A4 East Oregonian Wednesday, July 17, 2019 CHRISTOPHER RUSH Publisher KATHRYN B. BROWN Owner ANDREW CUTLER Editor WYATT HAUPT JR. News Editor JADE McDOWELL Hermiston Editor Founded October 16, 1875 OUR VIEW Blight isn’t just a Pendleton problem T he Pendleton Development Com- mission made the right decision last week when it directed its advi- sory committee to go back to the draw- ing board on a series of proposals to address city blight. The issue in question is the committee’s housing loan proposal in which a homeowner inside the urban renewal district could acquire a no-inter- est loan up to $16,000 fix the outside of a structure determined to be a blighted house. For a homeowner, the key to the loan would be the fact the city will forgive 20% of the loan each year the owner passes an annual inspection until the loan is paid up. Rental home owners are also eligible for the program, though they can only qualify to have up to 50% of their loan forgiven. Charles Denight, the associate director of the commission, said if the commission issued 30 such loans, the urban renewal district will shell out $353,850 to the loan program over two years. Downtown blight came into sharp focus when a study revealed 25 residential properties in the downtown area showed symptoms of blight, such as fading paint and little yard maintenance. Staff photo by Ben Lonergan The city of Pendleton is examining a variety of proposed options for cleaning up and reno- vating blighted homes in the downtown area. At a glance the loan program idea to encourage homeowners to provide upkeep on their property has some merit. Hand- ing out cash to get people to do things they have already demonstrated they don’t want to do may work. Money, after all, talks. Yet the loan program isn’t guaran- teed to be effective. Some homeowners may not exhibit what President Abraham Lincoln called “the better angels of our nature” and, instead of using the loan to fix their home, could take the money and run. The loan program, in short, can’t fix human nature. Pendleton Mayor John Turner suggested the city go beyond the loan program and buy blighted houses and then link up with local people who spe- cialize in restoring and “flipping” houses and then selling them. Turner’s idea also has merit, but only because it is a clear example of an elected leader thinking out- side the box. Entering a program with pri- vate individuals — with taxpayer money — who flip houses isn’t a wise, long-term solution. In the end, it could create more problems than it solves. Blight isn’t just a Pendleton problem. For reasons that are varied — and to some extent, unclear — city blight impacts cit- ies across the region. We all want our town to look good and be a place where visitors can remember as beautiful and welcom- ing. Walking down a street of homes with weeds for yards and shuttered, unattractive buildings doesn’t make good memories. That means our elected leaders need to do more to address this issue, and the development commission’s focus on the issue is encouraging. Area lawmakers could just as easily ignore the blight issue and place their attention elsewhere. That they are trying to find a solution should be good news for voters. The loan program has some promise but, as explained last week, isn’t ready for prime time. We all want to eradicate blight but if any taxpayer funds are going to be used for such efforts then our elected lead- ers must tread very carefully. OTHER VIEWS Dems 2020 task: Convince voters to overlook economy n Oct. 28, 1980, in the final debate of his race against Jimmy Carter, Ron- ald Reagan asked a question that has come to define presidential politics. “Next Tuesday all of you will go to the polls, will stand there in the polling place and make a decision,” Reagan said. “I think when you make that decision, it might be well if you would ask yourself, are you better off than you were four years ago?” The answer for most voters was no, and Reagan won the election with 489 electoral votes to Carter’s 49. The question, or some close variation of it, has popped up many times since. “Are you better off than you were four years ago?” asked Bill Clinton in 1992. (In 1996, seeking re-election, Clinton declared, “We are better off than we were four years ago.”) “Are you better off than you were four years ago?” asked Barack Obama in 2008. It worked for Clinton, and it worked for Obama. Now, the question is whether it will work for Donald Trump. The president’s Democratic 2020 chal- lengers face a daunting problem: Unless there is a serious economic downturn, the answer to the are-you-better-off question will work in the president’s favor, not his opponent’s. The unemployment rate, 3.7 percent, is the lowest it has been in half a century. June’s employment report — 224,000 new jobs — brought another strong performance. The economy is growing at a slightly better than 3% annual rate. Most important, in the con- O cannot stand by and watch that happen.” text of an election, wages have grown 3.1% Fast-rising Democratic contender Kamala over last year with low inflation —- improve- ment that has not been seen in years. Harris chose another approach. “I know Any commentary on the 2020 elec- predators,” the former prosecutor said tion should include the warning that things recently, “and we have a predator living in could change. But barring a signif- the White House.” icant reversal, in 2020 most vot- Other Democrats have portrayed ers would likely answer yes when Trump as a threat to American val- ues, a threat to the rule of law, and a asked if they are better off than they threat to the “norms” that guide our were