A4 BAKER CITY HERALD • SATURDAY, MAY 28, 2022 BAKER CITY Opinion WRITE A LETTER news@bakercityherald.com Baker City, Oregon EDITORIAL City Council has responsibility to save ambulance service T here were multiple disappoint- ing moments during the Baker City Council meeting Tuesday, May 24. Here’s two of the more dis- tressing examples: First, when Jennifer Spencer, the city’s administrative services man- ager, told councilors that she had been “gladly” providing data about the city’s ambulance service to firms that might respond to Baker County’s request for proposals. And second, when City Manager Jonathan Cannon said “I think the best thing we can do is cheerlead the county” — meaning supporting the county’s effort to find an ambulance operator to replace the city’s fire de- partment if it ends that service on Sept. 30, 2022, as the Council pro- posed. Both statements sound innocuous. It’s reasonable for Spencer to supply statistics about the ambulance service to anyone who asks. Those are public records, after all. And certainly no one ought to root against the county in its endeavor, as required by state law, to ensure that residents have a competent ambulance service, regardless of who runs it. But here’s the disturbing thing about both statements — who, to belabor the sports analogy, is the home team? Rather than helping the county re- place the city fire department as am- bulance provider, city councilors and city officials need to keep the fire de- partment intact for at least the fiscal year that starts July 1. That can hap- pen, and it can happen without plun- dering the city’s budget. But it’s less likely to happen due to the Council’s 4-2 vote to approve Councilor Dean Guyer’s motion to not submit a proposal to the county by the June 3 deadline. This reversed the Council’s May 10 decision to respond to the county’s solicitation. When the May 24 meeting started, Cannon was preparing to hand out drafts of the proposal, and councilors initially scheduled both a work session and a special meeting with the intention of finalizing that proposal prior to June 3. Cannon described the situation as a “pivot point.” He said the city can’t afford to continue to operate ambu- lances because the gap between what the city spends (and bills) and what it collects will continue to widen. The city’s projections, which take into account rising costs for employ- ees’ retirement, salaries and other in- flationary factors, as well as an increas- ing trend in the number of ambulance calls, show that’s the case. But there’s something far more vital at stake here — the dual-role fire de- partment that multiple generations of Baker City residents have depended on. And that pivot point, to borrow Cannon’s metaphor, does not hinge on what happens two years from now, or five. Time is very much shorter than that. The City Council made sure of that when it notified the county on March 22 that the city planned to discon- tinue ambulance service on Sept. 30. That prompted the county — which, again, is legally responsible — to send out the request for proposals for am- bulance service. And now, two weeks after the Council decided to make an offer to the county, it has botched that chance on the specious premise that, as both Guyer and Councilor Joanna Dixon said on May 24, the city can get back into the contest some time after June 3. The Council’s seeming lack of ur- gency is perplexing. Particularly so considering that on May 10 the council chambers in City Hall was packed with residents who urged councilors to preserve the fire department as it is. Councilors should demand an in- credibly high level of proof before tak- ing such a drastic step as ending am- bulance service and trimming nearly six positions from the fire department, a step unprecedented in the city’s modern history. The case that Cannon has assem- bled doesn’t meet that threshold. There’s no doubt that the financial projections for ambulance service, and the fire department, are troubling. But if the situation were as dire as Cannon suggests, there ought to be ir- refutable evidence that the ambulance albatross over the past several years has forced the city to divert significant dollars from elsewhere in the general fund to stanch the financial bleeding. Yet Cannon’s response is that the city, due to the ambulance service costs, has had to forego some projects. This is not the same as cutting other ser- vices, such as police, that residents pay for and expect to be there when needed. The examples Cannon listed in the May 24 meeting include a roof for the fire hall, software for the fi- nance department, new fire trucks, oxygen bottles for firefighters, founda- tion repairs and a fire escape for City Hall, and a cash register. It’s unlikely that residents will pack into City Hall to advocate for financial software and a cash register. Cannon said something else during the May 24 meeting that was striking. He pointed out, correctly, that there will be an ambulance service in the city after Sept. 30. No reasonable per- son ever believed otherwise. But Can- non also said this, referring to the am- bulance service: “It may not have