SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 2021 Baker City, Oregon 4A Write a letter news@bakercityherald.com EDITORIAL Baker City’s flawed COVID-19 resolution Resolution 3881, which the Baker City Council passed by a 5-2 vote on Tuesday, March 23, cites the economic and social damage resulting from Oregon Gov. Kate Brown’s executive orders during the pandemic. Businesses have suffered. So have students. So too some seniors and others who have spent so much of the past year alone. Criminal suspects who normally would have been detained for at least a night or two in the Baker County Jail have instead been cited and released due to limits on occupancy to reduce the risk of the virus spreading in that confi ned setting. Not all of these resulted directly from Brown’s decisions, but all refl ect the atmosphere prevailing in Oregon. The City Council reasonably questions whether the governor has recognized the vastly different situations between rural areas such as Baker City and, say, the Portland metro area. The City Council made a similar point earlier this month when it voted to send a letter, written by Councilor Jason Spriet, to the governor chastising her and other state offi cials for failing to consider the opinions of local offi cials in setting regulations during the pandemic. Resolution 3881, however, is a much less focused, and thus fl awed, document. The resolution, drafted by Mayor Kerry McQuisten in consultation with City Manager Jon Cannon and the city’s attorney, rather than focusing solely on Brown’s orders and their harmful effects, and advocating for fi nancial and regu- latory relief for struggling businesses, also implies that COVID-19’s danger is exaggerated. The resolution, though it concedes that the virus is contagious, goes on to state that “contagious viruses do exist in the world.” Indeed they do. But what’s the point of noting the obvious? Has any other virus caused or contributed to the deaths of more than half a million Americans in little more than a year? The resolution: “COVID-19 is over- whelmingly survivable and lockdowns do not stop its spread.” The second part of that sentence is a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention A depiction of a coronavirus particle. legitimate point, and one that relates directly to the issue of whether Brown’s executive orders have all been necessary. The fi rst part, however defensible statis- tically, is cold comfort to the loved ones of the 12 Baker County residents who have died after testing positive for the virus. Downplaying the danger of COVID-19 is to be expected in a partisan political screed, but it is wholly inappropriate for a resolution purporting to represent all Baker City residents. The resolution notes that “our local hospital and health care system are not overwhelmed with COVID cases, and never have been.” This is disingenuous, and another misguided attempt to por- tray the pandemic as a minor medical is- sue. County offi cials have said that most local residents who contracted the virus and needed treatment, including ventila- tors, have been sent to a Boise hospital. The relatively minor effect COVID-19 has had on the local health care system refl ects not that the virus is benign, as the resolution implies, but that it is, for some, dangerous enough to require a higher level of care. Rather than focusing solely on restric- tions the governor has imposed — deci- sions that have signifi cantly harmed the local economy and residents — the reso- lution also delves into the issue of face masks. The resolution claims Brown’s “lockdown and masking mandates” — the former having a much more direct, and harmful, effect on businesses — “are actively creating division and unrest with the increased potential of physical violence within our community as those of one opinion are encouraged by it to impose their opinions over the free will of those of another in a physical way ...” The issue of masks is a divisive one, to be sure. But the resolution offers no evidence of resulting violence except the “potential” for such. Moreover, the resolution, which in an earlier clause states that “we do believe our citizens are fully capable of making their private, individual healthcare and lifestyle deci- sions themselves” now implies that some of those citizens, due to mask mandates, might not be able to resist the urge to commit physical violence. Unless we’re to believe the only people likely to get rough are those who wear masks and are mad at those who don’t. Which is farcical. This isn’t the only unclear or inconsis- tent clause in the resolution. It also states that “we believe in the kindness, compas- sion and common sense of our citizens and businesses to help protect the most fragile and susceptible in our communi- ty.” The overwhelming consensus of medi- cal experts is that wearing face masks, in certain situations, is an effective way to reduce the likelihood of spreading the virus. It’s fair to call mask wearing, to borrow from the resolution, both “com- mon sense” and a way to “protect the most fragile and vulnerable.” Yet the resolution attacks “masking mandates” as being divisive, without acknowledging their medical benefi ts. The fi nal “whereas” clause in the resolution features a selection of famous quotes from American founding fathers. This is standard fare, of course, in docu- ments alleging that the government is infringing on citizens’ rights. But the inclusion of Patrick Henry’s “give me liberty or give me death” vow is curious in this context. Do the fi ve councilors who voted for the resolution believe their constituents, including those who have been infected with COVID-19, must choose between total rejection of the governor’s orders, and untimely death? The very traits that the resolution touts in local residents — “compassion” and “kindness” — are the ones that refl ect our willingness to take temporary steps, including the trifl ing matter of occasional mask wearing, to reduce the risk to those for whom this virus is dangerous. The resolution has a more promising conclusion, in part. It states that the city will support fi nancial reparations for businesses, and back ballot initiatives to limit the governor’s emergency pow- ers. The former, in particular, is vital to economic recovery, and something the Council is right to advocate for. Yet the fi nal clause is another exagger- ated statement that serves no purpose except to infl ame. “The City recognizes the citizenry of Baker City are free, sover- eign individuals within a