A6 The BulleTin • Sunday, March 28, 2021 EDITORIALS & OPINIONS AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER Heidi Wright Gerry O’Brien Richard Coe Publisher Editor Editorial Page Editor Should Oregon stick with mandatory minimum sentences? W hat is fair punishment for a murder, a rape or compelling someone into prostitution? How long should someone be in jail? Should there be a minimum sentence or should that depend on the circumstances? After voters passed Measure 11 in 1994, Oregon has mandatory min- imum sentences for serious crimes. It’s 25 years for murder. It’s eight years and 4 months for Rape 1. It’s five years and 10 months for compelling prostitution. A judge in Oregon gen- erally has no choice but to at least im- pose the minimum. The idea behind mandatory min- imums is that certain crimes deserve a base level of punishment. A judge could be more severe, but not less. Mandatory minimums also ensure certainty for the public that crimi- nals get similar sentences for similar crimes. Some argue, though, manda- tory minimums don’t achieve justice. Judges aren’t allowed enough discre- tion for the facts of a case or the ab- sence of a criminal history of a con- victed individual. This legislative session, Senate Bill 401 would convert Oregon’s manda- tory minimums for certain felonies to presumptive sentences, excluding murder. Judges could give greater or lesser sentencing. Judges could judge. It will almost inevitably mean shorter sentences for many people convicted of violent crimes. The Oregon District Attorneys As- sociation does not want the change. Three district attorneys have come out in favor of the bill, including De- schutes County District Attorney John Hummel. Two justifications for keeping Mea- sure 11 are voters voted for it and state crime rates dropped after it passed. “When voters passed Measure 11 in 1994, violent crime rates in Oregon were at historically high levels. Since the passage of Measure 11, violent crime dropped by over 50%, to its low- est level since the 1960s. While violent crime declined nationwide during this period, Oregon violent crime declined more than anywhere else in the na- tion,” Oregon’s District Attorneys As- sociation said in its testimony. Hummel argued it’s hard to know exactly if Measure 11 was responsi- ble or contributed significantly to the drop in crime. Correlation is there. Causation is difficult to prove. The Oregon District Attorneys Association points out that manda- tory minimum sentences are not ab- solutely mandatory. If judges make particular findings in court, they can impose less prison time or even no prison time in some cases. Some ar- gue Measure 11 sentencing has an advantage because it makes decisions based on conduct, not skin color. Hummel, along with Mike Schmidt, the Multnomah County DA, and Matt Ellis, the Wasco County DA, highlighted in their testi- mony what has been a concern about what mandatory minimum sentenc- ing does to the legal system. It con- centrates more power in the hands of district attorneys instead of judges. DAs can use the threat of a Measure 11 charge as clout in negotiations be- hind closed doors. “In a system of criminal justice where over 90% of cases are resolved via plea offer rather than trial, the incredible leverage provided by (Ballot Measure) 11 pro- vides prosecutors — and prosecutors alone — the ability to decide the sen- tence by voluntarily declining to pur- sue a BM 11 charge, often by electing to reduce a charge to a lesser offense or an ‘attempt,’” they wrote. We aren’t going to tell you what you should think about Measure 11 or the proposed changes to it in SB 401. We do believe judges are in the best position to determine what is just punishment. The changes in SB 401 would not wash away problems. But it does tilt more power into the hands of judges where we believe more power belongs. Plan to control health costs may not share your priorities T he cost of health care is grow- ing faster than the wages of Oregonians. Deductibles and premiums keep climbing and house- hold income is not keeping up. What should Oregon do? A state committee is working right now on putting a lid on the growth in health care costs. It meets again Monday. Under the plan, Oregon would set a health care cost growth target. In- surance and provider cost growth would be compared to the target and reported to the public. If costs exceed the target, insurers and providers would have to improve or would get punished. The proposed target is 3.4% through 2025 and then 3% until 2030. How Oregon executes this plan raises many fascinating questions that we don’t have room to discuss in this short editorial. One issue that got our attention is punishment for those who exceed the cap or re- fuse to participate. The plan is for a “meaningful financial penalty” to be made with concern for the financial solvency of the business. But “others felt that there should be no guaran- tee that ‘flagrant offenders’ who con- tinue to exceed the cost growth tar- get should remain in business.” What will that mean for the idea of profit? What will it mean for the qual- ity of care, availability of care, options for care? We don’t mean to suggest the committee isn’t thinking about those things, too. But does it assign them the same priority as you do? Read more at tinyurl.com/theoregoncap. 