Opinion A4 BAKER CITY WRITE A LETTER news@bakercityherald.com Saturday, November 19, 2022 • Baker City, Oregon EDITORIAL Addressing Morrow County’s water emergency T he news that the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality will restructure the composition of a key committee focused on nitrate pollution in local drinking water is a good move, but what impact the changes will be remains a mystery. The DEQ appointed new members to the Lower Uma- tilla Basin Groundwater Management Area and triggered a move to restructure how the board operates last week. The focus of the group is to find out what is creating the high levels of nitrates in the groundwater and then craft recommendations on how to lower those levels. The groundwater pollution saga lingered for decades, and last summer Morrow County declared an emer- gency to battle contaminated drinking water. The county — with some state help — has worked on this challenge since then. Meanwhile, environmental groups petitioned the Environmental Protection Agency to assist, and the federal agency warned the state it might intervene. The changes to the committee are certainly welcome and every little bit helps in this situation, but in the end, what, exactly, are the modifications to the board mem- bership and its mission going to do to reduce nitrates? What will the changes do to address the pollution situation? Umatilla County Commissioner Dan Dorran said that people would look back on these changes and “say that we kicked the football off and started the game today. We’ve only been practicing for the last 30 years. Now we are doing it for real.” It’s hard to make out what Dorran meant. The commit- tee has been in existence for a while now. There should have never been any “practicing” regarding groundwater contamination. Changes to the board membership and its mission are fine, but they’re essentially administrative modifications and don’t do anything to fix what has become a world- class debacle for Oregon and local counties. The hue and cry will be that local, regional and state leaders and officials are working hard to fix the pollu- tion issue. We hope that is true. So far, though, there hasn’t been the kind of speed and decisiveness one would expect. We hope the new board members prove to be crucial, and we are sure their intentions are good. Yet what voters really should be able to see is a very methodical blueprint regarding how county and state leaders are going to solve this problem. Anything less is window dressing and simply misses the whole point. █ 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. COLUMN Update GI Bill for the online era BY SHANNON RIGGS E ach year, more than 700,000 veterans rely on the GI Bill to pay for their education, but those who pur- sue online degrees don’t receive their benefits in full. We must show veteran students pursuing online degrees that the coun- try appreciates their service by asking Congress to address this oversight. GI Bill benefits include a monthly housing allowance based on the college’s ZIP code. Students are allotted more fund- ing in cities and towns where housing is more expensive, and less where housing is less costly. When veterans pursue degrees online, however, the housing al- lowance is reduced to half the national average, regardless of location or housing costs. At Oregon State University, where I serve as the executive di- rector of our Ecampus, the 493 veteran students who pursued their degrees online full-time with us in 2021 faced a short- age of $871.50 per month. (The shortage for part-time students is pro-rated, so a student taking three classes instead of four per semester would receive 80% of the housing allowance). If the GI Bill was set up this way under the assumption that online students have more flex- ibility, more ability to work and less financial need, our univer- sity data shows otherwise. At Oregon State, distance students actually have greater financial need: 44% of our online students are eligible for Pell Grants, com- pared with 25% of our on-cam- pus students. Further, students who need to balance work and school — a primary reason students pursue degrees online — aren’t eligible for as many financial aid re- sources as full-time students. The quality of online degree programs has increased substan- tially since the GI Bill law was up- dated in 2008. As early as 2010, an authoritative U.S. Department of Education report showed “no significant difference” in learning outcomes between online and in-person courses. More recently, a 2019 study confirmed that on- line learning is as effective as face- to-face education in the class- room. Many education scholars believe that course design, faculty and class size are more import- ant factors than whether college students are learning remotely or not. Statistics from the National Center for Education highlight steady growth in student enroll- ment in online courses, with the COVID-19 pandemic accelerat- ing that growth. More college stu- dents are adult learners choosing online degree programs to stay at their jobs and avoid relocating their families. Withholding half the housing allowance for online courses doesn’t make sense be- cause, whether attending on cam- pus or not, veteran students still have housing expenses. The rationale behind the GI Bill was to help veterans tran- sition from military service to civilian life. By all accounts, it has been highly successful in the more than 75 years since it was signed into law. The GI Bill more than doubled the num- ber of college graduates in the United States while helping to educate millions of veterans. But, unfortunately, it has fallen behind the times. Online education is here to stay, and lawmakers should update the GI Bill accordingly. █ Shannon Riggs is a public voices fellow of the Op Ed Project and the executive director of academic programs and learning innovation at Oregon State University Ecampus. This column was produced by Progressive Perspectives, which is run by The Progressive magazine and distributed by Tribune News Service. OTHER VIEWS Moon mission could spur science N Editorial from The St. Louis Post-Dispatch: ASA’s Artemis program is edging toward a re- turn to the moon — this time to stay — with its suc- cessful launch this week of an uncrewed rocket. Some Ameri- cans looking at the Earth-bound problems all around us might reasonably ask: Why? The an- swer is not just about the scien- tific discovery that a permanent presence on the moon promises but also the much-needed sense of national purpose it could re- capture. Humanity’s first climb to the moon began, rhetorically at least, in September 1962, when Pres- ident John F. Kennedy defined the purpose of the endeavor: “We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things not because they are easy, but be- cause they are hard.” Just seven years later, Neil Armstrong be- came the first human to set foot on an