KATHRYN B. BROWN Owner ANDREW CUTLER Publisher/Editor ERICK PETERSON Hermiston Editor/Senior Reporter THURSDAY, SePTeMBeR 1, 2022 A4 Founded October 16, 1875 OUR VIEW Polio’s tiny, but troubling, return P olio, the specter that haunted America during the first half of the 20th century, leaving parents frightened that their children would be killed or paralyzed for life, can seem as relevant today as manual typewriters or black-and-white TV sets. And for more than three decades, the viral disease has been relegated to history. Polio hasn’t spread widely in the U.S. since 1979. And the federal government declared the disease eradicated from the U.S. in 1994. The reason is simple — vaccination. Vaccines have all but eliminated polio, along with other previously wide- spread diseases that mainly afflicted children, such as measles, mumps, diph- theria and whooping cough. Yet earlier this month a young adult who is not vaccinated against polio and lives in Rockland County, New York, north of New York City, contracted the virus and was paralyzed. More trou- bling, the virus was found in sewage samples in a few New York counties, as well as in New York City. Vaccination rates remain high in most of the country, fortunately. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported about 93% of 2-year-olds have had at least three doses of polio vaccine (federal officials recommend four doses, although some states require only three for students attending school). But the CDC also notes, in a report on the recent New York state polio case, that vaccination rates have dipped during the COVID-19 pandemic, largely due to disruptions in some vaccination programs. There’s another potential concern — that the politicization of COVID-19 vaccines will convince some people to eschew polio and other vaccines whose effectiveness and safety are indisputable based on voluminous data over many decades. According to the New York State Immunization Information System, vaccination rates among children 2 and younger in Rockland County was 60.3% as of August 2022. In some communi- ties, the rate was as low as 37.3%. That puts a significant number of children at risk of contracting a preventable disease. New York officials believe polio arrived in the state by way of a person infected with a strain of the virus linked to samples found in wastewater in Israel and the United Kingdom. That person either had few or no symptoms — which is the case with most people who are infected with the polio virus — and then spread it to others, including the person who, due to the paralysis, became the first known confirmed case in the state. The reappearance of polio, even in a very limited sense as is the case in New York, doesn’t mean the disease is going to become widespread again. But the episode should be a valuable reminder to Americans of how vital vaccination is, and how much inoculations have done to spare both children and adults from terrible, and potentially fatal, infections. Sadly, someone’s life was irrevocably changed in the process. Hunters and harvests BILL ANEY THIS LAND IS OUR LAND he relationship between hunters and prey is complicated. I love stepping into the hunter role, creeping quietly through the woods with the dials on all my senses turned to the max, paying attention to shadows, air currents, the distant crack of a twig or a subtle shift in a shape on the oppo- site hill. Did that log just move? Yes, the hunt makes me feel truly alive. But then comes that moment when the hunter and the hunted meet. Decid- ing to pull the trigger or release the arrow marks a change in the whole experience. As hunters, we say this is where the fun ends and the work begins, but it is more than that. Many of us have quiet personal rituals we go through after taking a life, thanking the animal, our creator, the earth. True statement: None of my hunting partners enjoys the killing part of the hunt, and I wouldn’t hunt with anyone that did. A few of my friends have taken to referring to the filling a deer or elk tag as a “harvest.” As in “I hunted hard for seven days but was not able to harvest an elk.” I suspect this is a way of taking some of the angst out of the killing, trying to convince themselves that hunt- ing is simply another way of gathering food from nature’s bounty, like a walk through the vegetable garden. Personally, I am puzzled by this choice of words. By choosing the clean euphemism of “harvest,” the hunter seems to be trying to make hunt- ing somehow seems less violent or dramatic. But to the hunted, it is still a violent dramatic event. T We usually think of a harvest as something that completes the cycle of sowing, tending, watering and weed- ing. It implies sweat equity, and the harvester is invested in the crop. I remember my mother talking about how she and her Stanfield High School classmates would make late summer midnight raids on a watermelon patch, more than once being chased away