Service D Terminate robocalls By The (Huntington, W.V.) Herald-Dispatch H ow many of us have missed an important phone call because we didn’t recognize the number? Now- adays if you don’t recognize the num- ber, you don’t answer the phone. Why? Because of all those annoying robocalls. Some robocalls mask themselves by using a local number when the call really is made from far, far away. You can’t even trust the caller ID on your phone anymore. According to a recent article in the Washington Post, reports of unwanted phone calls are rising. Nearly half of all cell- phone calls next year will be spam, accord- ing to projections by First Orion, a caller ID firm. An article in USA Today quoted statistics from YouMail, a company that provides a service to block robocalls. The arti- cle said U.S. consumers and businesses received about 30.5 billion robo- calls in 2017. That broke the record of 29.3 billion calls set the previous year. YouMail estimates the 2018 total will jump to roughly 48 billion. U.S. phones received some 6.1 mil- lion robocalls per hour in September 2018 alone, YouMail said. Help may be on the way. West Virginia Attorney General Pat- rick Morrisey said last week he had joined a bipartisan group of 40 attorneys general to stop or reduce annoying and harmful robocalls. The coalition is reviewing the technol- ogy major telecom companies are pursu- ing to combat illegal robocalls, which can make it appear that the incoming call is coming from a legitimate source, such as a well-known financial institution, business and/or government entity. “Our office receives numerous calls from West Virginia consumers annoyed by the prevalence and frequency of robocalls,” Morrisey said in a news release. “By join- ing forces, I believe our coalition can work with the telecom companies and produce real results to quell these intrusions and stop scammers from taking advantage of West Virginians.” Attorneys general from Ohio and Ken- tucky are also part of the coalition. Morrisey said the multi-state group he has joined has had in-depth meetings with several major telecom companies. The attorneys general share information about the technological capabilities already in existence or in development to fight these calls. The coalition is working to develop a detailed understand- ing of what is technologically feasible to minimize unwanted robocalls and illegal telemarket- ing, engaging the major telecom companies to encourage them to expedite the best possible solu- tions for consumers, and consid- ering further recommendations the states should make to the Federal Communications Com- mission, Morrisey said. The coalition’s efforts will enhance West Virginia’s abil- ity to enforce anti-spoofing leg- islation passed earlier this year, which prohibits any seller or telemarketer from misrepre- senting its caller identification data in order to deceive the call’s recipient, Morrisey said. Meanwhile, the FCC is consider- ing action to create a national database of phone numbers that have been terminated and reassigned. The database would help prevent accidental robocalls to numbers that are no longer assigned to consumers who signed up to receive those calls. FCC Chairman Ajit Pai, who offered the FCC proposal on robocalls, has offered another proposal that he says will help pre- vent spam text messages. But spam mes- saging via texting is not nearly as trouble- some as robocalls. Pai’s announcement says as much. It says the spam rate for texts is estimated at 2.8 percent, while the spam rate for email is estimated at more than 50 percent. The sheer volume of robocalls renders cellphone service almost useless at times. It’s good to see efforts are underway to limit the damage robocallers are doing to our ability to enjoy our phone service. The sheer volume of robocalls renders cellphone service almost useless at times.