A12 OFF PAGE ONE East Oregonian Saturday, January 26, 2019 Discord and controversy in Davos even with Trump absent By JAMEY KEATEN AND PAN PYLAS Associated Press Staff photo by E.J. Harris, File Traffic drives south on Highway 97 near the Cow Canyon Rest Area east of Shaniko on Oct. 20, 2018. Study: ODOT already taking some safety measures Continued from Page A1 65 or higher, which went up by 13.4 points. In comparison, none of the control group highway segments had an increase in speeders above 2 percent, and there was virtually no increase in the number of cars traveling 85 miles per hour or higher. Crashes were up on raised speed limit highways across-the-board, and in most cases, those increases were larger than the control segments. Crashes that caused seri- ous injury or deaths rose by 36 percent on 70 mile per hour roads, but that num- ber also went up by 37 per- cent on control segment highways. The real contrast was on 65 mile per hour zones, which saw a 67 percent increase compared with the 21-point increase seen on the control roads. Despite the disparity in crashes between speed lim- it-increased roads and the control segments, traffic volume was only 10 percent higher in the speedier zones. “These preliminary find- ings of the analysis are con- sistent with other related research and analysis that have found increased crash frequency and severity with increased speed limits,” the study states. Studying ODOT data and Oregon State Police press releases, a Novem- ber East Oregonian analy- sis found that fatalities from traffic crashes rose 10 per- cent in the 26 months after the speed limit increase as opposed to a 3.5 percent decline in traffic deaths statewide. Barreto hadn’t read Port- land State’s analysis and didn’t want to comment, but he previously defended it after the EO‘s analysis, saying he wanted to see how many crashes were attributed to drunk or dis- tracted driving. Given the variety of fac- tors that could lead to a crash, Monsere said it’s dif- ficult to determine cause of crash on a wide scale. “You can think of a crash as having a random nature to it,” he said. But he also reiterated that there’s a significant collec- tion of research that shows that traffic collisions go up when speeds do. Monsere said there’s other limitations to his analysis. Ideally, the study would be able to look at three years of data after the speed limit increases went into effect instead of just one. And since most of the well-traveled highways in Eastern Oregon already had their speed limits raised, he had to look at other parts of the state for control segments. “They’re not ideal matches,” he said. Monsere said he’d like to do a follow-up study not only with more crash data, but with more accurate speed readings as well. While automatic traffic records are sparsely located on Eastern Oregon’s two- lane highways, Monsere said the next analysis would use new software that uses numerous GPS data points to more accurately mea- sure speed and differentiate between car and semitruck. In the meantime, ODOT is already taking some safety measures after PSU’s analysis. Troy Costales, the ODOT Transportation and Employee Safety Division administrator, told the Ore- gon Transportation Com- mission at a Jan. 17 meet- ing that ODOT planned to continue to direct resources toward speed enforcement and could also install new signs and other infrastruc- ture to prevent offroad and head-on crashes on two-lane roads. In a Friday interview, Costales said the transpor- tation commission is also starting a long-term discus- sion on establishing a pro- cess to change speed limits outside legislative acts. Pot: City manager remains cautious Continued from Page A1 Oregon’s surplus of marijuana is another fac- tor. Any surplus is going to drive down prices, Cor- bett said, and when mari- juana prices drop, so do the tax revenues. Still, he said, he would not be surprised if every city in the state is reevaluating the value of cannabis. “It just makes sense as cities struggle to meet the increase in PERS,” he said. Paying into the Pub- lic Employee Retirement System remains a major concern statewide, from the Legislature to coun- ties to school districts. And in Pendleton, Cor- bett said, talk of putting that $300,000 to use means improving roads. However the city uses the money, he said no doubt the mari- juana tax benefits Pendle- ton from a purely financial standpoint. The Oregon Department of Revenue started collect- ing local marijuana taxes in February 2017. Since then, according to the depart- ment’s Revenue Research Section, it has received more than $23 million in local taxes, and the monthly revenue from cities and counties topped $1 million every month for the past 12 months. Pendleton’s city man- ager said that’s impres- sive, but he will remain cautious on what to expect from marijuana revenue until the market proves its sustainability. DAVOS, Switzerland — While domestic woes side- lined major figures like U.S. President Donald Trump, this year’s gathering of the global elites in the Swiss ski resort of Davos show- cased divisions on press- ing issues like trade and the environment. In the end, a spunky 16-year-old Swedish cli- mate activist all but stole the show. The World Economic Forum, which wrapped up Friday, was characterized by discord over momentous issues like Brexit and world trade. Many of the leaders closest to those questions — from Trump to Britain’s Theresa May and China’s Xi Jinping — did not show up as they had in past years. Envi ron ment alists, meanwhile, howled about