4A | WEDNESDAY EDITION | MAY 12, 2021 Siuslaw News P.O. Box 10 Florence, OR 97439 NED HICKSON , EDITOR | 541-902-3520 | NHICKSON @ THESIUSLAWNEWS . COM Opinion The First Amendment C ongress shall make no law respect- ing an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press, or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Govern- ment for a redress of grievances. “I never considered a difference of opinion in politics, in religion, in philosophy, as cause for withdrawing from a friend.” —Thomas Jefferson (1800) USPS# 497-660 LETTERS Miltenberger knows issues, duties Upon reading the various posi- tions of the candidates for Siuslaw School Board, I decided to then read the Mission Statement of the District and the Goals of the Super- intendent/Board for 2021. Among the things the school district mentions in those docu- ments is the uniqueness of every child, high standards and expec- tations, the involvement of and communication to the entire com- munity, including those histori- cally under-represented, as well as standards focused on visionary leadership, effective financial man- agement and an inclusive district culture. Maureen Miltenberger is the can- didate who is aligned and focuses her positions on the mission of this district. Her statements showed she was aware of the policies, reg- ulations and goals that the district has put forth and, most important- ly, knew the purpose and job of a school board member. Maureen is familiar with the new and vital Oregon Student Success Act (SSA), working with other community re- sources and focusing on helping all students of our district to deal with the continuing and future effects of the current pandemic. Maureen is very student-fo- cused, including experience direct- ly with students and their needs while learning — especially inside the current school buildings. We need a board member who understands their job as a member of the school board team and not anyone with vague or irrelevant positions, negative personnel or political manifestos, or undefined “-isms” that look backwards. Maureen Miltenberger has my vote for school board because she knows the duties of the position which she is running for, and is fo- cused on the positives of issues and policies for 2021 and beyond for all our students. —Mary DeCeault Dunes City OSBA guidelines are important to consider Having served on the school board in North Bend for six years, I felt the following information might be helpful as we face the election to fill school board posi- tions here in Florence. First of all, I would like to thank everyone who has stepped forward to run. It is a massive job, some- times with little things and some- times making decisions that no one is really happy with — but that the laws and financial restrictions may dictate nevertheless. Maturity and life experiences make the job a lot easier. If you check with the school board association (www.OSBA. org), Code of Conduct, some of the guidelines that they recommend are: • The elected officials should be a representation of the community, so that a good cross-section of ideas can be shared. That may mean that you do not want an abundance of retired folks or you may not want family members serving together on the school board, which could lead to conflict of interest issues. • The elected officials should serve with an open mind and not running for this position because they might have a personal opinion or vendetta about how they think the school district should be run. • There are several areas that the school board is actually responsible for: the evaluation of the superin- tendent, approval of policies and procedures and approving the bud- get. Please choose wisely with your vote. —Carol Salisbury Florence Viewpoint nothing more than overt advertisement While I greatly appreciate the Siuslaw News providing editorial space to concerned members of this community through the publi- cation of the “Guest Viewpoint,” I must take issues with that element in the Saturday, May 8 edition, “School Board Needs Equal Repre- sentation.” This viewpoint was nothing more than an overt advertisement for two specific candidates in the race for positions on the school board. While it seems other good, viable candidates endorsements are limited in length and relegat- ed to the “Letters” column, Ms. Mann-Heintz was provided several column inches to expound on the qualities of her favored candidates. Unless other candidates are al- lowed equal, unpaid, space, this is blatantly unfair. Of course, at this point such consideration is moot, as voting is well underway. —Jimmie Zinn Florence Don’t insult our intelligence It is axiomatic in the “course of human events” that men have cer- tain talents and abilities — as do women — to preserve happiness. That is why when taking full ad- vantage of citizenry responsibility as it relates to plebiscite opportu- nities in America, one must deter- mine their voting strategy based on merit not gender. In the May 8 edition of the Siu- slaw News, there was a curious Ad (page A2) requesting those in Flor- ence and the surrounding environs to vote exclusively for the fairer gen- der. Though my native intelligence is shaky at times, please Florence Area Democratic Club, do not in- sult our fair city’s intelligence with politically correct pablum. We will decide on who to vote for based on many different fac- tors, including philosophy, creden- tials and who will be most for the citizens without personal pride of politics. Therefore I voted for those who will serve the area best and not based on diversity or gender. My votes consisted of a good man: a builder who is certifiably non-political and will make a dif- ference in curriculum, philosophy