A4 BAKER CITY Opinion WRITE A LETTER news@bakercityherald.com Saturday, December 3, 2022 • Baker City, Oregon EDITORIAL Will Legislature scuttle mortgage interest deduction? T he mortgage interest deduction has been popular with homeowners. It has been beloved by real estate agents. Economists dislike it. Many Democrats in the Legis- lature have had their eye on changing it. And although Gov.-elect Tina Kotek didn’t say she wanted it gone in campaign stop after campaign stop, she has been willing to look at changes to it, too. It does seem like the Legislature is gearing up to make changes to tax policy, tax rates and tax exemptions. On Monday, Nov. 28, an interim legislative committee kicked off the first of three meetings on revenue in Oregon. Our advice: Don’t watch that meeting. Lots of useful historical background. But dry. Little hint of what the Legislature might do. If you were placing bets, a pretty sure one would be leg- islation to change or do away with the mortgage interest deduction in the next session. You may like your mortgage interest deduction if you are lucky enough to be purchasing a home. Helps keep your taxes down. It may encourage people to buy homes. But the arguments against it are many, consistent and may be winning. According to the language in Oregon law, taxes are supposed to be things like fair, not regressive, evenly dis- tributed and efficient. The mortgage interest deduction fails to tick some of those boxes in some ways, as a state report laid out. Most of the benefit goes to higher-income taxpayers. That’s because generally you get more tax benefit from buying a more expensive home. Taxpayers in more urban counties benefit more. Minorities benefit less because they are less likely to own a home. The argument is it also helps to drive up the cost of housing, because of the presumed benefit created by the deduction. And it is also a lot of money. The mortgage interest de- duction is estimated to cost the state about $1 billion in foregone revenue from 2021-2032. So, is it any wonder legislators are looking at it? For instance, one proposal has been to eliminate it or reduce it and use the money to help more people with housing. You could argue that there are other more pressing issues with Oregon’s tax system. There is dramatic vari- ation in tax rates for historical reasons among counties and among cities. The interplay between tax rates, Mea- sure 5 and Measure 50 created other oddness in prop- erty taxes paid between even similar homes. Oregon’s corporate activity tax is a pyramiding tax structure on businesses that brought in a lot more money for educa- tion $1.4 billion in 2021, but just look at Oregon’s K-12 education performance. Not quite where we would want it to be. Out of all the possibilities for changes, it may be the mortgage interest deduction that will be debated. Tell your legislator if you want it to stay or go. █ 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. CONTACT YOUR PUBLIC OFFICIALS President Joe Biden: The White House, 1600 Pennsylvania Ave., Washington, D.C. 20500; 202-456-1111; to send comments, go to www.whitehouse.gov. U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley: D.C. office: 313 Hart Senate Office Building, U.S. Senate, Washington, D.C., 20510; 202-224-3753; fax 202-228-3997. Portland office: One World Trade Center, 121 S.W. Salmon St. Suite 1250, Portland, OR 97204; 503- 326-3386; fax 503-326-2900. Baker City office, 1705 Main St., Suite 504, 541-278- 1129; merkley.senate.gov. U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden: D.C. office: 221 Dirksen Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C., 20510; 202-224-5244; fax 202-228-2717. La Grande office: 105 Fir St., No. 210, La Grande, OR 97850; 541-962-7691; fax, 541-963-0885; wyden. senate.gov. U.S. Rep. Cliff Bentz (2nd District): D.C. office: 1239 Longworth House Office Building, Washington, D.C., 20515, 202-225-6730; fax 202-225-5774. Medford office: 14 N. Central Avenue Suite 112, Medford, OR 97850; Phone: 541-776- 4646; fax: 541-779-0204; Ontario office: 2430 S.W. Fourth Ave., No. 2, Ontario, OR 97914; Phone: 541-709-2040. bentz.house.gov. Oregon Gov. Kate Brown: 254 State Capitol, Salem, OR 97310; 503-378-3111; www.governor.oregon.gov. Oregon State Treasurer Tobias Read: oregon.treasurer@ost.state.or.us; 350 Winter St. NE, Suite 100, Salem OR 97301-3896; 503-378-4000. Oregon Attorney General Ellen F. Rosenblum: Justice Building, Salem, OR 97301-4096; 503-378-4400. Oregon Legislature: Legislative documents and information are available online at www.leg.state.or.us. State Sen. Lynn Findley (R-Ontario): Salem office: 900 Court