A6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 2021 EDITORIALS & OPINIONS AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER Heidi Wright Gerry O’Brien Richard Coe Publisher Editor Editorial Page Editor Be transparent about Bend’s police bodycam videos W hen Mike Krantz began as Bend police chief in August, the estimate was it would be 18 months before Bend police officers would have bodycams. That was too long for Krantz. He and his staff worked together, and now, they may be implemented this summer. Chemical irritants. Chokeholds. Police discipline and training. Changing when and if police should be sent out on calls. Those issues and more get debated about law en- forcement. But communities, polit- ical leaders and police tend to agree about the need for body cameras. They provide added transparency and accountability for police and the public. Krantz did make a good point Friday when he was interviewed by Bulletin Editor Gerry O’Brien on Facebook. Cameras “don’t tell every- thing,” he said. They only show what they show. Sometimes what you want to see will be out of frame. But he wants them, and thanks to his efforts, the work of his department and Bend city councilors providing the money, Bend will have them. There are going to be added costs. It will cost the department $300,000 to $400,000 a year to properly store the video. Krantz also asked for two employees. One would handle re- cords requests. Another would be responsible for keeping the 120 or so cameras and other equipment run- ning right. Krantz said department policy will not be that the cameras must be on all the time. He mentioned several situations when it will be de- partment policy to have them on: when officers have reasonable sus- picion or probable cause, during in- terviews, when they are interacting with people in a mental health crisis, Krantz did make a good point Friday when he was interviewed by Bulletin Editor Gerry O’Brien on Facebook. Cameras “don’t tell everything,” he said. They only show what they show. Sometimes what you want to see will be out of frame. But he wants them, and thanks to his efforts, the work of his department and Bend city councilors providing the money, Bend will have them. BY GREG HARRIS Special to The Washington Post traffic stops and if what seems like a routine contact turns adversarial. That is not necessarily an exhaus- tive list. He said it will be optional at other times, such as when police are transporting people who are not in custody. What’s not clear yet is how public records requests for police videos will work. What will it cost? How long will it take to get a video? We urge the Bend department to track and release statistics, including the length of time it takes to release videos, costs charged and any deni- als of requests. We also would like to see records kept of officers who fail to comply with department policy for when cameras should be on. And we urge the Bend City Council to re- view the department’s performance with the new technology and on re- cords requests. Should stimulus end up increasing your state taxes? T he federal stimulus checks helped a lot of Oregonians out when they needed it. And it is also going to help out Oregon gov- ernment — about $100 million in federal stimulus payments is going to wind up in the state treasury. The federal government is not taxing the stimulus payments. In Oregon, they are not taxed as in- come, either. But the payments can impact the federal tax calculations used on your Oregon income tax. And so the stimulus payment may mean you owe state tax on more of your income and wind up paying more taxes or get a reduced refund. Seniors turn to a 13-year-old to get vaccination appointment Does that sound right to you? The stimulus checks sure seemed to be aimed at helping individuals, not helping state government. U.S. Rep. Peter DeFazio, a Dem- ocrat, wants state lawmakers to pass a bill to eliminate the state tax liabil- ity owed by Oregonians on federal stimulus payments. State Sen. Dick Anderson, R-Lincoln City, is already working on such a bill. The idea has at least half a nod from Oregon House Speaker Tina Kotek, a Dem- ocrat. A spokesperson said Kotek “supports the House Revenue Chair evaluating this issue.” Tell your legislator what you think. Editorials reflect the views of The Bulletin’s editorial board, Publisher Heidi Wright, Editor Gerry O’Brien and Editorial Page Editor Richard Coe. They are written by Richard Coe. S enior citizens across the coun- try have been wrestling with computer systems to sign up for coronavirus vaccines. My mother, who is 79, is among them. On a recent call from a suburb of Chicago, where she has been living alone throughout the pandemic, she sounded defeated. “I’m trying to figure it out! I can’t. None of my friends can, either,” she said. She couldn’t even explain the dif- ficulty, just that it was hard. Ours is a far-flung family. We specu- lated on options to help: Could my sis- ter, a software engineer, take over using remote desktop control software? Then my mother called back to an- nounce: “I got the first shot!” We were baffled. How did she even get the appointment? It turns out a 13-year-old boy han- dled it for her. She didn’t know him — he was the grandson of a friend of a friend of hers — and she didn’t fully understand how he’d done it. “Something on Twitter?” she guessed. “But he’s amazing!” “He got me one appointment, then he called back and told me, ‘No, you don’t want that one, they won’t guaran- tee a second shot.’ So he canceled it and found a better one. He’s gotten appoint- ments for all my friends.” For all her friends? A 13-year-old. I had to understand how this was hap- pening, so I called him. I reached him by phone in the Chi- cago suburb where he lives with his younger brother and parents. Eli, who didn’t want his whole name used, had to check first with his mom whether it was OK to talk to me. We set up a Letters policy We welcome your letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250 words and include the writer’s signature, phone number and address for verification. We edit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. We re- ject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, Zoom call. Meanwhile, I talked to another woman he’d helped. “He’s doing this just out of concern for others,” she said. “It’s not part of his business.” “His business?” “Oh, he runs a tech support busi- ness, where he fixes problems with your computers and phones, and researches how to save you money on your cell- phone plan. He’s saved me, oh, thou- sands of dollars. Has his own website and everything.” “At 13?” “Yes, such a boy you never saw,” she continued. “I went to his bar mitzvah, which was virtual because of the pan- demic. He refused gifts and didn’t want a party. He just wanted donations for a community composting program he’s started.” “What makes him so good at getting vaccine appointments?” I asked. “At my age, we’re all slow at comput- ers,” she said. “So even if we find an ap- pointment, and start to enter our infor- mation, it’s gone. His fingers fly over the keyboard like wind. Did you know he’s helping people in Florida now?” The day I connected with Eli over Zoom, he appeared with tousled dark hair and a gangly build. He was dis- armingly earnest. I was glad his mother had joined the call, because she, in her pride, coaxed out the stories where he was perhaps too humble to tell them. They couldn’t agree on how many people Eli had helped, for example. She thought 28, but he didn’t want to count some who had canceled their appoint- ments. “I didn’t technically help them,” he said. When I asked how much time he was spending, he answered, “not letters submitted elsewhere and those appropriate for other sections of The Bul- letin. Writers are limited to one letter or guest column every 30 days. How to submit Please address your submission to either My Nickel’s Worth or Guest Column and much.” His mother pointed out he’d been on hold on the phone for three hours the day before. “But I was doing other things during that time,” he said. “Why don’t you want your name used?” I asked. Talk about doing good deeds — didn’t he want credit? He pointed out that the internet has a way of generating fan and hate mail — neither of which he wants. And he doesn’t have the capacity to help more than five or six people at a time, and he has more than that on his list. More surprisingly, and to his credit, he saw the problems of equity and was aware of the phenomenon where more affluent white people snag vaccination appointments in poorer communities of color. Astonished by his political aware- ness, I asked, “So what can fix this vac- cination rollout?” In response to my question, Eli looked, for the first time, frustrated. “Honestly, what the providers need to do is just create phone systems for the elderly who don’t have access to the internet.” Immediately, though, he realized the problem of such a system — the end- less queues, people calling in simulta- neously on a dozen devices, enlisting their friends to call — and he trailed off. He circled back later to the idea that he might build a website to help more people find appointments. But fun- damentally he has come to the same conclusion most analysts have. “There needs to be a national, coordinated system. That would help.” e e Greg Harris has taught writing at Harvard University for 18 years, in the College, the John F. Kennedy School of Government and the T.H. Chan School of Public Health. mail, fax or email it to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: letters@bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel’s Worth/Guest Column P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804 Congress already went ‘big’ on coronavirus relief BY STEVE SCALISE AND TIM PHILLIPS Special to The Washington Post P resident Joe Biden says the risk of