A4 Opinion wallowa.com October 21, 2015 Wallowa County Chieftain We must ¿JKWKLJK ¿UHWKUHDW A by Governor Kate Brown s we near the end of a third consecutive costly ¿re season, the aftermath is staggering. Some 2,218 wild¿res burned more than 00,000 acres across the state and threatened more than 1,400 homes and structures. More than 10,000 ¿re¿ghters across Voice of the Chieftain the Paci¿c 1orthwest risked their lives ¿ghting these ¿res, and ensuring that they could respond swiftly, with all available resources, I invoked the Emergency ConÀagration Act ¿ve times. Because of the great work of many, we were prepared to minimize loss during these challenging months. On behalf of all Oregonians, I thank the thousands of ¿re¿ghters and support crews from local, state and federal agencies, tribal governments, the contract community, local ¿rst responders, landowners, forestry professionals and others who ensured that not one life was lost in Oregon. Other states were not so fortunate. Your dedicated service to our state is never taken for granted, and is greatly appreciated. Even though wild¿re season is winding down, now is the time for Oregonians to begin thinking about next summer¶s ¿re season and prepare for the rains of winter. This is the best way to express our appreciation for the risks that Oregon¶s ¿re¿ghters experience every year. For those who lost homes and property, state and local of¿cials are working hard to help you put the pieces back together. There are several resources, ranging from streamlined permitting processes to ¿nancial assistance programs, available to victims of the ¿res. Many have already attended the informational meetings held by state and federal of¿cials. But the tools to get help are always available at wild¿re.oregon.gov. With the onset of winter and an El 1ixo pattern likely, persistent rains could wreak havoc on areas stripped of vegetation by wild¿re. Oregonians in these areas are already taking preventative steps such as seeding or mulching bare ground, keeping culverts unplugged of debris, and installing sediment traps above culverts. Looking ahead to next summer, homeowners can work with community organizations such as Oregon Firewise, www.¿rewise.org, to manage the landscapes around their homes. Homeowners should consider establishing what’s called “defensible space,” so if wild¿re threatens a home and there is little to burn near its walls, ¿re¿ghters will have a better chance of saving it. Wild¿re, drought, and the myriad of challenges resulting from climate change have likely introduced our state to a new normal. As preventing and ¿ghting ¿re becomes more complex, we must rethink our approach, adopting strategies for both wet and dry seasons. Addressing and preventing ¿re damage is a year-round effort, and it is more important than ever to work together to adapt to climate change and protect our way of life now and for tomorrow. EDITORIAL .DWH%URZQLVWKHJRYHUQRURI2UHJRQ USPS No. 665-100 P.O. Box 338 • Enterprise, OR 97828 2I¿FH1:)LUVW6W(QWHUSULVH2UH 3KRQH‡)D[ :DOORZD&RXQW\¶V1HZVSDSHU6LQFH Enterprise, Oregon M EMBER O REGON N EWSPAPER P UBLISHERS A SSOCIATION P UBLISHER Marissa Williams, marissa@bmeagle.com R EPORTER Stephen Tool, stool@wallowa.com R EPORTER Kathleen Ellyn, kellyn@wallowa.com N EWSROOM ASSISTANT editor@wallowa.com A D S ALES CONSULTANT Jennifer Powell, jpowell@wallowa.com G RAPHIC D ESIGNER Robby Day, rday@wallowa.com O FFICE MANAGER Cheryl Jenkins, cjenkins@wallowa.com 3HULRGLFDO3RVWDJH3DLGDW(QWHUSULVHDQGDGGLWLRQDOPDLOLQJRI¿FHV 1 Year $40.00 $57.00 6XEVFULSWLRQVPXVWEHSDLGSULRUWRGHOLYHU\ See the Wallowa County Chieftain on the Internet www.wallowa.com facebook.com/Wallowa | twitter.com/wcchieftain POSTMASTER — Send address changes to Wallowa County Chieftain P.O. Box 338 Enterprise, OR 97828 Contents copyright © 2015. All rights reserved. Reproduction without permission is prohibited. Volume 133 I’ve been brooding about growing individualism, isolation, and feelings of entitlement for years. Phones disconnect us from fellow-humans as they connect us with terse text messages; “liberated” co-eds need escorts to cross campus at night; athletes and CEOs forget teams and chase individual wealth and fame; and solitary mis¿ts collect arsenals and go on shooting rampages. Maybe I’m just getting old and crotchety—every age bemoans the fact that the world we grew up in passes, and new ideas, technologies, and concerns take its place. But I am clearheaded now about the problems of my forties and ¿fties in mid- dle America: women chased back from good war-time jobs to make 3.2 children and have