Constitutional, Representative Republic, not subjects or slaves, and will be recognized as such as we fi rmly stand to represent them.” Invoking slavery in this context not only refl ects the hollowness of the argu- ment, but it detracts from the admirable aspects of the resolution. — Jayson Jacoby, Baker City Herald editor Your views Arkansas resident keeps track of about but very few actually attempt. I hope what’s going on in Baker City the community will embrace that and get I’m Charlie Carpenter and I live in Arkan- sas but I’ve visited Baker City many times. I keep an eye on things on social media and I’ve noticed a few things I really like. I saw that the police department was seeking input from the public on things they perceived as opportunities for improvement. I think that’s really cool! I also noticed the new mayor has em- braced a level of transparency politicians talk involved with the council. I love the historic downtown area. I hope people in those businesses have survived the craziness of the pandemic. We don’t have that kind of downtown area where I live and I hope everyone there realizes how special it is and pulls together to make sure it’s not lost. Charlie Carpenter Springdale, Arkansas Stuck in a snowbound cabin with the flies For the fi rst time in my relatively uneventful life I was truly enter- tained by the chance to smash a fl y with a rolled up magazine. I have in the past felt a certain smug satisfaction after dispatching a bug that had been dive-bombing my eyes for 10 minutes. And I have on occasion been frustrated by my failure to deliver a conclusive whack to an unusually nimble insect. But I had not previously watched a fl y, banging repeatedly against a window pane in the mindless man- ner typical of the species, and felt relieved of the burden of boredom. I am ashamed to admit this. Not because I’m leery about confessing to insecticide. I’m embarrassed because the source of my excitement about the appearance of that single fl y was the absence of the digital entertain- ment to which I am accustomed. No internet. No television. My cellphone was as useful as a two-wheel drive pickup in a mud bog. This ought not have bothered me. Or at least not to the point that I leaped with glee from my chair when I noticed the fl y. We had rented this rustic cabin in the woods fully cognizant that JAYSON JACOBY it was as thoroughly analog as the one-barrel carburetor in a lawn- mower. The prospect was in fact enticing. We would spend a winter night in the Malheur National Forest’s Sunshine Guard Station, along the Middle Fork of the John Day River about 15 miles from the nearest gas pump and beer cooler. We wouldn’t suffer unduly, to be sure. Most notably, the wooden struc- ture has electricity. And although the guard station lacks running water, as frequent campers we’re used to the minor deprivation of an outhouse. I thought of our weekend as an adventure, but one rather more comfortable than a backpacking trip or even a couple of nights in our toilet-less pop up trailer. No tent poles to fumble with, for one thing. Also, comfortable seats and reliable heating (although I would have preferred to burn tamarack rather than kilowatts; alas, the guard station has electric heaters in place of a woodstove or fi replace). We brought our snowshoes and planned to explore the area during daylight. I had one book in progress, and a second ready in case I made it through the fi rst. As the weekend approached — my wife, Lisa, reserved the guard station about a month earlier — I daydreamed occasionally. I con- ceived the classic scene of the city- dweller, imagined myself sitting in a comfortable chair, watching snowfl akes swirl outside, a mug of hot cocoa within easy reach. This wasn’t a fantasy. Not completely, anyway. Late on Saturday afternoon, after we had hiked the road behind the guard station and snowshoed for a piece on another road up the river some miles, I was indeed sit- ting in a chair. But rather than feeling cozy and satisfi ed, as I watched the light leak out of the day and smelled the potato soup simmering on the stove, I was a trifl e bored. Perhaps more than a trifl e. I would read a few pages but instead of settling into the book, as I usually do at home, sometimes for the better part of an hour, my attention would waver. Except it was the absence of out- side stimulation that kept distract- ing me, not its presence. I found this passing strange, and not a little exasperating. With no television blaring, no promise of a basketball game to watch or favorite movie to revisit, no website or weather forecast to peruse on my phone, I should have smoothly lost myself in the story I was reading, only to realize later, as I looked at the dark windows, that the sun had set. And a fi ne story it was — “Burn- ing Fence,” the compelling nonfi c- tion book by renowned Oregon novelist Craig Lesley. Yet I couldn’t get comfortable. With hindsight I suspect the problem was the pressure that a person sometimes feels when a long-anticipated event fi nally arrives. It is much the same with a vacation — you feel compelled to make the experience not merely memorable but transcendent, having toiled so long to make it possible. Yet the burden, almost always, is too great, the expectations unrea- sonable. That perfect Currier and Ives tableau I had created in my mind, for instance, surpassed the reality, as I suppose I knew it would. There were no snowfl akes, for one thing. Also, the guard station, lacking a woodstove to perfume the air with pine, actually smelled more like a place that has been indifferently maintained and is rarely aired out. The potato soup couldn’t quite overcome this slightly unpleasant scent. Still and all, as the evening went on and I began to feel sleepy, there were moments when the real expe- rience seemed familiar, resembling the idyllic scene I had envisioned over the past month. In particular I reveled in the silence. I don’t mean that the cabin was quiet. With a 9-year-old boy and his 13-year-old sister around, true silence was as improbable as my learning even the basics of calculus. Besides which, the fans from the electric heaters purred constantly. What I noticed, and appreciated, was the complete absence of city sounds. No obnoxious burbling from a passing car with an exhaust system held together by rust and optimism. No slamming doors. No blaring train whistles. Just the great silence of the deep woods. And an occasional buzzing fl y to get me out of my chair. Jayson Jacoby is editor of the Baker City Herald.