A4 BAKER CITY HERALD • SATURDAY, APRIL 16, 2022 BAKER CITY Opinion WRITE A LETTER news@bakercityherald.com Baker City, Oregon EDITORIAL District takes a risk with International School T he Baker School District’s Oregon International School, a char- ter school intended to bring up to 40 foreign students to Baker High School each year and make it more affordable for local students to study abroad, might turn out to be a success both culturally and financially. Baker School Board members are confi dent that it will. But the board and district have also taken a substantial risk, both mone- tarily and in terms of public perception, by deciding to spend an estimated $865,000 to buy and renovate two historic homes in Baker City that will be used to house a dozen or so of the visiting students each school year (the others would stay with local host families). Although the board made those decisions in public meetings, those meetings, including the most recent one on April 12, were done remotely, via Zoom. Th e meeting agendas were available on the district’s website, but the district didn’t issue any press releases to announce the proposed pur- chases. Th e board needs to return to in-person meetings, as other public bodies, including the Baker City Council and Baker County Board of Commissioners, have done for many months. As for the International School itself, the concept seems sound. Th ere is a benefi t to Baker students to meet, learn and socialize with teenagers from other cultures, and to have a better chance, thanks to scholarships, to visit another country themselves. Th e district projects that the International School will produce more revenue, through state payments for visiting students and tuition, than it will cost, starting with its fi rst full year of operation. And although district offi cials told board members on April 12 that interest among foreign students has been strong, and that the district likely will have to turn away some applicants, what if the demand doesn’t con- tinue over the 14 to 15 years the district projects it will take for the Inter- national School to repay the district for the housing purchases? As we’ve learned over the past two years, a pandemic can almost immediately curtail exchange student programs. Although it’s gratifying to see two historic homes being used, the decision to buy those, rather than newer residences, is itself a risk. Older homes, even aft er renovations, can be expensive to maintain and, potentially, to repair. Th e district’s recent history of starting new programs — Baker Technical Institute, Baker Web Academy and Baker Early College — has proved suc- cessful. Th ese have not only added educational opportunities for students — and adults, through some BTI programs — but they have helped the district remain on sound fi nancial footing. Th at record likely helped convince some voters to approve the $4 million property tax levy in May 2021, the district’s fi rst in more than 70 years. Th e district is combining that money with a $4 million state grant and $4 mil- lion from its capital projects fund to make signifi cant improvements to all district schools over the next two years or so, including heating, ventilation and cooling and security. Th e district will also construct a cafeteria/kitch- en/multipurpose building at Baker Middle School. All of the levy dollars are allocated to those projects; none is going to the International School. Still and all, the board probably lost some of the goodwill represented by the bond passage with its recent house purchases and expansion of the International School, which, however rosy its fi nancial projections, also necessitated signifi cant spending up front, money that has no immediately tangible benefi ts. Ideally, those projections will pan out and this latest program, like its predecessors, will enrich the district and its students. Taxpayers will be paying attention. — Jayson Jacoby, Baker City Herald editor YOUR VIEWS Citizens need to speak up about ambulance service tently calling for cover to support multiple ambulance and fire calls. This is with them being staffed Baker County citizens. What with three personnel and backup is wrong with our people? We per shift. all need to wake up to this non- We, the citizens, deserve much sense going on at the city and better than this. The employees county level over ambulance deserve much better than this. service. Our ambulance service They deserve to know that when area is facing not having service they are working, they have the in the near future unless city/ backup that they can count on. county officials start working Their families deserve to know hand in hand and come up with that their loved ones are going a working plan and a solution. to have all safety measures being From watching the City Coun- taking care of. cil meeting on Tuesday, April As I well know, at any given 12, 2022, it appears that the time one can find themselves in city manager is willing to get need of an ambulance with ex- rid of our ambulance service. tremely well qualified trained His comments lead me to be- personal a phone call away. I lieve that he is willing to cut the probably wouldn’t be here to- medic/fire personnel down in day if it weren’t for the excellent order to save money. care I received from the first re- In listening to medical service sponders. calls on my scanner, with the cur- Please Baker City and Baker rent level of personnel available, County people, contact your the fire department is consis- elected officials and voice your concern over this matter, your life may depend on it. Roger Coles Baker City Limiting abortion, but what about the babies? In all the states that are choos- ing to limit abortion, the so- called freedom states, not one proposal to assist the mother to be, in prenatal care and postnatal assistance. No mention of child care or severe penalties for the fathers not supporting the child until age 18. Those against this proce- dure seem to feel they have done their moral and religious duty, but never mind the con- sequences. Shall we soon have the welfare rolls skyrocket in the great state of Idaho that so many wish to join? Tom Nash Halfway OTHER VIEWS Editorial from The New York Daily News: Despite some extremist groups’ misguided legal efforts, it remains extraordinarily difficult to legally purchase firearms in New York City. They can still be had on the black market coming in from the persistent Iron Pipeline, but Gov. Kathy Hochul and Mayor Eric Adams have begun cracking down on that smuggling pathway, and buying an illegal gun can be both expensive and dangerous. So what’s an enterprising do- mestic abuser, drug dealer, or would-be shooter to do? The easy option is to purchase what’s called a ghost gun, essentially a disassembled weapon that does not technically count as a fire- arm, at least not until it is put to- gether in as little as a half hour. Not only is this as simple as buying a TV or a toaster online, it is perfectly legal, sidestepping gun laws and allowing malefac- tors to wield instruments that carry no serial numbers and are virtually untraceable no