A4 East Oregonian Saturday, January 19, 2019 CHRISTOPHER RUSH Publisher KATHRYN B. BROWN Owner DANIEL WATTENBURGER Managing Editor WYATT HAUPT JR. News Editor Founded October 16, 1875 OUR VIEW Rural response T he state of Oregon must begin grappling with the lack of reliable emergency response in its wildest and most remote places. Cash-strapped, tax-burdened rural Oregon counties are playing host to more adventurous visitors, while their own populations age and require more medical care. Mean- while, the tax base that supports rural emergency responders continues to decline as their economies sputter and their children moves elsewhere to find economic opportunity. To sum up: Adventurous visi- tors are getting into more and more trouble, but the places where they find that trouble are having a harder and harder time providing reliable emergency response. As we reported earlier this week, Wheeler County is one of those places. With little economic activity after its logging- based economy collapsed in previous decades, Wheeler has become the least populated and fastest shrinking county in the state. And its aging population is straining the volun- teer emergency responders that for generations helped support a thin professional crew of law enforcement professionals. Those volunteer systems are beginning to collapse under the weight of state and federal regula- tions, heavier burdens being placed EO Media Group/Tim Trainor The Wheeler County Sheriff’s Office evidence cage, located in the courthouse basement, must occasionally be emptied so defendants have a place to sit during trial breaks. on fewer and fewer people, and a lack of institutional resources. And it’s not just Wheeler County. Other poor rural counties in eastern, southern, central and coastal Oregon see the same fate on the horizon. There are no more rocks to squeeze for a little additional funding in many such frontier locales. Tax rates are high while economic prospects are low. It’s hard enough for the profes- sionals to make it out there. Members of the Wheeler County Sheriff’s Department must buy their own boots, guns and bulletproof vests, wear uniforms handed down from other departments and type up their reports on hand-me-down computers. On days off, deputies change the oil and do brake work on their own patrol cars. Police evidence storage areas are used as cells for inmates between hearings. Imagine doing all that hard work, without many resources, and not getting paid. That’s what volun- teer ambulance drivers, firefighters and EMTS are facing. And if the state doesn’t want to see the system collapse entirely over the next years, it needs to find a sustainable, reason- able route of migrating dollars from our tourism and recreation economy to the people tasked with keeping those tourists and recreators safe. Some have floated a motel tax that would be divided equitably among the state’s 36 counties. Just $1 a night on every hotel stay in Oregon could bring a small county like Wheeler upwards of $200,000 a year. That would provide a reliable, steady stream of income to help a poor sher- iff’s department, make life easier for rural ambulance and fire crews, and on down the line. It will save lives. That help must come from else- where. As we said above, there’s few options to raise that kind of money on the backs of poor people in poor counties, thanks to Oregon’s tax system. Governor Kate Brown has pledged to use her last term to help rural Oregon keep pace with the gains that the rest of the state has enjoyed. The problems facing rural law enforcement and emergency response offers her — and the Legis- lature — the chance to put her words into meaningful action. OTHER VIEWS Swamp things everywhere Among Wheeler’s consulting duties, according to the Project on Government rain the swamp!” was one Oversight, was hosting a fundraiser for key of those memorable Donald Republican Sen. John Barrasso, now the Trump campaign promises that chairman of the Senate Environment and remains unfulfilled, much Public Works Committee. ... like “Mexico will pay for After more than a decade Given the the wall!” and “Repeal and working for the Senate’s replace Obamacare!” with premier denier of human- Republican “something terrific.” caused climate change, majority in Unlike the latter two James Inhofe of Oklahoma, promises, there’s little Wheeler joined a consulting the Senate debate about the need to firm working against envi- and Trump’s ronmental restrictions on establish strong ethical behalf of his top client, coal standards for govern- avid support, ment. That makes Trump’s magnate Robert Murray. Wheeler’s failure to keep his swamp- “He’s spent his career draining pledge — high- carrying out someone else’s confirmation lighted by the Senate agenda,” Joseph Goffman, might be a confirmation