four years ago. And then they politics and lives. would vote to re-elect the incum- bent president. Together, the message could be That leaves Democrats with characterized as: Yes, the economy the task of convincing millions of is growing, unemployment is low, Americans to vote against their and wages are rising. But Amer- B ryon ica under a re-elected Trump would economic interests, to choose a y ork become a racist dystopia in which Democrat over the president, during COMMENT all the beliefs Americans hold near a time of economic satisfaction. and dear would be under constant How to do it? Some Democrats siege. How could any decent person vote to have chosen to argue that there is something re-elect the president? so wrong with the president — he’s a rac- ist, or he is an agent of Russia, or he is some- Beyond that, Democrats hope educated thing equally terrible — that the traditional voters will be susceptible to anti-Trump measures of a successful presidency do not social pressures, to being shamed out of vot- ing for the president. The idea is that those apply. voters will focus on their objections to the Look at Democratic front-runner way Trump has conducted himself in office Joe Biden’s entry into the race. Biden’s — the tweets! — and not on the economic announcement video focused entirely on results of his presidency. Indeed, a number of the August 2017 white supremacist rally in polls have shown that a significant group of Charlottesville, Virginia, in which a count- er-demonstrator was murdered. voters who are happy about the economy still “We are in the battle for the soul of this plan to vote against Trump. nation,” Biden said. “If we give Donald “Trump’s tenure is straining one of the Trump eight years in the White House, he most enduring rules in presidential politics: will forever and fundamentally alter the char- the conviction that a strong economy ben- efits the party holding the White House,” acter of this nation — who we are — and I wrote analyst Ron Brownstein in The Atlan- tic. “Across many of the key groups in the electorate, from young people to white col- lege graduates, Trump’s job-approval rating consistently runs at least 25 points below the share of voters who hold positive views about either the national economy or their personal financial situation.” Of course, Democrats can’t ignore the economy. So far, when they have addressed it, they haven’t been terribly creative, rely- ing on the standard-issue Democratic cri- tique of Republican presidents — that Trump is creating an economy that benefits only his rich friends. “Who is this economy really working for?” asked Elizabeth Warren at the first Democratic debate. “It’s doing great for a thinner and thinner slice at the top.” It’s not clear how well that will work. As The Wall Street Journal editorial board pointed out recently, under Trump, “wages are rising at the fastest rate in a decade for lower-skilled workers, and unemploy- ment among less-educated Americans and minorities is near a record low.” The result of the president’s policies, the Jour- nal argued, “has been faster growth and less inequality.” Another way to say that is that millions of Americans are better off than they were four years ago. The question in 2020 will be whether that matters. ——— Byron York is chief political correspon- dent for The Washington Examiner. Any new carbon bill should return money to Oregonians T he 2019 session of the Oregon Legislature was a doozy. With supermajorities in each house, Democrats didn’t have to worry about passing most tax bills, which they did with abandon. Republicans stewed until those in the Sen- ate found a way to force their Democratic coun- terparts to the bargaining table. They picked up their papers and left the Senate, once in early May and again in late June. By doing so, they shut down the Senate by denying a quorum. Senate President Peter Courtney says for the short 2020 legislative session he wants a bill that would cap and trade carbon emissions to “be ready to go on day one. It’s got to come out of the Senate in five seconds.” It’s a nice dream. But it presumes Democrats and Republicans can reach a deal. The second walkout by Senate Republicans was caused pre- cisely because they could not. Even some Demo- crats didn’t support the bill. There are dangers for both parties if their only communication is shouting at one another across a crowded Senate floor. The last thing Oregon 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. needs is a Legislature as dysfunctional as Con- gress has become. Democrats should remember they don’t repre- sent everyone. They picked up only a single seat in the Senate in the 2018 election. While they’ve been the majority party there for the last decade, their edge has fluctuated. Were they to lose the single seat they gained in 2018, their voting supermajority would be gone. As for Republicans, they have received con- siderable flak for the walkouts. Legislating by walkout may cause some voters to walk away. The best starting point for a new cap-and- trade bill is to stipulate that any revenue raised by it to be returned directly to Oregonians. House Bill 2020, the cap-and-trade bill that died, gave the money to the government to redistribute. Oregon government has a terrible track record when it comes to government programs designed to compel Oregonians to go green. A new carbon bill will be a lot more ready to go if it’s ready to return the revenue raised to Oregonians. 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 the editor to editor@eastoregonian.com, or via mail to Andrew Cutler, 211 S.E. Byers Ave. Pendleton, OR 97801