B2 THE OBSERVER & BAKER CITY HERALD • THURSDAY, DECEMBER 1, 2022 Reviews Continued from B1 Josh Rindfleisch/Wallowa County Chieftain The rental shop at Ferguson Ridge in 2022 has a new owner. The shop had been owned and operated by Charlie Kissinger since 2006. Now Adrianne Gass, a professional ski patroller, has secured the bindings. Ferguson Ridge to pass the ski wax to new shop owner Ski patroller takes over shop from longtime operator Kissinger Josh Rindfleisch/Wallowa County Chieftain With assistance, Adrianne Gass lights a fire to make it comfortable for customers the first day of business. Josh Rindfleisch/Wallowa County Chieftain The snow has arrived in Novemer 2022 and the slopes are open at Ferguson Ridge ski area in Wallowa County. said it was bittersweet to let it go. “The ski shop has changed a lot since I bought it,” he said. “For whatever reason we have a lot of young families who chose to rent their skis instead of buy them, partly because there’s no one around here to buy them from, I think. It’s become a pop- ular way to go for a lot of fami- lies, just to rent skis. As the kids grow up they can just change skis instead of having to buy new ones. It’s an economical thing for families to do.” Running the shop has been “kind of a lifestyle thing for me,” he said, “but it’s every weekend from Thanksgiving until the first of April, so it will be nice not to have to be tied down to it.” Kissinger said he has always enjoyed Fergi and liked watch- ing the kids grow up from sea- son to season. “It’s been a lot of fun, and I enjoyed it a lot,” he said. “The previous owner was trying to sell his business and there wasn’t anyone to do the ski shop there, so I told him I’d do it at least un- til we found someone else that wanted to do it, and I ended up doing it quite a while.” Kissinger said that even though he won’t be running the shop, he’ll continue to help out and do other things on the hill as usual. He is confident that Gass and her family will be able to build on the shop’s success. Gass said she wants to do more in terms of binding testing, getting equipment tuned and waxed more regularly, sending it out in better condition and gen- erally upgrading the fleet. “It’s a process,” she said. “Get rid of some of the old stuff, and get a few new things and con- tinue that.” She believes that will require some capital. She hopes to earn a little profit this season and use it to pay for improvements next season. “I’m trying to be incremen- tal,” she said. “It’s not quite how I envisioned it this year, but I will take it one step at a time and keep the upgrades going, as Charlie was, to keep the inven- tory current but not enough so we have to raise prices.” Oregon climbing but still lag national average BY MIKE ROGOWAY The Oregonian Oregonians have histori- cally earned less than people in other parts of the country, but over the past decade the state has narrowed the gap consid- erably. Oregon’s per capita personal income was $61,596 last year, according to a new study by Molly Hendrickson, an econo- mist with the Oregon Employ- ment Department. That’s 96% of the national average. Orego- nians made only 88% of the na- tional average in 2011. Personal income consists of earnings — the wages and sal- aries from employment — plus investment income and gov- ernment payments. It recently has included the pandemic stimulus checks that continued into last year. Oregon’s personal income grew by 8.2% last year, accord- ing to Hendrickson, tied with Washington for the 10th fastest growth in the nation. The state ranked 21st overall in per capi- tal personal income. line reviews are fake, according to the World Economic Forum. That may not sound like much, but the organization estimates that those fake re- views cost $152 billion in online spending annually. — Daniel Castro, director of the And even if the fake reviews Center for Data Innovation don’t cost consumers directly, they can influence purchasers “We think it’s likely to be a who may choose another prod- problem elsewhere,” Bonta said uct based on a negative review, in a phone interview. “I can’t to the tune of $791 billion in comment on other investiga- e-commerce spending in the tions, but I don’t think this is United States alone, the group a phenomenon isolated to just said. Roomster.” “It’s a real problem for both In a statement to news or- consumers and business,” said ganizations, Roomster said the Daniel Castro, director of the allegations are not true and are Center for Data Innovation, an example of “overreach” by which published a report in the FTC. September on the issue. “It can Bonta said he thinks Califor- cause financial losses, bad pur- nia’s unfair competition laws chases and physical injury.” For and regulations are sufficient example, if a device that is sup- but said the FTC’s decision to posed to protect against slippery seek comment on proposed surfaces fails, it can cause injury, new, tougher federal regulations has merit. “The more watch- he said. Castro’s study found that 49% dogs on the block the more reg- ulations and laws on this, the of American consumers trust better,” he said. online reviews as much as rec- Rich Cleland, assistant di- ommendations from friends rector of the FTC’s Division of and family, and another 28% Advertising Practices, said the put just as much value on them agency was looking at new rules as articles written by experts. to “shore up our potential to se- “The problem with fake re- cure civil penalties.” views is there’s a lot of incentive He said the department part- to cheat,” he said, adding that nered with the half dozen states people can use fake reviews to build up their own businesses or in the Roomster case because states are able to obtain mone- to put down a competitor. tary damages — a consequence Sites that are in the business of “selling trust,” such as Yelp or taken away from the feds last year in a U.S. Supreme Court Google, “want to be a trusted case. source,” Castro said. Also last year, the “But there’s only so FTC put more than much a platform can 700 companies on do when they are up notice that if they against people trying used false endorse- to cheat the system. 