hearing executive director of Wednesday for a former Harvard Law School’s envi- foregone ronmental law program, coal industry lobbyist conclusion. says of Wheeler. nominated to run the Envi- ronmental Protection Since Wheeler joined Agency — all the more EPA, first as deputy and disturbing. then acting administrator, the agency has Nominee Andrew Wheeler became worked to roll back fuel efficiency stan- acting EPA administrator after his prede- dards on vehicles, ease greenhouse-gas cessor and former boss, Scott Pruitt, restrictions on coal-burning power plants resigned in July amid a cloud of self-serving and, in December, rescind regulations that ethics scandals. Wheeler, 54, doesn’t carry reduce coal-plant release of mercury and Pruitt’s ethical baggage, but he has devoted other poisons. himself to a disciplined rollback of environ- Given the Republican majority in the mental safeguards. Senate and Trump’s avid support, Wheeler’s Wheeler is one of 188 former lobbyists confirmation might be a foregone conclu- sion. But that doesn’t mean senators can’t working in the administration, according to ProPublica, and a fox-guarding-the-hen- use the confirmation hearing to press the house example of someone regulating an nominee on a variety of important issues. industry that once paid him handsomely. After all, Wheeler isn’t a lobbyist Others include the acting secretary of anymore. If confirmed, he’ll be in charge of the Interior, David Bernhardt, previously implementing environmental laws designed an influential lobbyist for the fossil fuel to protect the quality of the air Americans industry, and EPA senior attorney Erik breathe and the water they drink. Baptist, who used to work as a lobbyist Moreover, history will judge him for and lawyer for the American Petroleum what he did — or didn’t do — to head off Institute. catastrophic impacts from human-induced Trump replaced President Barack climate change. A daily drumbeat of reports Obama’s ethics rules with a set he said confirms that warming oceans, melting were tougher, but which in fact allow for icecaps and rising sea levels are more likely the liberal granting of waivers so that the to drown coastal swamps than to drain swamp once again can fill with water. them. USA Today “D 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. OTHER VIEWS Real ‘Green Deal’ taxes would hit middle class The Wall Street Journal B y now readers have heard that progressive luminary Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (AOC for groupies) supports a 70 percent top marginal tax rate, which she says will help finance a “green new deal.” Higher taxes on the rich is the stock socialist answer on how to pay for any project, though a reminder arrived this week that soaking the wealthy will barely register as a down payment. The Tax Foundation on Monday did Ms. Ocasio-Cortez the favor of taking her proposal seriously and asked: How much money would the government reap from a 70 percent tax rate on income above $10 million? Authors Kyle Pomerleau and Huaqun Li looked at two scenarios — one if the rate applied only to ordinary income like wages and interest, and another if it also applied to income from capital gains. The best case scenario: a 70 percent rate would raise less than $300 billion in revenue over 10 years, which is less than half of the $700 billion that has been cited in press reports. Progressives aren’t eager to put a price tag on the green new deal, which includes modest proposals like a universal jobs guarantee. But you can bet that ridding the economy of carbon will cost into the trillions of dollars. A 70 percent top rate would generate even less revenue if extended to capital gains. Investors only pay when they realize gains by selling assets, and they are espe- cially sensitive to tax rates when deciding whether to sell. High rates can leave money locked into a current asset instead of flowing to the next good idea. When the Tax Foundation authors considered the effect on behavior and incentives — why bother with that extra investment if most of the money will go to government? — they found that a 70 percent top rate on all income would lose the government $63.5 billion over 10 years. Ms. Ocasio-Cortez won’t admit it, but she and her socialist friends will eventu- ally have to go where the real money is: the middle class. That means higher tax rates on even modest wage earners; taxes on retirement savings like 401(k)s or college savings accounts. Remember this the next time a Democrat or columnist who claims to be conservative says he’ll finance a program by hitting the 1 percent of earners who already pay more than a third of America’s income taxes. Sooner or later they’re coming after you. 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 9780, or email editor@eastoregonian.com.