matter what a background check would have turned up for them. Once a trigger is pulled, they fire just like any other, no matter where they came from. This long-standing loophole has made a mockery of our ef- forts to control the spread of these lethal tools, culminating in atrocities like Friday’s murder of 16-year-old Angellyh Yambo in the Bronx. The share of ghost guns used in crimes remains low but is rising, driven by the smug- gling crackdowns and the relative ease of obtaining them. With President Joe Biden’s announcement of a new federal rule clarifying that serial num- bers must be included on com- ponents known as frames and receivers regardless of whether they’re affixed to the rest of a gun, as well as establishing the kits as firearms themselves for enforcement purposes, we can work to stem this trickle before it becomes an avalanche. Along with promises to in- crease federal enforcement and the announcement of a new nominee to run the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, the president is signaling that these workarounds won’t be tol- erated. It’s too late to save An- gellyh, but we can keep other families from feeling that im- mense pain. COLUMN Masterful book recounts fire that destroyed Paradise I have seen plenty of statistics about the fire that decimated Paradise, California, in November 2018, but numbers mean little compared with a passage in a book describing fire vic- tims’ skin sloughing away at the gen- tlest touch, exposing the naked pink flesh beneath. There is no scarcity of reasons why I prefer compelling prose to a spreadsheet. Numbers can tell a story, to be sure. But that story invariably lacks the richness of detail that writers can extract from the English language, with its vast deposits of good and powerful words. Lizzie Johnson mined that ore to great effect with her recent ac- count of the tragedy: “Paradise: One Town’s Struggle to Survive an Amer- ican Wildfire.” Johnson’s book, published in 2021, is not an easy read. It could hardly be otherwise. She is, after all, writing about a fire, sparked by a faulty electrical line owned by Pacific Gas & Electric, that killed 85 people and destroyed around 19,000 buildings, including most of the homes and businesses in Paradise, population 26,000. More than three years later, Para- dise hasn’t come close to recovering — if that word is even appropriate given the scale of the disaster. About 1,100 new homes have been built in the town that lies in the foot- hills of the Sierra Nevada, east of Chico and north of Sacramento. Paradise’s mayor, Steve Crowder, said in a November 2021 interview that he expects the city’s population will reach the 10,000 mark by the fourth anniversary of the tragedy. But it’s not only the scale of the dev- astation that prompted me at times to put down Johnson’s book, to rest my mind as I might rest my legs by taking a break during a difficult hike. “Paradise” has a slightly hallucino- genic quality, though Johnson’s prose is precise and straightforward, befit- ting her previous work as a newspa- per reporter. This quality stems from the large roster of people she interviewed, and whose experiences comprise the bulk of the book. Johnson shifts so often from one person to another, from one small group, brought together by circum- stances beyond my ability to under- stand, to the next, that I sometimes felt as though I needed the equivalent of the cast of characters on a playbill. The litany of terror is fatiguing as only a tautly crafted nonfiction tale can be. The depth of Johnson’s reporting is palpable on almost every page — she must have spent a considerable time Occasionally Johnson inserts a time reference. In each instance I was shocked by how much had happened in so lit- tle time. Johnson’s storytelling is so with the survivors she interviewed, so engrossing, the situations that her encompassing is the detail. subjects endured so terrible, that it It is the most cloying of clichés to seemed to me, as the pages and the say that a writer “makes you feel as if chapters accumulated, that the better you were there,” but the saying is ubiq- part of a day must have elapsed. uitous because it’s also apt. Johnson’s But for many of the Paradise resi- book absolutely deserves this acco- dents Johnson wrote about, the tran- lade, overused though it is. sition from a routine November day As I followed the many awful jour- to a life-threatening predicament was neys that Johnson catalogs I felt that I nearly instantaneous. had a sense, secondhand though it of Stories of wildfires have intrigued course was, of how acrid and choking me since I first swung a pulaski in the smoke was, how horrific the heat, the summer of 1989, just after fin- how desperate the circumstances. ishing my freshman year at the Uni- I suspect Johnson had an ample versity of Oregon. I worked for the list of details to enrich her narra- Wallowa-Whitman National Forest tive, and she chose wisely. Besides in each of the three subsequent sum- the expected detritus of a wildfire mers, and although I wasn’t a fire- — charred trees and windblown em- fighter I ended up on the lines at least bers and the like — Johnson wrote a few times each summer, though in about pools of melted aluminum every case the blaze was no more than that scorched vehicles wept like sil- a handful of acres. ver tears. I can’t think of a better way In the three decades since, the fire to explain the intensity of the heat, risk across the West has escalated a both poignant and terrible. great deal. In that summer of 1989, Yet for all the book’s hellishly ex- which seems impossibly distant to me quisite descriptions, the reality that now, the lightning-sparked Dooley struck me with the greatest force was Mountain fire, at 20,000 acres, was a how rapidly this city, with a popula- milestone blaze. tion nearly three times bigger than That’s still a considerable size, to be Baker City’s, was all but leveled. sure. But the Dooley fire, having been Jayson Jacoby eclipsed by well more than a dozen blazes in Oregon since then, and a great deal more across the region, in- cluding the Paradise fire, no longer seems especially noteworthy. Johnson’s book was even more compelling given what happened in Western Oregon during the Labor Day weekend in 2020. The most dam- aging wildfires in decades, driven by a windstorm quite like the one that propelled the Camp fire through Par- adise, ravaged multiple canyons on the west side of the Cascades. One of those burned through parts of Mill City, the town east of Salem where my parents, one of my sisters and a nephew live. Mill City fared far better than some nearby towns, such as Gates and Detroit, where the post-fire scenes weren’t so different from those in Par- adise. Both my parents’ and my sis- ter’s homes survived — although the house just across the street from my sister did not. Having heard from my parents and my sister about their experiences on the morning when the flames arrived, I could hardly avoid pondering, as I read Johnson’s book, how close they might have come to experiencing something similar. Jayson Jacoby is editor of the Baker City Herald.