coronavirus relief legislation is not in going too big but in going too small. This is a false choice, and we shouldn’t let platitudes about “going big” mask the need for smart and effective policy. Congress has already gone “big” — so big that more than $1 trillion of previously enacted assistance remains unspent. Doing more of the same won’t solve the country’s problems. We need to get pandemic relief right. But instead of working with lawmakers of both parties on legislation that could more effectively overcome the pan- demic and help our country recover, the president is mustering support for a $1.9 trillion package loaded with a par- tisan wish list of items that have noth- ing to do with the pandemic. We’ve heard firsthand from friends and family who want to get vaccinated but can’t. We’ve heard from neighbors who simply want to get back to normal and get back to work. What the coun- try needs is focus. That involves an ap- proach to COVID-19 relief spending that is timely, temporary and targeted to those hit hardest by the pandemic. Congress has already enacted roughly $3.7 trillion to develop and distribute vaccines, save small busi- nesses and fund schools. Scientists developed multiple safe and effective vaccines, and distribution recently began reaching more than 1 million Americans a day. Just the first round of the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) helped keep more than 51 mil- lion workers employed last year. As of Thursday, the more than $1 trillion of that assistance that remains unspent or is still in the process of being disbursed includes $183 billion for an- other round of the PPP, $199 billion for health care, $136 billion for expanded unemployment insurance and $46 bil- lion for direct stimulus payments. We have no business borrowing an additional $1.9 trillion from our chil- dren’s future when all of that remains to be spent to help our country re- open safely. No doubt, people are hurting — es- pecially in the restaurant and hospi- tality industry. We agree that targeted relief is appropriate for those individ- uals, families and businesses hit the hardest. But we shouldn’t be blind to the fact that Americans are also adapt- ing and innovating. Our economy is significantly stronger than many had predicted last year that it would be. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office projected last week that the U.S. economy will grow 3.7 per- cent this year without any additional stimulus. The economic downturn last year “was not as severe as expected,” the CBO said, and “the first stage of the recovery took place sooner and was stronger than expected.” As more and more Americans are vaccinated, lockdowns will end, businesses will re- open and jobs will return. Even state governments are faring better than anticipated. Collectively, they have already received hundreds of billions from the federal gov- ernment over the past year. “From the start of the pandemic in March through October, tax revenues in 38 states were down 5% or less from the same period the year before,” the New York Times reported in December, drawing on data from the Urban In- stitute. Some states, including Cali- fornia and Minnesota, experienced budget surpluses. Another bailout for these states to cover fiscal irrespon- sibility that predated the pandemic doesn’t make sense — yet that’s what the president is calling for. There are people who desperately need help, but the country is not in a free-fall. The president’s relief package isn’t just focused on the wrong things — it also contains unrelated provi- sions that would undermine the re- covery already in progress. Take the proposed federal $15-an- hour minimum wage. The CBO recently estimated that this heavy- handed wage hike could cost up to 2.7 million American jobs. Why would we double the minimum wage at a time when thousands of businesses are struggling to make payroll and millions of Americans are looking for jobs? For small businesses such as restaurants that have survived a year of incredibly tough conditions, a fed- eral requirement to raise wages up to 600 percent for employees who work off tips would be a death blow. We need to increase vaccine pro- duction and distribution so people have confidence they can safely get back to work and get the economy go- ing again. We should not spend need- lessly on things that don’t directly af- fect COVID. The president’s $1.9 trillion relief package isn’t the way to get there. It fails to accomplish the key goals of de- feating the virus and recovering stron- ger. It would pile up debt and impose counterproductive policies that would hurt the people who need help. We shouldn’t confuse big spending with smart or effective policy. Ameri- cans deserve better. e e Steve Scalise, a Republican, represents Louisiana’s 1st Congressional District and is minority whip of the U.S. House. Tim Phillips is president of Americans for Prosperity, a grass-roots advocacy group.