SATURDAY, MAY 8, 2021 Baker City, Oregon 4A Write a letter news@bakercityherald.com OUR VIEW Stop the secrecy Oregon state Sen. Mike Dembrow, D-Portland, has been noisy about the need for the Oregon Health Authority to be transparent about the COVID-19 data it releases. His bill, Senate Bill 719, would ensure that transpar- ency. And though the bill should have long since passed the Legislature, it would seem to be in good hands. It’s in the committee Dembrow chairs, joint ways and means. The central premise of Oregon’s public records law is that the public has a right to know what its govern- ment is doing. Meetings are open to the public. Govern- ment documents and the data behind them should be open to the public if requested. As good as Oregon’s law is, it teems with excep- tions. One is for public health investigations, Oregon Revised Statutes 433.008. It reads in part: “informa- tion obtained by the Oregon Health Authority or a local public health administrator in the course of an investigation of a reportable disease or disease out- break is confi dential and is exempt from disclosure.” So when journalists and others have requested informa- tion about testing rates by ZIP code for instance, the request was denied. ORS 433.008 doesn’t mean that the information must be denied to the public. It means it can be denied. And when government can deny the public informa- tion, it often does. Dembrow’s bill simply requires the Oregon Health Authority or local public health administrator to release aggregate information about reportable disease investigations that does not identify individual cases or sources of information after receiving a public records request. This would not only apply to COVID-19. It would also apply to salmonella and E. coli outbreaks. State offi cials are trying to encourage Oregonians to get vaccinated and continue to obey COVID restric- tions and guidelines. It would send the wrong signal for the Legislature to now tell Oregonians: “Let’s keep the secrecy” and not pass this bill. Your views More to worry about than some power line towers There still seems to be quite a contro- versy over Idaho Power’s B2H trans- mission line and how unsightly the power line towers will be. This reminds me of a Bible verse (Matthew 23:24) that refers to straining at a gnat but swallowing a camel. In this case Idaho Power’s B2H is the gnat. Unless the people react, the camel will be what is talked about, as follows. The present administration wants to totally eliminate the use of fossil fuels including for generating electricity, and there is talk of breaching our power- generating dams. This would do away with the two main sources of electricity for this area. They propose replacing these power sources with wind tur- bines and fi elds of solar panels. Just to meet the present demand for electricity would require wind turbines on every hilltop and along every ridge, and solar panels covering a good por- tion of the fl atter land. What a sight that would be. If that isn’t bad enough, just think Letters to the editor Unsigned editorials are the opinion of the Baker City Herald. Columns, letters and cartoons on this page express the opinions of the authors and not necessarily that of the Baker City Herald. • We welcome letters on any issue of public interest. • The Baker City Herald will not of all the extra electricity that will be needed if the remainder of their plans are enacted. Their plan includes, over a relatively short period, making all cars electric and all homes totally electric. Since their plan appears to be completely eliminate the use of fossil fuels, it can be assumed that cars, trucks, farm machinery, heavy equip- ment, trains, planes, ships, etc. would be included. In addition to homes there would be restaurants, stores, factories, steel mills, aluminum plants, hospitals, etc. The next point deals with the fact that not only will you have a vast number of wind turbines and solar panel fi elds to deal with, but just think of all the new power lines they will create. Just think of all the substations it will require to gather the electricity and send it to where it is needed. Just think of all the electrical points along the highways that will be required to recharge vehicle batteries. What I have said here may not be 100% accurate but it is enough to indi- cate that the people of this area have a lot more to be concerned about visually than a few transmission towers on Idaho Power’s B2H proposal. I have an anonymous email from a few years back where someone wrote the obituary for common sense. Based on the direction the present adminis- tration is going I would say the email was correct, and common sense is dead. Dick Culley Baker City knowingly print false or misleading claims. However, we cannot verify the accuracy of all statements in letters to the editor. Mail: To the Editor, Baker City Herald, P.O. Box 807, Baker City, OR 97814 Some people too selfi sh to help city return to normal Bravo to Gary Dielman and Cindy Birko for sharing their views regarding the attitudes of the local stupidheads who are the biggest problems facing us in Baker in getting our lives back to normal. I am so disgusted with the lack of intelligence many in the community apparently possess and the fl agrant city council members lack of leadership. Shame on you all. I wear a mask for you but you are too selfi sh to help our city get back to normal. Robin Raskin Baker City Email: news@bakercityherald.com Flames transform a formerly familiar landscape I didn’t believe a patch of black- ened tree stumps could shock me. I suppose I ought to have known better. I should have understood that no number of conversations or photographs or social media videos could affect me as viscerally as see- ing those stumps myself, and