drinks ready for hubby com- ing home; African American veterans of WW 2 getting the same and worse treat- ment as they did pre-war; Indian tribes and treaties being “terminated” to make way for American business. But I also believe that those of us who grew up in good places in those times experienced a different kind of camaraderie and community than do young people today. I thought about this as I sat in on the 75th anniversary of the Big Brown Church—Congregational—in Enter- prise last Sunday. I’m nominally a mem- ber, but for one reason and another have not been active the last few years, but congregation leader Stacy Green gave me a nudge, and I showed up to hear Mary Louise 1elson and Addie Marks talk about church history and long-time pastor Jerry Raedeke talk about church philosophy. And to see old friends. It actually took me a long time in the MAIN STREET Rich Wandschneider community to ¿nd the church—I fol- lowed one of my sons there about 20 years ago. An early recollection is of an older woman tapping me on the arm and whispering that she was glad I was there, and that I didn’t have to believe everything in the UCC Creed to be part of their congregation. Jerry Raedeke echoed that sentiment when he reminded people that this church had grown from a coming together of two separate— Methodist and Presbyterian—congre- gations. Putting aside differences, the two groups negotiated a “community” church. Jerry lamented current divisions in churches as offshoots of congrega- tions ¿nd one theological or ideological thing or another to disagree and disen- gage over. Like ¿reÀies, despite all their earnestness, these upstarts come and go. But this merging group in 1940 did build a community church! Addie and Mary Louise recounted past ministers and church growth—there were almost 300 members at one time, a choir of 30 and a Sunday School with 80 young- sters. Thinking about Mary Louise reminds me of a general church meeting with regional of¿cials about a decade ago, when we were searching for a new min- ister. The Portland pastor said that the word was out, and he was sure that we would ¿nd someone who liked the out- doors, hunting, ¿shing, etc. Mary Lou- ise told him to forget stereotypes, that people in our congregation also read, wrote, and liked music and song. Sue (Morgan) Wagner, brother Sam, and 1ancy Rudger told Sunday School stories, and one of a regional youth con- ference that brought in others from this community and scores from around Or- egon and Washington. And of a group called “M 3.” Did Sam remember what that meant? Sue asked. The oldsters in unison said that it meant that “God is ¿rst, others second, and µme’ third.” How quaint that seems now. It reminds me of old coaches screaming “team” at would be superstars, and of the verses to “We Shall Overcome” that I once sang arm in arm in arm with blacks and whites in Washington D.C., with Coretta Scott King leading the singing. Sam was a pew behind me, and I had to ask him about a story that I had heard years ago—maybe from his Mother Bet- ty, or from one of his eight or nine sib- lings. The story was that there was a box of shoes in the hallway, and you picked out your shoes—and returned them—as you grew. Sam con¿rmed the shoe box, and remembered that one time his dad had done some work for the Crows in Lostine, and been paid with a box of aw- ful, new but dusty, yellow tennis shoes. I guess the Morgan kids wore those shoes to school for quite a stretch. That too is hard to imagine today, when every kid has the right shoes, clothes, and I-phone, and helicopter par- ents hover over the single child. With all its warts and sores, there was something grand about big families, close commu- nities, and a time when teams trumped stars and yellow shoes got you by. &ROXPQLVW 5LFK :DQGVFKQHLGHU ZULWHVIURPKLVKRPHLQ-RVHSK 733SRVLWLYHIRUDJTXHVWLRQVUHPDLQ The Trans-Paci¿c Partnership, a big multi-nation trade pact, has been negoti- ated and within the month will begin a long process of rati¿cation by member countries. The agreement — known by its ini- tials TPP — is designed to improve trade relations between the 12 participating countries, including the United States, Japan, Canada, Mexico, Australia, Viet- nam, Chile, Malaysia, 1ew =ealand, Peru, Singapore and Brunei Darussalam. We are for trade. It’s the lifeblood of American farmers and ranchers, partic- ularly those in the 1orthwest. Anything that facilitates the opening of markets abroad is probably good. In a teleconference with reporters, Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack touted these among the bene¿ts of the