49% ments, the agency That’s where state of consumers trust was ready to take laws can make a dif- online reviews action. The FTC has ference.” as much as been hamstrung, Few states have recommendations Cleland said, be- laws or regulations from friends and cause last year’s high specifically target- family court ruling in AMG ing online reviews, 28% Capital Management he said. LLC v. FTC stripped Consum- value them as much as articles written by the agency of its abil- er-friendly states, experts ity to seek monetary such as California, damages in cases in Colorado, Illinois 700 which it sued. and Massachusetts, companies warned use their broad con- last year by the FTC Swift action sumer protection about using false Review platforms laws to go after mis- endorsements such as Yelp, Goo- creants, while many gle, Amazon and other states are silent Trustpilot have mechanisms on the issue, he said, or have to try to cut down on fake re- weak laws. views, representatives of several The Federal Trade Commis- companies said. sion is considering new rules Julianne Rowe, a Yelp spokes- to address the problem. In the meantime, it is teaming up with person, one of the most popu- lar review platforms, said in a states to file lawsuits on behalf phone interview that the com- of consumers, since the federal pany uses both technological agency cannot seek monetary and human resources to weed relief on its own. out fake reviews. The company Tougher rules works to track down IP ad- In August, half a dozen states, dresses, looks for multiple re- including California, Colorado, views from the same person or group, and takes into account Florida, Illinois, Massachusetts flags from other consumers and New York, and the FTC pointing to possible illicit re- sued the online apartment and views, she said. roommate site Roomster and Yelp, she said, prohibits re- its owners, for allegedly pay- views that the company has ing for fake reviews to bolster solicited. “What it looks for are its reviews and listings. The reviews that may be less reli- suit alleges the site also charges able, users that are less active, customers for access to sham unhelpful rants and raves, con- apartment listings. The suit is flicts of interest and employees, pending in U.S. District Court friends or family,” she said. Only in New York. 70% of submitted reviews are Recently, the FTC an- nounced it is exploring tougher published, she said. Amazon announced in Octo- rules to combat fake reviews, ber that it had filed suit against the suppression of negative re- 10 American companies, as well views and payments for posi- as firms in Spain and Italy, seek- tive reviews and served notice ing to stop the sources of fake in the Federal Register that it reviews. is soliciting public comments Google said its policies on the proposed rule through “clearly state reviews must be January. based on real experiences and California Attorney General information, and we closely Rob Bonta said his state joined monitor 24/7 for fraudulent the suit against Roomster be- content, using a combination of cause it is “facing a housing cri- people and technology. When sis out of proportion. If there’s we find scammers trying to mis- an app, they (consumers) are lead people, we take swift action going to trust it … especially ranging from content removal when they are seeing all these to account suspension and even letters of support.” But he said litigation.” it’s not just about Roomster or apartment platforms. By the numbers BY JOSH RINDFLEISCH Wallowa County Chieftain FERGUSON RIDGE — The ski area Ferguson Ridge, referred to locally as “Fergi,” has a new owner in the rental shop. The shop had been owned and operated by Charlie Kissinger since 2006. Now Adri- anne Gass, a professional ski pa- troller, has secured the bindings. “I just want to keep the low- key, family-friendly vibe of Fergi and have the shop continue to support this community. I want to have quality, affordable equipment and work toward having a shop that can take care of most, if not all, of their ski and boarding needs,” she ex- plained. Gass and her family moved to the area about six years ago. Gass and her husband, Perry, are both skiers and previously worked at a resort in Tahoe, where they first met. She was in ski patrol there and he did lift maintenance. Perry grew up in Wallowa County and ended up returning when a job opened in Joseph at the the Wallowa Lake Tramway, where he had worked in his youth. Gass first heard about Kissinger when she was at a party telling someone she wanted to tune skis. Someone said she should talk to Kissinger. “I called him up, and I was like, ‘Hey, I want to work for you.’” Kissinger was noncom- mittal at first, so she decided to “just show up and hang out and help him. I sort of just pushed my way in there, I guess. For a while I didn’t know if he wanted me to hang around, but eventu- ally he didn’t seem to mind too much.” Kissinger has spent many years operating the shop and “It’s a real problem for both consumers and business,. It can cause financial losses, bad purchases and physical injury.” Oregon incomes have been rising sharply for several years, though economists aren’t ex- actly clear on why. An influx of professional workers moving here from other states is surely one fac- tor, as is the state’s growing tech sector. The poverty rate has dropped steadily in the popu- lous Portland area, reflecting low unemployment and rising wages — especially at the lower ends of the wage scale. (Poverty rates, however, are set at a na- tional scale and have little bear- ing on affordability in a high- cost market like Portland.) Stimulus payments inflated personal incomes last year, as did wealthy people selling stock to lock in gains on Wall Street and to avoid prospective fed- eral tax hikes on the rich (tax increases that Congress did not ultimately pass). Oregon’s outlook for income growth isn’t as rosy over the next few years, according to a new forecast from state econ- omists. They expect a mild recession beginning next sum- mer, costing the state 24,000 jobs and pushing unemploy- ment up to 5.4%. (Oregon’s jobless rate is currently around 4.1%.) And with stimulus payments behind us, and stocks in bear market territory, upper income Oregonians have less incentive to cash out their investments. Forecasters expect just 2.4% personal income growth in 2023, with growth climbing to around 5% for the few years after that. That’s still relatively healthy by historical standards, reflecting optimism that the coming downturn will be short and soft. “The recession is expected to be mild,” forecasters wrote, “and personal income is ex- pected to remain stable despite job losses.” Are you running an outdated Windows Operating System? We’ll help you avoid critical issues by installing Windows 11! Computer not running as fast as when it was new? Let us install lightning-fast solid state drive!