and culture for students for Siuslaw School Board position 4; and simi- larly a good man for position 6. For the Democratic Club’s in- formation, for WLAD I voted for a good man and a good woman for commissioners who have not been tainted as yet by politics in order to help clean up that district — though possibly not agreeing on every nuance. It is irrational and shortsight- ed to believe that gender should be strictly adhered to when using one’s sacred voting privilege. I hope that the Florence Democratic Club reads our Declaration of Indepen- dence, Constitution and Federalist Papers to begin to understand their folly, even in this modern age. Al- though unfortunately for the Dem- ocratic Club, men wrote those time honored documents, just as men also wrote the 19th amendment. God bless America. —Joel Marks Florence New school board needs wise representation (Editor’s Note: Viewpoint sub- missions on this and other topics are always welcome as part of our goal to encourage community discussion and exchange of perspectives.) We (the school board) are in many respects at a critical juncture for our students and, therein, the future of our country. I’m writing this Viewpoint to further, as the editor states and in the spirit of, “… community discus- sion and exchange of perspective.” I do have a different perspective. But before delving into that, let me set the record straight with regards to some things I find very troubling with Suzanne Mann-Heintz’s Guest Viewpoint (“New School Board Needs Equal Representation,” May 8). First, she has seemingly iden- tified herself as representing the school board. It clearly states: Guest Viewpoint By Suzanne Mann- Heintz, Siuslaw School Board. She does not represent the views or opinions of the board nor does she have the authority to do so. That sub-heading, Guest View- point, is the second place people look when scanning for context. The assumption they will make is that she represents the entire board and therefore the entire board be- lieves and/or feels the same as she. Secondly, this notion of unanim- ity is further promulgated in para- graph 14, where she writes, “The board speaks with one voice ...” I understand what she is trying to say here but the voters/readers will not and will again assume she Guest Viewpoint By Dennis King Siuslaw School Board Member speaks about these candidates for all board members. She does not. So, to be explicitly clear then, I do not speak for any other Siuslaw School District Board members. I’ll begin my perspective by pars- ing out the word “equal” in Director Mann-Heintz’s title and the word “wise” in mine, which interestingly is the type of language issue I see as critical for board members to wres- tle with. She states, and thereby implies, that Director Diana Pimlott’s role and influence on the board will be diminished because she is the “... only remaining woman ...” and therefore the only way she can have a voice is for there to be “... more gender balance.” This need for “equal” representation is to super- sede all other personal qualities. I, on the other hand, know that the reason Director Pimlott is ad- mired and respected as a director is because she is wise. I look to her for her input on topics that come before the board because of her wise counsel. Her race, color, sex, religion, sexual orientation, national origin, disability, genet- ic information, pregnancy or any other protected characteristic as outlined by federal, state or local laws have absolutely nothing to do with it. Director Mann-Heintz implies, or wants the reader to infer, that old white guys are biased and, without gender balance, will lead the district into ruin. Not true. We need wise people on the school board. People who can tru- ly weigh matters objectively with- out prejudice. There are candidates on the bal- lot that are wise. I’ll not publicly champion them because I find a sitting publicly-elected official do- ing so incredibly inappropriate. So, on principle — and the fact that the Dunning-Kruger effect comes to mind (look that one up) — I’ll simply encourage those of you who haven’t voted to do so. And instead of just calling two candidates, and to have real bal- ance, call them all. 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Email letters to: nhickson@thesiuslawnews.com WHERE TO WRITE President Joseph Biden The White House 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. NW Washington, D.C. 20500 Comments: 202-456-1111 Switchboard: 202-456-1414 TTY/TDD: 202-456-6213 www.whitehouse.gov 900 Court St. NE - S-417 Salem, OR 97301 503-986-1705 Email: Sen.DickAnderson@ oregonlegislature.gov Oregon Gov. Kate Brown State Rep. Boomer Wright (Dist. 9) State Sen. Dick Anderson (Dist. 5) 160 State Capitol 900 Court St. 900 Court St. NE Salem, Ore. 97301-4047 Salem, OR 97301 Message Line: 503-986-1409 503-378-4582 Email: Rep.BoomerWright@ www.oregon.gov/gov oregonlegislature.gov U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden 221 Dirksen Senate Office Bldg Washington, DC 20510 202-224-5244 | 541-431-0229 www.wyden.senate.gov U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley Lane County Dist. 1 Commissioner Jay Bozievich 125 E. Eighth St. Eugene, OR 97401 541-682-4203 Email: Jay.Bozievich@ co.lane.or.us 313 Hart Senate Office Bldg Washington, DC 20510 202-224-3753 | 541-465-6750 Florence City Council www.merkley.senate.gov & Mayor Joe Henry Florence City Hall, 250 U.S. Rep. Peter DeFazio Highway 101, Florence, 97439 (4th Dist.) 541-997-3437 2134 Rayburn HOB ci.florence.or.us Washington, DC 20515 Email comments to Florence 202-225-6416 City Recorder Kelli Weese at 541-269-2609 | 541-465-6732 kelli.weese@ci.florence.or.us www.defazio.house.gov