A4 BAKER CITY Opinion WRITE A LETTER news@bakercityherald.com Saturday, October 29, 2022 • Baker City, Oregon EDITORIAL Caution with COVID-19 vaccine mandates W hether, and where, a COVID-19 vaccine could become mandatory for children to attend schools, is uncertain. It appears likely that the Centers for Disease Control will add the COVID-19 vaccine to the agency’s list of immunizations recommended for kids. The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices recently recom- mended that the CDC do so, and the federal agency usu- ally heeds the committee’s advice. But a CDC recommendation is not a mandate for states, or for school districts. In Oregon, a state law administered by the Oregon Health Authority determines which inoculations are re- quired for school attendance. In this state, however, the word “required” should be appended by an asterisk. A big asterisk. Parents can exempt their children from any, or all, vac- cines on Oregon’s list through a nonmedical exemption — which is to say, they don’t need an opinion from a doc- tor about why a child shouldn’t be immunized. But even though the current law basically makes it impossible for Oregon to actually exclude from schools those students who don’t take a particular vaccine, state officials should be cautious if they consider adding COVID-19 vaccines to the list of “required” vaccines, such as those for measles, mumps and whooping cough. The risk here is that the extreme feelings about COVID-19 vaccines — which are political fodder in a way other childhood immunizations are not — could result in fewer children getting vaccines they would oth- erwise have had. And worse still, vaccines that protect them against illnesses which, quite unlike COVID-19, actually pose a significant health risk for children. Indeed there’s probably already a “vaccine gap” in the U.S., although researchers attribute this not to skepticism about vaccines driven by the pandemic, but to reduced access to clinics, a situation that, fortunately, is largely in the past. Regardless, Oregon officials shouldn’t ignore the statis- tics that show parents don’t see the value in having their children vaccinated against a virus that poses a minus- cule threat for serious illness or death for that age group. (Of Oregon’s 8,600 deaths related to COVID-19, al- most 85% were people 60 or older. Just eight were chil- dren 9 or younger.) Statewide, 41.6% of children ages 5 to 11 have had one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, and 37% have had two doses. The percentage is much lower in Baker County — 12.3% of residents ages 5 to 11 have had one dose. There’s no compelling evidence that adding COVID-19 vaccines to the required list for Oregon stu- dents would help curb the spread of the virus or, more important, save lives. But it’s plausible to conclude that making COVID-19 vaccines “mandatory” for students — even accounting for Oregon’s regrettably lenient law allowing nonmedical exemptions — would contribute to a declining vaccina- tion rate for those other diseases which, thanks to high immunization rates, have been all but eradicated. Certainly, parents’ acceptance of COVID-19 vaccines for children to this point makes it abundantly clear that, if forced to decide, a significant percentage of parents would seek a nonmedical exemption were COVID-19 vaccines added to the list for school attendance. If some of those parents also eschewed other vaccines, for whatever reason, then the requirement could not be branded as anything but an abject failure — a decision that, instead of helping children, would be more likely to harm them. — Jayson Jacoby, Baker City Herald editor YOUR VIEWS New benches are great addition to Geiser-Pollman Park It is with much appreciation that this let- ter is written. Two years ago, we lost a very dear friend after a courageous battle with cancer. Many of us wanted to honor Mer- rie Hensley with a bench to commemorate our friendship. We worked with Lynette Perry, co-founder of the Baker City Events organization. Her vision was for donated benches to be placed around the bandstand in the Geiser-Pollman city park, a great way to increase seating for musical events and community activities while paying tribute to others. We are happy that the seven new metal benches are now in place. Because this was a team effort, we would like to thank the following: Lynette Perry for her dedication to this project; Natural Structures for the sturdy and well-designed benches; R.D. Mac for donating the concrete pads; and Robert Collins for his work to install the benches. As donors of a bench, we are happy that Merrie’s many friends and family will have a great place to remember her. We are grate- ful to those who volunteered their time and efforts in making this project come to fru- ition. What a beautiful park we are lucky to enjoy in so many ways, and now with a bench to honor a very special friend. Patty Bogart, Victoria Howard, Fawn Robertson, Erin Callahan, Heather Palmer Johnson, Kathy Saunders, Diane Davis, Jean Justus, Julie Stout, Theresa Dennis, Kathy Mitchell, Jerri Wickert, Barbara Haynes, Kelly Nichols Support Baker Rural Fire District tax levy On the Baker Rural Fire Protection Dis- trict (BRFPD) tax levy, an informed YES vote. Please support all your local rural fire districts by volunteering, supporting, and encouraging others to do so! All volunteer organizations are in the same situation: short on operating budgets, and more importantly, volunteers. The service to the patrons of any district is directly tied to the volunteers, equipment, and training available. This is paid for by the patrons’ tax dollars, and any grant money that can be acquired. In response to Mr. Johnson’s last two let- ters to the editor asking for no votes on the tax levy request — there was only a small sliver of accuracy: that being he was a mem- ber of the volunteer department for a period of time. The facts are: a few addresses were affected by station location change, one was just outside by a few feet, and couple ad- dresses were added into area. All affected addresses have been, and will continue to be provided service by the district. The depart- ment chief and training officers receive a small compensation for extra time spent to support the volunteers and patrons. The dis- trict is not required to, and does NOT, pay PERS. Personnel, volunteer or paid, levels fluctuate in any organization due to many factors. We have not had vast resignations, only two. BRFPD board and budget meetings are open to the public, and legal