our name on it, but that’s not necessarily a bad thing.” It is a bad thing. Worse, it’s a bad thing that needn’t happen. Whether the city can afford to con- tinue operating ambulances, and maintaining the level of firefighter staffing that ambulance revenue makes possible, far into the future is very much uncertain. The city needs a new revenue source. Most everyone seems to agree that the most plausible solution is to ask voters within the Baker Ambu- lance Service Area — the city and most of the rest of the county — in the May 2023 election to boost their prop- erty taxes. But such a measure would be in ef- fect a moot point if the city parks its ambulances at the end of September and lays off firefighters. If the current dual-role fire de- partment is to continue well into the future, it must first be saved now. That should be the City Council’s top priority. But after the May 24 meet- ing, the city seems more inclined to help whoever steps in to replace the fire department. — Jayson Jacoby, Baker City Herald editor OTHER VIEWS After Uvalde, will Americans finally take action on guns? Editorial from The Dallas Morning News: The feeling is too familiar now. It hits like a shock and then twists into emotions of horror, anger, sadness and fear until it settles in the mind as a sickening numbness that we don’t know what to do with. The place this time is Texas. Uvalde. The deaths for now include 19 children and two adults. Schoolchildren. Teachers. Exe- cuted on their own campus. Mur- dered in the place where they should be safe, where they should be growing and becoming. As a nation, we lack the capacity — morally, intellectually, politically — to seriously grapple with the evil sickness that has set in, manifested in the incomprehensible nihil- ism of a murderer who would de- stroy the lives of the most innocent among us. But the rage spreads through all of us as we spin in the powerless frustration that nothing is done, that nothing will be done and that we will simply await the next slaughter. Politically and legally, this coun- try refuses to accept or act upon the obvious connection between the easy availability of powerful weapons designed to kill humans and the way they get into the hands of young men, even boys, with his- tories of disturbing behavior. Our political conscience as a nation is so stunted now that we cannot even enforce laws that are on the books to stop these shoot- ings. We cannot seriously discuss, much less legislate, common-sense laws that could get broad agree- ment that might stop the next shooter. We cannot even agree that we should use the resources of the federal government to study gun violence. We believe in the right to bear arms. But every human right is bal- anced with human responsibility. No right is unlimited. Every lead- ing Republican in this state has made more permissive gun access a political cause while doing precious little or actively undermining ef- forts to enforce existing regulation. We do not know, at this writing, the details of how the Uvalde mur- derer got his hands on the weapon or weapons he used. We do not know his motive. We do not know much beyond the fact that he was 18, he wanted to kill children and he had the means to do it. It is time to re-enact the restric- tions in the Federal Assault Weap- ons Ban that were so foolishly per- mitted to expire. It is time to limit high-capacity magazines. It is time to ensure that background checks and red flag laws have the most se- rious and uniform enforcement. And it is time to open broad de- bate about other measures. Saying this law or that law would not have prevented what happened is Uvalde is not enough. We must demand from our elected officials that they study, propose and enact legislation that has an effect. If you are in elected office, this is your job. It is urgent — a moral imperative. There will be calls for address- ing mental illness. Those are valid. But if one thing is clear from mass shooting after mass shooting, it is that killers generally acted with careful planning and clear intent. They understood the depravity and evil of their actions. They did these things because they knew they were terrible and because they had the ready means to do them. After so much blood of so many children has been spent, after so many mothers and fathers and sis- ters and brothers have been left with lives of agony and mourning and loss, after all of this horror and pain, are we still unable to act? All exit doors on hallways should be locked from the outside. I spoke with Mark Witty at the District 5J In view of the tragic school mas- office and learned that only the sacre in Texas I ask everyone to Baker Early Learning Center has call members of the school board such protection. He told me two and School District 5J Superinten- other elementary schools will have dent Mark Witty and demand that these doors installed this summer every Baker school be fitted with and one next summer. He said it double locking doors at the front would require “millions of dollars of the school requiring people to to retrofit the junior high and high identify themselves prior to gain- school due