by a farmer with a shotgun. I doubt the pranksters considered their purloined melons as a harvest, having no invest- ment or commitment into the care and feeding of the crop. Are hunters any more deserving to call the result of a successful hunt a harvest? I am not talking about the high fence Texas game ranches, where a “hunter” can pay $20,000 to shoot any of a long list of exotic game animals. These herds are cultivated much like domestic livestock, and use of the harvest word may indeed apply. But is this hunting? I recently had a wonderful discussion with a new friend and tribal member about his perspective on hunting and harvesting. The traditions around hunt- ing for his culture do involve invest- ment. Learning to be a tribal hunter means understanding the creation stories and the deal struck long ago between the four-leggeds and humans. Deer will provide people with food, clothing and other raw materials, and in exchange people are to take care of the deer. And there’s more to it. Spiritually, I have heard hunting referred to as an act of prayer, and there’s a feeling of the hunted giving to the hunter. Every crop has a prime harvest season. It’s watermelon and wheat season now, and the huckleberries are ripe in the Blues. Bow hunters are out chasing bull elk in a season when the animals are more concerned about mating than avoiding hunters. Pursuing big game while they are rutting can be a lot of fun, but it usually doesn’t bring the best meat. Similarly, the largest bull or buck is not the best eating no matter when it is hunted; you can’t eat antlers, and I’d much rather fill my freezer with the meat of a young cow elk or a doe. There are ways for hunters to invest time and energy in their bounty. As public landowners, we can advocate for intelligent management of habitat, like a farmer maintains soil health, and we can invest time, energy and sweat in improving the ground. In our corner of the world, the Blue Mountains, we have tools like forest thinning, prescribed burning, road management and control of invasive species to provide habitat for thriving herds of deer and elk. Crops can’t grow well on ground that is constantly disturbed. Once the sown seed has germinated, the farmer stays out of the fields. Likewise, wild animals need secure undisturbed habitat. For some species this means areas without motor vehicle traffic and wise hunters know that bombing around the forest on all-terrain vehicles in midsummer will affect the herds they hunt in the fall. Those who think of hunting as a harvest should be willing to put in the upfront investment of time, energy and treasure into the crop. Join and support hunting and conservation organizations that work to improve habitat. Respect, and encourage, road management on public lands by keeping motor vehicles where they belong, thereby providing secure habitat year-round. Get engaged and educated on public land manage- ment issues and be an advocate for sound resource management. As you sow, so shall you reap. ——— Bill Aney is a forester and wildlife biol- ogist living in Pendleton and loving the Blue Mountains. YOUR VIEWS Mixed messages We continually get the same message from both Salem and Pendleton city offi- cials, we need more revenue. In the case of those legisla- tors in Salem, to appease the governor to solve a myriad of perceived problems, a new “transportation tax” to support public transportation, was passed. This new tax is levied only on the working stiffs. Almost in the same breath, they announce that overall tax revenue is much higher than expected, and taxpayers, including those not effected by the new “transpor- tation tax” will get a “kicker” refund in lieu of a future tax reduction. The city of Pendleton, on the other hand, would rather take advantage of that “trans- portation tax,” and rather than use it as intended, to improve our public transportation system, is using it to construct a bus barn to provide a break room and other amenities, not for our city employees, but for elite Taxi drivers contracted to drive city vans and buses. That’s the company that just hijacked the name used by independent driv- ers contracted to Uber. This appears to be a retaliatory move to undermine the test program adopted by city officials that allows competi- tion within the taxi service to better serve the public. Those are the same city officials that boast “not to worry, we’re not spending property taxes on public transportation, it and the bus barn are paid for with various free government grants.” Free? Who are they trying to kid? In another brilliant move, the “Love Your Home” program, aimed at blight elim- ination in the urban renewal districts and an “amazingly popular” program according to Mayor John Turner, will probably be eliminated. Go figure. Once again the resi- dential areas of the URD will have to bow to the downtown business community when it comes to assistance programs. Rick Rohde Pendleton