SATURDAY, AUGUST 14, 2021 Baker City, Oregon A4 Write a letter news@bakercityherald.com OUR VIEW Brown deal leaves bad taste I t is not a political scandal by any means, but the recent news Gov. Kate Brown spent a large chunk of taxpayer dollars to pay one of her former advisers to serve as a political consultant leaves a bitter aftertaste. The news barely broke above the col- lective consciousness of the state and it certainly gained little traction in portions of the Willamette Valley, a traditional base for the governor. At its heart the news revolves around a deal brokered in 2020 where the governor hired her former communications director Chris Pair through a no-bid state contract. The deal provides Pair with a salary of $6,500 a month to attend weekly meet- ings of the Western Governors’ Association regarding enlarging the effort to create infrastructure for electric vehicles. So far, the state has paid Pair $91,000. Brown has also paid Pair money through one of her political action commit- tees. When Pair — a longtime member of Brown’s staff — departed in January 2020, Brown made no mention he might be hired back. A month later, the governor’s offi ce asked state offi cials to prepare the no-bid contract for Pair’s consulting company. Now, on the face of it, none of this is illegal. In fact, former government offi cials turning around to work as independent contractors for their former bosses or agen- cies is commonplace. It just looks bad. Transparency in government is essen- tial for a democracy to function properly. That means taxpayers have the right to know what their elected leaders are doing and why. The money paid out to Pair so far is, obviously, just a drop in the bucket of the multibillion-dollar budget of the state. But it is the principle that counts in this situation. If the governor was going to hire one of her former staffers and let him or her be paid with tax dollars, she should have disclosed it. State government — and especially the governor’s offi ce — isn’t a private company. It’s funded by taxpayers, and taxpayers have a right to know — no matter how low the sum — how their money is being used. The governor didn’t break the law, but bankrolling one of her former staffers on the taxpayers’ dime doesn’t sit well with us. 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. Letters to the editor We welcome letters on any issue of public interest. Letters are limited to 350 words. Writers are limited to one letter every 15 days. Writers must sign their letter and include an address and phone number (for verifi cation only). Email letters to news@ bakercityherald.com. A glimpse at Baker High School in 1926 I opened the book’s cover and almost immedi- ately became lost in a world which no longer exists and, for me, never did. This wasn’t a novel, though, nor any other form of fi ction. The people and the places in the book are real. The places are in Baker City, and they persist. But the people are, all of them, long since gone to their graves. The book, bound in brown imitation leather, is the 1926 edition of The Nugget, the name given to the Baker High School yearbook. (Or annual, as we mostly called these publi- cations when I was a teenager.) The 1926 version of The Nugget was the 28th, which puts into perspective just now venerable BHS is. I fi nd it endlessly fascinating to briefl y in- habit a world I can never experience in person, to see the faces and read the words of people I will never know. Fascinating, but also a bit eerie. I ponder the reality that the students and the teachers who populate the pages of The Nugget once strolled the same streets that I do today, almost a quarter of the way through a century they could scarcely have imagined, so distant it was. For them the 19th century had far more relevance than the 21st. I think about how these people saw the Elkhorns in the same seasonal guises that I do, how they too awoke to below-zero Janu- ary mornings (except more likely in a home warmed by pine than by kilowatts or therms), and endured August heat (except without the comfort of artifi cially chilled air). I understand that they did all this decades before I — or my parents, come to that — had been conceived, and when I consider this span of time, this juxtaposition of time and plane, I feel a queer mixture of nostalgia and melan- choly and curiosity that is not a little discon- certing. Turning the pages of an artifact such as the 95-year-old Nugget is akin to visiting another universe, one that’s simultaneously familiar but also so different, and in noteworthy ways, that in some senses I scarcely recognize it. The fi rst thing I noticed about this antique is the formality of much of its language. Al- though the yearbook also is rich in the teenage jargon of the Roaring 20s and the inside jokes of a group of classmates in a small, rural school — an essential purpose, then as now, of this sort of document — I was surprised by the quality and sophistication of some of the writing. The foreword, for instance, which is attrib- uted to The Nugget staff, is the work of a period when, or so it seems to me, the proper and disciplined use of written English was rather more appreciated than it is today. The foreword reads: “Although the memo- JAYSON JACOBY ries of the past school year are still warm, and its joys, its labors, and its companionships are still fresh in mind, it is our sincere desire that when memory has been dimmed, that this 1926 Nugget Annual will prove a reminder of these happy days.” That is a sentence written by teenagers who understood not just the foundational principles of good writing, but who also grasped such nuances as cadences which ring pleasantly in the ear. (The eye, important organ though it is, gets too much attention, in my estimation, when it comes to reading and writing. I believe we rate the quality of writing, however subconsciously, by what we hear in our heads, not by what we see.) Perhaps I ought not be surprised by the students’ acumen. The Nugget yearbook — I was pleased to see it referred to as an “annual” in a couple places — is not the only publica- tion they produced. They also put out a weekly school newspaper. The staff included seven reporters and three editors, an embarrassment of journalistic riches by today’s standards. As I leafed through The Nugget’s 98 pages I was entranced by the mixture of the contempo- rary and the archaic. The fi rst names of the students, for instance, betrayed the age of the yearbook perhaps as much as any other attribute. There are Normas