SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 2021 Baker City, Oregon A4 Write a letter news@bakercityherald.com EDITORIAL Small acts can have big effects in our community The pandemic has given many of us reasons to be thankful for things we might previously have taken for granted. This is certainly so as we move into the holiday season. We can eagerly anticipate events such as the downtown Christmas parade, which, like so many favorite community traditions, was canceled in 2020 but will happen this year so long as the Chamber of Commerce gets enough entries. (If you’re interested, check the Chamber’s website, www.visitbaker.com.) We can also appreciate that unlike a year ago, the virus has mainly been on a downward trend. A year ago, the number of COVID-19 cases in Baker County was rising toward what was, until the delta variant surge started in late July 2021, the peak of the pandemic during December 2020. All residents 18 and older are now eligible for a booster vaccine dose, an opportunity everyone should take advantage of. And in contrast to the situation last year, there are no limits on occupancy for our beleaguered restaurants, so festive dinners are easier to plan. But as we celebrate this most magical of seasons, and revel in a return to holidays that should feel closer to normal than the 2020 versions, let’s also rejoice that we are all members of a community which consistently burnishes its reputation for generosity. You’ve read about examples of this recently in these pages. A group of volunteers strives to fi nd forever homes for dogs and cats. A fundraiser draws crowds to help a family whose lives have been over- turned by COVID-19. There are undoubtedly dozens more examples. So as we prepare for the unique joys of this season, let’s each of us try to per- petuate that spirit of selfl essness that is our community’s greatest attribute. It needn’t be anything grandiose. Maybe a neighbor needs help raking leaves or stacking fi rewood. Or you know someone who would appreciate a hot meal delivered to their home — and even more so, someone who stays for a conversation after the warm package has been set on a table. How about making a phone call to a friend you haven’t talked with since summer? We all have limitations, of course. Some of us can’t afford to buy a dinner or other gift. Some of us can’t wield a rake or lug stovelengths around. But smiles cost nothing. And speaking kindly isn’t likely to strain any muscles. When so much that we read and see and hear is marked by anger and bitterness, by tears and regret, surely we can all muster, in the waning days of 2021, some action, no matter how modest, that refl ects the brighter side of our nature and gives us all reason to hope for a 2022 that is defi ned by happiness and optimism. — Jayson Jacoby, Baker City Herald editor Your views Baker City Council shouldn’t pass on Daugherty’s experience Many of us remember the city budget debacle of 2016, when the promised gains of third party ambulance billing and a potential land sale did not materialize and the Baker City Fire Department positions that were funded based on that revenue were at risk. This led to a much maligned “public safety fee” that offset the approximate $180,000 annual shortfall for three years. I want to thank Randy Daugherty for volunteering for the budget board after those mistakes were made and helping guide the city back to a reasonable and balanced budget with a healthy carryover from year to year. We were able to sunset the safety fee while maintaining our staffi ng levels due in no small part to his fi scally conservative approach and business/em- ployer experience. Unfortunately we ap- pear doomed to repeat the mistakes of our past as this council spends money and funds new positions without the input, expertise, and long-term vision the Bud- get Board and the Public Works Advisory Committee members have to offer. To try and paint Mr. Daugherty as having anything to do with the previous budget shortfalls shows ignorance that can eas- ily be corrected by the city’s archived council and budget minutes. Councilor Waggoner has stated that he wants someone to fi ll the council vacancy who is “not really a business owner.” I would argue that Mr. Daugherty’s skill set as an employer and budget watchdog is exactly what this council is missing. Accept- ing criticism is part of the job, and the fact that Randy is willing to put his money where his mouth is and do the work is an opportunity this council shouldn’t pass up. Baker City can’t afford it. Loran Joseph Baker City Letters to the editor of all statements in letters to the editor. • Writers are limited to one letter every 15 days. • The writer must sign the letter and include an address and phone number (for verifi cation only). Letters that do not include this information cannot be published. • Letters will be edited for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. • We welcome letters on any issue of public interest. Customer complaints about specifi c businesses will not be printed. • The Baker City Herald will not knowingly print false or misleading claims. However, we cannot verify the accuracy Mail: To the Editor, Baker City Herald, P.O. Box 807, Baker City, OR 97814 Email: news@ bakercityherald.com Online humor from a most unexpected source Government bureaucrats are known for many things but