to the architectural lay- ing access to our precious children. outs of those schools.” This should be the highest priority for our school board. Don’t kid yourselves into thinking it won’t happen in Baker. It has happened everywhere. There have been 117 school shoot- ings in the last year. Please protect our children and join me in letting the Baker School Board and Mr. Witty know that we need to find the money NOW to add this extra layer of pro- tection to our children’s schools! Harvey Haskell Baker City YOUR VIEWS Security at schools should be highest priority COLUMN Sight of a thunderhead serves as summer preview T he juvenile thunderhead seemed to rest on the shoulder of Black Mountain, a temporary appendage that at a cursory glance might have been mistaken for stone rather than ephemeral water vapor. For me, though, the vantage point from Bowen Valley, just south of Baker City, is a familiar one. I was not fooled by the illusion. I’m no geologist but I know, from perusing various books and maps, that Black Mountain is not a volcano. This makes the peak, which rises above the southeast corner of Phillips Reservoir, an unlikely candidate to suddenly sprout topographic features. The sight of that cloud, slate gray in the center with fringes of white around its fluffy top, thrust me sud- denly from spring into the summer storm season. Thunderstorms are perfectly plausi- ble in May, to be sure. But for me the classic thunder- head is the sort that forms on hot afternoons in July or August, when broiling air becomes buoyant and as- cends until it can no longer hold all its latent moisture. The physical processes that con- spire to transform an innocuous cu- mulus cloud into a malevolent cumu- lonimbus, with its potential to spawn crop-smashing hail and tree-cracking gusts and lightning bolts that set fire to vulnerable forests, are far beyond my ability to comprehend. I was fortunate to get through high school chemistry without burning down the laboratory after mishan- dling a Bunsen burner. But I needn’t grasp the scientific principles to relish the return of this atmospheric concoction, as reliable as the January blizzard that graces every streetlight with a halo, or the October dawn when the frosty air seems so bright and sharp that it ought to ping, like fine crystal, when you snap it with a finger. The distinctness of the seasons is one of Baker County’s most fetching attributes, it seems to me. I don’t mean only that we can ex- pect the snow squall to give way to more palpable to me when I see clouds amassing in the southwest, and feel the heat intensify as it so of- ten does in those strange still mo- ments before a storm breaks and the the lilac blossom, or know that the willow boughs begin to thrash about. harsh yellow of the rabbitbrush will It is, appropriately enough, an elec- yield, come autumn, to the softer tric feeling, one that can make the fill- shade of the tamarack. ings in my teeth seem to vibrate, and I anticipate with at least as much the fine hairs on my arms to quiver. affinity the less tangible sensations as I have in recent years sadly sup- the seasons wane and wax. plemented skywatching, a trait I un- The July thunderstorm and its May doubtedly share with my ancestors counterpart might be closer to sib- dating back dozens of millennia, with lings than to cousins, in a meteoro- the ersatz, if effective, digital ver- logical sense. But they feel quite dif- sion. Which is to say that in addition ferent to me. to glancing up at the sky I also look I rather expect rain, or hail, during down at my cellphone and its cun- May. It is, after all, on average the wet- ning displays of Doppler radar. This test month hereabouts. is interesting, as technology can be. A midsummer storm, by contrast, But the yellow and red digital blobs often marks the only deviation amid that denote a storm — which remind a long spell of the hot, dry weather me of nothing so much as the rudi- that is the default in our arid cli- mentary graphics from an Atari 2600 mate, sheltered as we are by the twin game — can’t convey the acrid smell rain shadows of the Cascades and of ozone from lightning, can’t make the Elkhorns. your organs feel as though they’ve The sense of anticipation is much been jumbled the way a cannonade of Jayson Jacoby thunder, seeming to explode directly overhead, can do. The sheer power of nature can’t be captured in pixels. And although I recognize the wis- dom of seeking shelter when a storm approaches and would never suggest otherwise, I also look forward, among the many experiences that summer promises and usually delivers, to those moments when I stand in my yard, awaiting the coming of the tempest. No other season can replicate those interludes between the predictable heat of the afternoon and the brief downpour, when the sweat on my neck seems to turn to ice. No air conditioner can produce a draft of air so refreshing. And then the steaming aftermath as the sun rapidly regains its strength, leaving only the puddles as evidence that the storm, on its way to dampen places far beyond the horizon, was ever here. Jayson Jacoby is editor of the Baker City Herald.