and Ethyls, Lelands and Franks, Ediths and Mildreds, Normans and Georges. Conspicuously absent, at least to modern expectations, are Jadens and Sydneys, Kaelis and Ethans, Kadens and Makaylas, among a handful of the names to which parents are partial nowadays. In the dozens of pictures of students there is a noteworthy prevalence of neckties and dresses. The boys have short hair, parted with the same precision that The Nugget staff as- sembled their paragraphs. Some sections seem as foreign as fl appers or the Charleston or the Great War. The “13X Club,” for instance. It has its own page, which describes the pur- pose of this exclusively male organization as “to develop and protect the ideals and traditions of the school. The club holds regular jury trials for all offenders of school rulings and deals out punishment according to the seriousness of the offense.” Only one specifi c offense is mentioned. “Smoking on the school ground has been practically unknown since the 13X prohibited it.” I daresay the modern education system would fi nd abhorrent the concept of a club that was not only segregated by gender, but also was apparently granted both judicial and punitive powers. But at least it got the smokers under control. Better than a dozen pages are devoted to athletics. I learned, among much else, that the 1925 Baker football team was a juggernaut, winning all eight games and not allowing a point in six of the wins. Only Pendleton and Wallowa managed to get on the scoreboard — the Buckaroos losing 15-9, and the Cougars going down 39-6. More notably, it appears that Baker’s mascot, the Bulldog, had its origin during that stellar season. In the fi rst game, on Oct. 3 at Halfway (this was decades before Halfway and Eagle Valley high schools were combined into Pine Eagle), Baker, and here I quote from The Nugget, “returned with two assets, a 24-0 vic- tory and a new title, ‘Bulldogs.’ The name stuck and the team lived up to the principles of the vicious canine.” I was pleased in no small measure to know this. I will never again, I suspect, be able to see the Bulldog mascot, painted on a gym fl oor or a wall or on a jersey, and not think, at least briefl y, of that impossibly distant early autumn afternoon in the Pine Valley (no night games in that less-illuminated era), when a group of boys, clad in leather helmets, became the Bulldogs. Nor can I walk past what we today call the Central Building without seeing that little book, the 1926 Nugget. Back then that impos- ing building was Baker High School. Indeed it was only a decade old in 1926. I walk that block of Washington Avenue a few times each week. Since the school district closed the building in 2009 (it was part of the Baker Middle School campus) I have occasion- ally thought the structure looked rather forlorn, as only a building can which one bustled with the inimitable energy of youth but which is now empty and silent. But it feels different to me now, when I walk by. I sense fragments of the past in the place. I imagine, instead of the occasional cracked win- dow or the weed-dotted grass that I see today, groups of teenagers clambering up the stone steps, unencumbered by bulging nylon back- packs in eye-watering shades. I think of them, in their ties and their dresses, sitting in their wood-and-metal desks, teenagers who survived a pandemic, who don’t know that a Depression awaits, who surely would never have pondered for a moment that, almost the whole of a cen- tury in the future, someone would think their lives were compelling. Jayson Jacoby is editor of the Baker City Herald. Biden administration falls short on eviction crisis Editorial from St. Louis Post-Dispatch: he Biden administra- tion’s new moratorium on evictions postpones yet again the crisis of debt that looms over millions of American households where the rent or mortgages are months overdue. But instead of solving the main problem of mounting indebted- ness to landlords and banks, the new moratorium seems likely to make it worse. And the threat of a federal court order reversing President Joe Biden’s two-month moratorium could T force the administration and Congress to fi x the same basic problem they should have been working to fi x all along. Congress imposed the origi- nal moratorium in early 2020 as the coronavirus pandemic began spreading rapidly and much of the nation went into shutdown mode. Tens of mil- lions of workers were displaced from their jobs, and even with two big federal stimulus payouts to individuals, many used all available cash to buy food and other essentials rather than pay rent. Landlords effec- tively got stuck with those bills — even though they remained on the hook for their own busi- ness loans and other operating expenses. One estimate suggests the outstanding bills owed by more than 6 million renters could be around $27.5 billion. A federal aid package to landlords was supposed to disburse around $46 billion, but only a tiny frac- tion has reached them so far. Which means landlords are still absorbing the costs unfairly. When Biden considered whether to impose a new moratorium and extend the burden on landlords, what likely weighed most heavily on his mind was the prospect of 6 million Americans facing poten- tial homelessness. Nevertheless, days of protest on the Capitol steps by Rep. Cori Bush of St. Louis certainly played a role in focusing Biden’s thoughts on the world of hurt about to descend on those millions facing eviction. Bush certainly can tout that as at least a short- term victory. For the long term, however, it’s clear that one moratorium after another is not going to solve the problem at hand. With each successive month of rent left unpaid, renters’ debts will only get deeper. At some point, the moratoriums will end, and those debts will come due. Mass bankruptcy and homelessness certainly are an option — resulting in a catas- trophe not witnessed in this country since the 1929 Great Depression when shantytown “Hoovervilles” were erected in major cities. The U.S. Supreme Court has made clear it will not tolerate more moratorium extensions without congressional approval. All it takes is one federal judge issuing an injunction on Biden’s new moratorium in coming days, and a true crisis will be at hand. Congress can no longer afford to kick this can down the road. The path to avert this crisis promises to be expensive and politically complicated, but it requires ensuring that land- lords are made whole for their mounting losses while helping renters clear their debts and stay in their homes.