notices and publications of both are made as required by statute. The current board of directors is working the same as those before: provide the best possible resources, training, and services to the volunteers and patrons of the district with what we have to work with. The board decisions are based on all factors with the information available and in the best in- terest of Baker Rural Fire Protection District patrons. Please be informed with the facts, not negative opinions. Contact any BRFPD board member or volunteer to help make an informed decision.Vote YES for BRFPD tax levy request! Collin Kaseberg Baker County COLUMN Sliding on ice while still thinking about dust I was used to driving through it, spawn- ing noxious gritty clouds that I tried to stay ahead of, even if that necessitated a higher speed and a commensurately bumpier ride. And I was used to walking through it, pressed the brake pedal and immediately each step creating a smaller but still annoy- wished I hadn’t. ing version of those vehicular dust storms. Not quite so firmly, anyway. The transition, then, from dust and sweat Almost as soon as my boot touched the to ice and frigid fingers, was so sudden that I hard rubber square I heard the telltale scuff- felt a trifle woozy, as though I had just tum- ing sound of tires sliding on ice, felt the bled off a merry-go-round propelled by en- sudden and unsettling sensation that 4,500 ergetic and muscular children. pounds of vehicle was no longer rolling but On Friday, Oct. 21, the day the first great rather floating. storm of autumn arrived, the dust was Something my Toyota FJ Cruiser was de- still thick where I walked above Denny cidedly not designed to do. Creek, south of the Powder River near (Although its capacity to ford water, thanks the Burnt-Powder divide. The rain hadn’t to an elevated air intake, greatly exceeds the started, and although it was the first cloudy depth I’m likely to ever experiment with.) day in nearly a month, the air was still mild. Less than 48 hours earlier, driving the Less than two full days later my wife, same vehicle on a different road, I was fix- Lisa, and I were trudging through 8 inches ated not on ice but on what could be consid- of snow on the Elkhorn Crest Trail near ered its antithesis — dust. Anthony Lakes, so fresh even the squir- Dust, of course, is ubiquitous in summer rels, which are forever scurrying about, had on the unpaved roads around here. barely blemished the soft white surface. (Which is most of the roads, if your desti- The temperature was 24 degrees. nation is the woods or the rangelands.) The season’s first snow always seems a bit Nor is it rare for dust to persist into fall, jarring, to be sure. tamped down only by the first good rain. In our somewhat elevated piece of ground, This year, though, was anything but typ- far from the moderating influences of the ical. Pacific, the cold and the snow are inevitable. For the first 20 days, October was distin- We know this implicitly, but the differ- guished not so much by its complete lack of ence between knowing something, and then rainfall — which itself is not so unusual — slogging through 8 inches of it after months but by its consistent warmth. of sweltering, can’t help but seem new and On all of those days the temperature ex- different. ceeded 70 degrees at the Baker City Airport. The first day in spring when the sun Although many mornings were moder- shines with real authority, making a patch ately chilly, the air warmed each day with a of shade a welcome refuge for the first rapidity that reminded me more of late Au- time since before Halloween, has about it gust than October. For my afternoon strolls the same strange flavor, familiar but also about town I inevitably donned shorts and a largely forgotten over the long span of fri- T-shirt, attire I had become so accustomed gidity. to that the whereabouts of my sweatpants Our seasons are so distinct — a reflec- was something of a mystery, albeit one I had tion of their extremes, particularly in tem- no reason to try to solve. perature, with a few triple digit days likely I was also used to the dust. in summer and subzero mornings even Jayson Jacoby I more common in winter — that the transi- tion is apt to seem abrupt regardless of the reality. But this autumn was an especially dra- matic example, it seems to me. Although I would argue that, so far at least, there hasn’t actually been much of an autumn. The conditions that define that season — periods of sunny but cool weather inter- rupted by benevolent storms that lay the dust and perhaps briefly whiten the peaks of the Elkhorn and Wallowas — have so far been absent. No, in 2022 we leaped from a long-linger- ing summer straight to a fair approximation of December. I resolved to myself not to begrudge this jarring jump, lest my incessant whining these past several weeks about summer’s per- sistence brand me a hypocrite, if only in my own mind. But during those treacherous few min- utes as we descended the steepest grades below Anthony Lakes, I regretted, if not the weather, then at least that our Cruiser was still rolling on its mud-terrain tires. (Although, as I mentioned, it was sliding as much as it was rolling.) These tires, with their aggressive pattern of blocks with lots of space between, are de- signed to fling mud away before it coats the tread and leaves your rig foundering. They are quite effective at this. But on ice these tires, with their smooth, sipeless tread, are about as useful as drag-rac- ing slicks. The studded tires are still stacked in the corner of a shed. Where, appropriately enough, they’ve been gathering dust during these months when my only interest in ice was making sure I crammed enough cubes into my water bottle to make sure it didn’t turn tepid before I slaked my thirst. █ Jayson Jacoby is editor of the Baker City Herald. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR • We welcome letters on any issue of public in- terest. Customer complaints about specific busi- nesses will not be printed. • The Baker City Herald will not knowingly print false or misleading claims. However, we cannot verify the accuracy of all statements in letters. • Writers are limited to one letter every 15 days. and legal reasons. • The writer must include an address and phone number (for verification only). Letters that do not in- clude this information cannot be published. Mail: To the Editor, Baker City Herald, • Letters will be edited for brevity, grammar, taste Email: news@bakercityherald.com P.O. Box 807, Baker City, OR 97814