pact: • TPP eliminates or reduces tariffs or taxes assessed by other countries on U.S. agricultural products, including beef, pork, poultry, dairy, horticulture, rice, grains, soybeans, wheat, cotton and pro- cessed products. • The agreement includes safeguards to protect U.S. markets from other coun- tries essentially dumping product into the country. GUEST EDITORIAL From the Capital Press • TPP gives the United States an ad- ditional opportunity to contest sanitary and phytosanitary standards that are not based on risk or science. • Beef and pork producers will see re- ductions in taxes levied by Japan on their products. The deal expands the market for dairy products such as cheese and yo- gurt in Japan and Canada. So, painted with a broad brush the deal sounds good for American agricul- ture. That said, this is a complex treaty with a lot of moving parts. The devil may well be hiding in the details that have yet to be made public. Critics are concerned with portions of the pact that deal with intellectual prop- erty, the Internet and dispute resolution. Opponents worry that one common component of recent trade agreements, known as “investor-state dispute settle- ment,” will allow big, multi-national cor- porations at odds with American laws to bypass U.S. courts in favor of an expert panel of arbitrators. Where once such a provision made sense when companies didn’t want to risk the third-world judicial system, oppo- nents point out that most if not all partic- ipants of the TPP have stable, established legal systems. Critics say the deal includes provi- sions that could severely restrict the In- ternet and remove “fair use” protections for use of copyrighted material. Labor unions oppose the deal because they say it will move more American jobs over- seas. Although alleged drafts of the deal have been posted to Wikileaks, we prob- ably won’t get of¿cial copies for another 30 days, after Congress has reviewed the pact. The public will then get 0 days to pore over the terms. Congress gave President Obama “fast track” authority in negotiating the Trans-Paci¿c Partnership. As such, it can only give the deal an up or down vote, and it can’t amend it. So, weighing the relative bene¿ts and potential harms of those details is all the more important. Without bene¿t of a complete text, the deal appears to us to be positive for U.S. farmers and ranchers. We are for trade, but not for a deal for a deal’s sake. We await a vigorous debate. Where to write P UBLISHED EVERY W EDNESDAY BY : EO Media Group Subscription rates (includes online access) Wallowa County Out-of-County /HVVRQVDW%LJ%URZQ&KXUFK :DVKLQJWRQ'& The White House, 100 Pennsyl- vania Ave. 1.W., Washington, D.C. 20500; Phone-comments: 202-45-1111; Switchboard: 202-45-1414. U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, D — 51 Hart Senate Of¿ce Building, Washing- ton D.C. 20510. Phone: 202-224-5244. E-mail: wayne_kinney@wyden.senate. gov Web site: http://wyden.senate.gov Fax: 202-228-2717. U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley, D — 313 Hart Senate Of¿ce Building, Washing- ton D.C. 20510. Phone: 202-224-3753. E-mail: senator@merkley.senate.gov. Fax: 202-228-3997. Oregon of¿ces include One World Trade Center, 121 S.W. Salmon St., Suite 1250, Portland, OR 97204; and 310 S.E. Second St., Suite 105, Pendleton, OR 97801. Phone: 503-32-338; 541-278- 1129. Fax: 503-32-2990. U.S. Rep. Greg Walden, R — (Sec- ond District) 1404 Longworth Build- ing, Washington D.C. 20515. Phone: 202-225-730. 1o direct e-mail be- cause of spam. Web site: www.walden. house.gov Fax: 202-225-5774. Med- ford of¿ce: 14 1orth Central, Suite 112, Medford, OR 97501. Phone: 541- 77-44. Fax: 541-779-0204. Pending Bills: For information on bills in Congress, Phone: 202-225- 1772. Salem Gov. Kate Brown, D — 10 State Capitol, Salem 97310. Phone: 503-378- 4582. Fax: 503-378-8970. Web site: www.governor.state.or.us/governor. html. Oregon Legislature — State Capitol, Salem, 97310. Phone: (503) 98-1180. Web site: www. leg.state.or.us (includes Oregon Constitution and Oregon Re- vised Statutes). State Rep. Greg Barreto, R-Cove (District: 58), Room H-384, State Capi- tol, 900 Court St. 1.E., Salem OR 97301. Phone: 503-98-1458. E-mail: rep.greg- barreto@state.or.us. Web site: http:// www.oregonlegislature.gov/barreto State Sen. Bill Hansell R — (District 29) Room S-423, State Capitol, Salem 97301. Phone: 503-98-1729. E-mail: Sen.BillHansell@state.or.us. Web site: www.oregonlegislature.gov/hansell. Oregon Legislative Information — (For updates on bills, services, capitol or messages for legislators) — 800-332- 2313.