being nearly close enough to smell the acrid stench of charred fi r bark. This epiphany happened on a recent evening as I drove west on Highway 22 in the canyon of the North Santiam River in Marion County. The spot was about fi ve miles upcanyon from Mill City, where my parents live. Drive another 16 miles beyond Mill City and you’d be in Stayton, where I grew up. Almost eight months after the Labor Day weekend fi res devastat- ed several parts of Western Oregon, including the North Santiam Canyon, I visited the place where I spent my fi rst 18 years. It would be hyperbole to say I no longer recognized what once was familiar. But I needn’t indulge in even a whit of exaggeration to say both that this canyon is a much differ- ent place than when I last saw it, in August 2019, and that not in my lifetime will I ever see it as I once did. For the better part of a year I had been anticipating the sights. My parents, whose riverside JAYSON JACOBY house was not damaged, have nar- rated on multiple phone calls over the months what they’ve seen while driving around. Both have lived in the area their entire lives, giving them a perspective, and a sense of things forever lost, that make my own seem paltry. Their descriptions, I now know having seen some of the places for myself, were certainly accurate. I was dismayed by the detritus. We drove through only a small portion of the damaged area but it was a depressing experience. The sadness was cumulative as we rolled past yet another heap of ash- es and fl ame-sculpted metal that wouldn’t be recognizable as the site of a building if not for the concrete foundation that alone survived. It strikes me as indescribably cruel that fi re, in what must have been a matter of minutes, could turn a family’s most valuable possession into something so ugly, fi t only to be dumped into a pit, so much worthless trash. And yet nothing I saw affected me so powerfully, though it wasn’t so depressing, as that one patch of stumps. It’s on the south side of the highway. What struck me was not just the stumps — I had seen thou- sands of burned trees during the previous 15 miles or so — but what the absence of the former stand of tall Douglas-fi rs had revealed. This is the east end of a loop road that runs through a residential area. I have driven past the spot probably 100 times. I don’t recall ever even noticing the street sign, which is much less conspicuous than the one at the west terminus of the loop. At least it was much less con- spicuous. Not now, with its coniferous cloak stripped away. In those few seconds as I steered my car through the highway curve I might have believed, before reality reasserted itself, that I was not where I knew myself to be. It was disconcerting. I sensed the mindless, primeval force that is fi re, its terrible power to not only rob people of what they cherish, but even to steal, in effect, their memories of what was not merely familiar but perhaps, or so we innocently believed, was even perpetual. ✐ ✐ ✐ The Elkhorn Mountains are lying to me. Again. This repeated prevarication is particularly troubling because I consider the Elkhorns my friend, to the extent that an inanimate object can play such a role, and no lie cuts quite so deeply as the one commit- ted by someone we care for. The Elkhorns are misleading me — and I presume many others who, as people are wont to do, look frequently at the mountains — about the amount of snow still packed into its forested nooks and crannies. I get a fi ne view of the Elkhorns each day, except ones heavy of cloud, while driving home from work, westward along Auburn Avenue. The vantage point, however, contributes to the illusion. I see, and quite prominently, slopes that tend to shed their snow relatively early in spring. These are places so rocky and steep that snow never accumulates to any great depth, or that, owing to their southerly exposure, absorb a lot of snow-melting sunlight. These two factors, and in some places the combination of the two, erase the white from swathes of the Elkhorns, particularly on the south side of Hunt Mountain and above the North Fork of Pine Creek. The other day, as I crossed the railroad tracks on a sunny afternoon, I noticed bare patches near the top of Hunt Mountain’s shoulder, an elevation of nearly 8,000 feet. But just a few days earlier I hiked up the Rock Creek road, just north of Hunt Mountain. And although much of the route was below 5,500 feet elevation, the snow still lay in drifts three or four feet deep. But those drifts along the road can’t be seen from the valley. Over the years I’ve come to rec- ognize the fallacy of what I see from town. More than once I’ve driven to the Elkhorns, anticipating an early hike based on a misreading of the scene, only to fi nd my intended route buried by the fi rm and grainy snow of April or May (or, some years, June). My homeward view sometimes still leads me astray, albeit briefl y. But I have a bellwether of sorts that has proved to be far more reli- able than a cursory glance at the Elkhorns’ east slopes. I look at the point where Hunt Mountain juts farthest to the east, and in particular its north side. In a year with a snow- pack that’s near to average, there will still be snow in that spot on May 18 — I use that date because, being the anniversary of the 1980 eruption of Mt. St. Helens, I seem to be able to remember it. On the day I was taken aback a bit by the snowless areas, after I was home I stepped into my yard and made a more thorough examination. What I saw is that on the sheltered north slopes, snow still speckles the dark background of the forests well down Hunt Mountain. Those lingering drifts tell a much truer tale than the bare sedimentary brows elsewhere on the peak. Jayson Jacoby is editor of the Baker City Herald.