St. N.E., S-403, Salem, OR 97301; 503-986-1730. Email: Sen.LynnFindley@oregonlegislature.gov State Rep. Mark Owens (R-Crane): Salem office: 900 Court St. N.E., H-475, Salem, OR 97301; 503-986-1460. Email: Rep.MarkOwens@oregonlegislature.gov OTHER VIEWS Supreme Court should separate sleazy lobbying from criminal kind By STEPHEN L. CARTER The U.S. Supreme Court heard oral argument Monday in the most important case you’ve never heard of. Although Per- coco v. United States has gen- erated few headlines, its reach could alter the way businesses deal with regulators and legis- lators. The case arises from the 2018 conviction of one Joseph Per- coco, who took a break from his job in Governor Andrew Cuo- mo’s office to run Cuomo’s re- election campaign. During his time away, a company having trouble with state labor regula- tors offered him $35,000 if he could, let us say, make the prob- lems disappear. Percoco placed a few calls to key officials, the reg- ulators backed off, and the com- pany was happy. And Percoco then returned to his senior role in state government after Cuomo won his new term. Sure, sounds a wee bit grafty. But the question the justices agreed to consider isn’t whether Percoco is a shining example of ethical probity. The question is whether he violated a federal statute aimed at punishing pub- lic officials who take bribes. The jury found he did, and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit rejected his defense that the law didn’t apply to him be- cause when he took the money and placed the calls he was, tech- nically, a private citizen. The Second Circuit’s opin- ion makes fun reading. The text abounds with references to “The Sopranos” and schemes to “keep the ziti flowing.” But the relevant issue isn’t whether Percoco was a sleazy character who hatched sleazy plans. The relevant issue is whether those sleazy plans violated a murky 1988 congres- sional amendment that prohib- its participation in “a scheme or artifice to deprive another of the intangible right of honest ser- vices” — what’s become known as “honest services fraud.” Percoco argues that this lan- guage is so broad that it could apply to a huge number of peo- ple, including lobbyists. To show the influence top lobbyists have, Percoco’s brief cites a 2012 study which found that lobbyists whose key Senators leave office lose a whopping $182,000 in an- nual revenue. The Justice Department re- jects the analogy, arguing that none of these well-connected lobbyists function, even infor- mally, as public officials. That would be reasonable, except that the test for who functions as a public official is so murky — a major factor is whether govern- ment employees feel obliged to treat the lobbyist’s requests as commands. There are plenty of lobbyists so powerful that the lowliest bureaucrat trembles to cross them. Consider the very real case of a legislator convicted under the statute after voting the way a lobbyist urged. In upholding the conviction, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit explained that even though en- tertaining legislators was part of the job, here the lobbyist — who was also convicted — had enter- tained the legislator too lavishly. How much is too much? Read the court’s guidance for yourself: [A] lobbyist does not com- mit honest services fraud ... if his ‘intent was limited to the cul- tivation of business or political friendship.’ He commits those violations ‘only if instead or in addition, there is an intent to cause the recipient to alter her of- ficial acts.’ This guidance fails to guide. It seems to say that a lobbyist is innocent as long as the lobbyist doesn’t lobby. This is Percoco’s point, and it’s a good one. Whatever one thinks of his conduct, the way the lower courts have construed the stat- ute leaves prosecutors far more leeway than Congress likely in- tended. Critics who call the case a classic example of prosecutorial overreach aren’t entirely wrong. The true problem isn’t the prosecutors but the statute it- self. Put Percoco aside and think instead about the rest of us. A minimum democratic fairness demands that crimes be spelled out with crystalline clarity. When we interact with the government that serves us, we should not be left to guess whether we’re break- ing the law. █ Stephen L. Carter is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. A professor of law at Yale University, he is author, most recently, of “Invisible: The Story of the Black Woman Lawyer Who Took Down America’s Most Powerful Mobster.” COLUMN Marveling at America’s return to the moon A merica is going back to the moon and I marvel, anew, at what our na- tion can accomplish