humor, I submit, wouldn’t make the top 10 on anybody’s list. Indeed I suspect many people would argue that the larger share of bureaucrats, at least while engaged in their frequently dour business, are utterly incapable of anything resembling comedy. (Intentional comedy, anyway; bureaucracies are prone to doing amusing things, unwitting though these may be.) Given the relentless banality characteristic of government opera- tions — and in particular the way they communicate with the public — I always get a particular thrill when I run across an exception. My wife, Lisa, for at least the past couple of years has occasional- ly rushed up, still chortling, to show me a Facebook post on her phone. The page is maintained by the Portland District of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. This agency, which builds and manages dams, by any reason- able measure ought to rank as an especially straitlaced branch of the federal government. Dam engineers, who are after all engaged in a serious business — their foul ups could fl ood cities and kill a lot of people — aren’t renowned for getting up to the sort of hijinks normally associated with fraternities. But the employee who manages the Portland District’s Facebook page relentlessly refuses to issue communications that seem to be the product of a microprocessor rather than a human brain. Chris Gaylord, a public affairs specialist at the district, has over- seen the district’s Facebook page, among his other duties, since the fall of 2019. The page’s most persistent trait is its wittiness. Gaylord said his fi rst attempt to inject not only humor, but also a sense of humanity, into the Corps of Engineers was an internal publi- cation distributed only to agency employees. That effort, which involved the installation of water bottle fi lling stations, was well-received, Gaylord said, so during the Christmas season in 2019 he decided to try a similar approach with the Portland District’s Facebook page. “It’s social media so it should be social,” Gaylord told me in a recent phone interview. “It can be funny.” Ever since Gaylord, as he puts it, “fl ipped the script,” comments from the public on the District’s comedic Facebook page have been almost exclusively positive, he said. “Humor keeps people engaged JAYSON JACOBY and interested,” Gaylord said. Which is to say, it encourages them to check the page frequently. And that’s the goal, Gaylord said. The next time the Corps of En- gineers needs to use the Facebook page to get vital information to the public — a fl ood, for instance — more people are likely to see it than was the case before Gaylord revamped the page. And of course a post about a potentially dangerous situation would be rendered in more straight- forward terms, he said. In the meantime, though, Gaylord will continue to enliven the internet with what I consider a beacon of good-natured humor. He said his efforts have also en- couraged some of his colleagues to contribute ideas for potential posts. One of those led to an Oct. 4 post. It’s the sort of announcement that is not exactly scintillating, but which government agencies usually leach of the tiniest shred of humanity. But Gaylord, with the assis- tance of a co-worker, will have none of this. The Oct. 4 post reads: “Rec- reational boaters can now pass through our three lower #Colum- biaRiver navigation locks during daylight hours only — which eliminates the possibility that vampires will be travelling down the Columbia as the nights grow longer. Sorry, vampires. You’ll have to resort to draining people’s en- ergy via the internet (or else send a familiar through on your behalf during the daytime).” The post concludes with a par- enthetical: “(We did not consult the Vam- piric Council.)” Here’s another example: On Oct. 1, in recognition of National Body Language Day (an event which somehow has man- aged to elude me until now), the page had a post lampooning the tendency for engineers to defl ect attention, by way of pointing, from themselves to the inanimate objects they work with. Gaylord’s post, which refers to this as the “Engineer Point,” says the gesture “says so much at once, including: • “I’m an engineer. I’m awk- ward. If I have to pose for a photo, then I’m going to direct your atten- tion to something that isn’t me.” • “Look at that spalling.” • “Look at that cavitation.” • “Really just fi ll in the blank for any object you could be looking at.” • “I just really like pointing at things.” • “I am extremely uncomfort- able.” On Sept. 28, which is Na- tional Ask a Stupid Question Day (another unoffi cial holiday I have, until now, missed), Gaylord had a post saying, “Of course, there are really no stupid questions. But we’ve defi nitely been asked some that have made us go, ‘Huh?’ ” I don’t as a rule recommend anyone browse a Facebook page, but I’m pleased to make an excep- tion for the Portland District. Nor is the mirth limited to Gaylord’s words. He also makes deft use of pho- tographs — doctored photographs, in most cases — to augment the humor. Gaylord’s responses to com- ments are clever, too. And, perhaps most refreshing of all, given the onslaught of invective and nasti- ness that is a hallmark of social media, almost all of those who com- ment seem to appreciate, as I do, this beacon of joviality from such an unexpected source. Jayson Jacoby is editor of the Baker City Herald.