extraterrestrial surface. The motivation for that as- tounding feat was, first and fore- most, geopolitical. Beating the Soviet Union to the moon was another front in the Cold War, one that united Americans. The significant scientific discovery and spinoff technology that the moon missions spurred — in- cluding computer-miniaturiza- tion capabilities that ultimately made possible the laptop or cellphone on which you may be reading this editorial right now — were almost incidental. There’s no Cold War driving things this time, which necessi- tates a little more explanation as to why America is returning to what it is, after all, a large cold rock in space. First, there is the science and the basic human drive for exploration — both worthy ends in themselves. The ultimate goal, with private com- panies providing heavy input, is to establish a permanent moon base as a jumping-off point for exploration of Mars and beyond. Moon rocks and soil samples collected during the Apollo mis- sions added immensely to scien- tists’ understanding of the origins of the moon, Earth and the rest of the solar system. Modern teb- vsting methods, more advanced than what was available half a century ago, could add to that understanding, especially if astro- nauts are able to conduct exper- iments on the moon itself while living there. That possibility has grown with the discovery a few years ago that water is trapped within the moon’s seemingly barren sur- face. If it can be extracted and processed, it could provide not only drinking water for astro- nauts, but breathable air and even hydrogen rocket fuel. Although there is no more Soviet Union to race with, geo- political factors remain. China is planning to build and staff a lu- nar base in the coming decades. Allowing a global adversary that kind of scientific and strategic foothold — in orbit right above us — would be not just disheart- ening but potentially dangerous. Finally, there is the unifying effect that a return to the moon could have on a deeply divided America. That cold rock in space brought Americans together once before. We need that kind of shared mission again. COLUMN Fishing contest scandal removes scales from our eyes T he slimy side of professional, high- stakes angling has at last been ex- posed. Not that any reasonably observant person, whether or not experienced in the ways of the rod and the reel, needed to have the scales removed from their eyes. Fishing, famously, is a hobby inextrica- bly connected to a, well, malleable defini- tion of truth. The term “fish story” is almost synon- ymous with exaggeration. But of course the key element to these tales is the one that’s always missing — the fish. These stories would be meaningless if there were an actual fish involved, a tan- gible chunk of flesh and fins that can tin- kered with. The whole point is that the fish in question is the “one that got away.” Its absence affords the angler consid- erable latitude in describing the circum- stances. But if you bring a real fish into the mat- ter you had best be prepared for scrutiny. Especially when tens of thousands of The first fish, based on its length, ought to have weighed about 4 pounds. But when tournament organizers put it on the scale, the figure was 8 pounds. A couple slashes of a fillet knife revealed dollars are at stake. the sort of subterfuge I would have ex- Two competitors at a Sept. 30 tour- pected from a devious child of moderate nament in Ohio — Jacob Runyan, 42, intelligence. and Chase Cominski, 35 — were either The anglers had crammed several lead oblivious to this, or else so arrogant that weights down the fish’s throat. they assumed they were above reproach. This, as I suggested, is hardly a subtle One thing they absolutely are not is tactic. clever. But it is effective for the purpose, what The pair, who were in line to pocket with the density of lead. $29,000, were instead disqualified from Except the investigators yanked some- the Lake Erie Walleye Trail tournament thing else from the carcass that also didn’t when officials found that the five fish they belong — fillets from a different walleye. had netted were, to indulge in euphe- On one hand this seems to suggest a mism, irregular. certain level of cunning quite absent in the Earlier this month the pair were in- lead weight addition. Larding the fish with dicted on felony charges of cheating, at- fillets had the advantage of being of pisca- tempted grand theft, possessing criminal torial origin rather than chunks of heavy tools, and misdemeanor charges of un- metal. lawfully owning wild animals. (Fish in many waters, including some I would like to think these are the first around here, sadly do contain potentially people to face that exact roster of charges. hazardous levels of another toxic metal, But given the apparently limitless ability of mercury.) humans to cheat, I doubt it. But that metal is carried in their tissue Jayson Jacoby and thus invisible, and in tiny amounts that, so far as I can tell, have no appreciable effect on their weight.) Using fillets to plump up a substandard walleye ought to leave the fish feeling nat- ural, should anyone decide to run a suspi- cious finger along the belly. Balls of lead, by contrast, are apt to catch the attention of even someone not intimate with the physical attributes of the typical walleye. Also, fillets wouldn’t set off a metal de- tector. I can only conclude that Runyan and Cominski lacked confidence that the sur- reptitious walleye fillets would be suffi- cient to ensure they won the tournament, and that they decided the lead weights, although potentially more risky, were nec- essary. I haven’t found a detailed accounting of the event that answers what seems to me a key question — would the pair have won had they kept the lead weights in their tackle boxes and relied solely on the fillets? Regardless, it seems obvious that, like so many cheaters, these anglers simply went overboard, so to speak. I doubt their walleye would have at- tracted undue scrutiny had the fish been only modestly heavier than typical given their length. But loading the fish with enough lead to double their expected weight was all but certain to expose the charlatans. They could hardly have been unaware that the tournament officials knew their way around a walleye, after all. One of the news stories I read about the case included a possible answer to my question. An affidavit in the criminal case noted that police in a different part of Ohio had investigated allegations that Runyan and Cominski had cheated in an earlier wall- eye tournament. According to a police report, the pros- ecutor decided there wasn’t enough evi- dence to charge the pair with a crime. The story, unfortunately, doesn’t men- tion whether the two won that tourna- ment. But I’m guessing that if they employed lead in any fashion in that event, it was for a legitimate purpose. █ Jayson Jacoby is editor of the Baker City Herald.