when it sets for itself immensely difficult but straightfor- ward goals. As I watched the Space Launch System rocket rise above the launchpad at Flor- ida’s Kennedy Space Center on Nov. 15 I felt something like the emotion I do when I stand, just before the opening notes or words of “The Star-Spangled Banner” ring out, and place my right palm on my chest. I don’t suppose any endeavor is immune to the political discord that so often afflicts our national conversations. But a task such as NASA’s Artemis lunar program, although daunting in its mechan- ical complexity, is in another way blessedly simple. It either works or it does not. When the countdown reaches zero the details that dominate so many other topics and so often lead us astray — how we feel, in particular — are meaningless. The rocket either fires or it does not. As with all machines it knows nothing of political affiliations or personal beliefs about things for which there is no absolute answer, but only opinions. The only relevant question, when it comes to the rocket, is whether the people who designed and built the thing did their work properly. That alone determines whether the rocket flies true. And the same holds true for the later Ar- temis missions, including the one that will, as early as 2024, bring astronauts to an orbit around the moon for the first time since the final Apollo mission in 1972. Perhaps only a year later, in 2025, Amer- icans will also land on the lunar surface and plunge their boots into the dust that Neil Armstrong and the 11 who followed him Jayson Jacoby made so famous more than half a century ago. Artemis is not universally praised, to be sure. But then neither was Apollo, despite the widespread notion that America’s race to the moon against the Soviet Union was an anomalous example of national unity during the 1960s, a decade marked by strife over the civil rights movement and the Vietnam war. One of the chief disagreements regard- ing our space program — albeit one largely confined to scientists and academics, and not shared by the general public — is whether or not we ought to have astronauts at all. Some NASA critics argued then — and not without logic — that unmanned space- craft can accomplish the scientific goals of exploration for considerably less money. Sending humans into space, and keeping them alive in a place utterly inimical to life, is inevitably more complicated, and expen- sive, than flinging machines out of Earth’s atmosphere. This complaint persists. Alex Roland, an historian from Duke University, recently told the Associated Press, following the Nov. 15 launch, that “in all these years, no evidence has emerged to justify the investment we have made in human spaceflight — save the prestige in- volved in this conspicuous consumption.” Roland’s implication — that NASA is in effect letting vanity influence what should be a purely scientific endeavor — ignores the reality that Artemis, like Apollo and Gemini and Mercury before it, are the product of human curiosity and ingenuity. I believe the value of those earlier pro- grams — and in particular the six Apollo missions that put 12 astronauts on the moon — would be nothing like as great as it was had the rockets carried only ma- chines. Sensors can measure all sorts of variables with a precision people can never match. Machines can collect samples of lunar dust and rocks, can take fine photographs, can tell us how hot and cold it gets, how strong the pull of gravity is. But no device can describe to us, back on Earth, what it is like to see our planet rise above the lunar horizon. Or what it’s like to walk on the moon. These observations might have little sci- entific value, being inherently subjective. But to the Americans whose tax dollars pay for these missions, the words of an as- tronauts resonate more powerfully than a column of data ever could. Machines can gather that data. But only humans can, in effect, represent the tens of millions of us who will never leave our planet — only astronauts can re- turn from their voyage and tell us how it was, in ways we can understand. We recognized the irreplaceable role of the astronaut in the 1960s. And I’m gratified that, despite the nearly inconceivable advances in technology that have happened since the final Apollo mis- sion, we continue not only to acknowledge the human role but to celebrate it. For me — and I believe for most of us — America won’t truly return to the moon until one of us actually steps onto the lunar surface. I hope the astronauts are already working out what they’ll say in that most monumen- tal of moments. █ Jayson Jacoby is editor of the Baker City Herald.