alleged hypocrisy after reports that a record number of flights by carbon-spew- ing private jets would ferry rich corporate bigwigs to talk at the event this year — including about global warming. As the adults deliber- ated, Greta Thunberg, an environmentalist teenager, sounded the alarm. “I want you to panic. I want you to feel the fear I feel every day,” said the stu- dent, who got a waiver from school to travel 32 hours from her home in Sweden — by train, to keep her car- bon footprint down. Since founder Klaus Schwab first gathered European business exec- utives back in 1971, the World Economic Forum has defended globalization as a force for good that improves lives and boosts prosperity. Now, advocates of closer AP Photo/Markus Schreiber The congress center where the World Economic Forum takes place is covered with snow on this year’s last day of the forum’s annual meeting, in Davos, Switzerland, Friday. economic and cultural ties are on the defensive. Trump’s “America First” sloganeering, the Brex- it-style self-interest, pop- ulist politics and the rise of “strongman” leaders in countries from the Philip- pines to Brazil have shaken confidence in the interna- tional rules and organiza- tions set up since World War II. The conference center in Davos still bustled with business executives, presi- dents and prime ministers, heads of non-governmen- tal organizations, scien- tists, and artists. They met privately or sat on publicly broadcast discussions about world issues: Poverty, cli- mate change, the rise of machines, diseases like Alzheimer’s and cancer, and trade disputes among them. Organizers of the event trumpeted some achieve- ments and commitments made in Davos. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said Japan will push for global data gover- nance when it hosts the Group of 20 leading indus- trialized and developing nations this year. Leaders of Azerbaijan and Arme- nia held talks toward end- ing the long-standing con- flict in Nagorno-Karabakh. Britain’s health secretary unveiled a five-year plan to tackle the global threat of antimicrobial resistance. “If it didn’t exist, some- one would have had to cre- ate it, because we can- not solve the most pressing global challenges without a unique partnership between governments, business and civil society,” WEF Presi- dent Borge Brende said Fri- day of the gathering. Still, the WEF has strug- gled to shake off the impres- sion that it hosts cham- pagne-swilling executives more interested in their bot- tom line and power-hungry politicians more interested in polishing their global image than in the state of the world. Brazil’s new president, Jair Bolsonaro, pledged to work “in harmony with the world” to cut carbon emis- sions. The nationalist leader has faced international con- cerns that his country could allow far more aggressive deforestation in the oxy- gen-rich Amazon. But he provided no details and was asked no probing questions by the WEF organizers about his policies. Shutdown: ‘Those benefits have to last’ Continued from Page A1 continue operating nor- mally through February, and that most products up through that point have already been purchased. But the press release said if the shutdown lasts beyond February, it’s unclear what will happen with food deliveries, as well as with ordering food for the following school year, which is usually done in February. The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Pro- gram (SNAP) is another program that local fami- lies have seen affected by the shutdown. The federal program gives low-income families some supplemen- tal funds to purchase food. Belit Burke, the pro- gram designer for DHS’ self sufficiency program, said it’s still too early to tell what the real impact of the shutdown will be. Ore- gon beneficiaries received their SNAP money for Feb- ruary a few weeks early to help with the lapse in fund- ing. But they won’t receive more benefits in February, even though the shutdown is temporarily over. “Those benefits have to last,” she said. She said the amount that each family receives var- ies, but the average case- load receives $209 per month. “It’s meant to be a sup- plement, but it ends up being many people’s whole budget, so they live pretty lean,” Burke said. Other nutrition pro- grams, like the WIC (Women, Infants and Children) program, are expected to be covered through February, as well. The SNAP program is a different funding stream than the SNAP-Ed pro- gram, said Angie Tread- well, the OSU Extension Service coordinator of SNAP-Ed (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Pro- gram Education). Tread- well said her program has already been funded for the entire fiscal year, so they will not be affected by the shutdown any time soon. That program provides ways for families to learn how to use their available resources to eat better, including family cooking classes and food tastings at local schools. St. Anthony Provider Spotligh t Dr Kargar is now accepting new patients. Internal Medicine 1 2 3 4 Whiteline Dig Area Board Certifi cation: Board Certifi ed American Board of Internal Medicine, University of Medicine & Dental of New Jersey School of Osteo Medicine Call 811 to Locate Education: California State University, Hayward Insurance Accepted: Most major insurances, Medicare, Medicaid Wait for Locates Special Services: Internal Medicine Dig Safe Arian Kargar D.O. 3001 St. Anthony Way Pendleton, OR 97801 858387 Call for your appointment today 1-888-522-1130 | www.cngc.com 541.966.0535 FOR MORE INFORMATION VISIT WWW.SAHPENDLETON.ORG