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. The evolution of Bend’s parking P BY MIKE WALKER arking in Bend has evolved over the last fifteen years and for many residents, not in a good way. This article describes how Bend’s parking requirements have evolved in preparation for the upcoming April 21 City Council work session on parking. The starting point is the 2006 re- write of the development code, which relied on encouraging on-street park- ing to reduce off-street parking. For example, restaurant parking require- ments were reduced by 70% and med- ical offices by 57%. Another “reduction” came with a smorgasbord of parking credits op- tions that an applicant can use to further reduce their parking require- ments by another 20%. For example, credits were allowed for providing lockers and showers or having a tran- sit line within 660 feet. In 2016-17, city staff advocated the “right-size” parking movement, which is based on gathering data on local parking demand to strike a balance between local parking supply and lo- cal parking demand. This movement was started by Donald Shoup, a pro- fessor at UCLA who documented a significant over-supply of parking in many metropolitan areas where trans- portation planners used “suburban” parking requirements in urban envi- ronments. The Downtown Bend, Gal- veston Avenue and citywide parking studies completed in 2017 all used the principles of “right-size” parking. Meanwhile, the 2016 urban growth boundary expansion adopted lower parking requirements for “mixed- use” projects and in the Bend Central GUEST COLUMN District. In 2019, the parking require- ments in the Bend Central District were reduced even further. In August 2019, the Oregon Leg- islature passed HB 2001 requiring “middle housing” in all areas where single-family housing is allowed. Plus, no city regulation could cause unreasonable cost or delay to mid- dle housing. DLCD, the state agency tasked with providing “technical as- sistance” to communities, began a yearlong process to draft new state regulations. Parking requirements were a constant point of contention in the DLCD’s committees drafting these proposed regulations. In the last DLCD committee meeting on Nov. 24, Bend’s Planning Division repre- sentative lobbied unsuccessfully to remove an option that would allow the community to continue to choose their parking requirements. On Dec. 9, the Land Conservation and Devel- opment Commission wisely adopted regulations that allowed three paths to compliance, which included the path allowing communities to choose their parking requirements. Bend immediately began the pro- cess to bring Bend’s development code into compliance. An ad hoc committee has been meeting every two weeks, and parking requirements are a point of contention. In the initial meeting, staff claimed there was only two paths to compliance. When some members pointed out the existence of the third path (community’s choice), staff stonewalled any efforts to use this third path by claiming the proof required for the third path was too hard for staff to handle. In committee meetings, “urbanists” argue that reducing or eliminating off-site parking requirements would remove barriers to affordable hous- ing. “Right-size” advocates argue that reducing or eliminating off-street re- quirements will not achieve the bene- fits claimed by the urbanists and lead to burdening adjacent existing busi- nesses and residents. In February, Councilor Melanie Kebler requested and was granted a work session to consider the elimina- tion of minimum off-street parking requirements for all new develop- ment. Urbanists argue that this new trend (“social engineering by force”) is necessary to shift the community to tall, mixed-used urban cores and more walkable neighborhoods. In response, a group of neighbor- hood association land use chairs com- piled months of research on this new trend and created doesparkingmatter. com to display both sides of the is- sue. A survey was sent to members of neighborhood associations to gauge members’ opinion. The survey is available to anyone at the website. The sponsors of the website support right- size parking requirements based on local data and a community dialogue. Urbanist believe off-street parking will still occur, but they want the com- munity to trust developers to decide how much. The council needs to hear the community’s voice (one of coun- cil’s new goals). e e Mike Walker is a retired civil engineer who worked over 40 years in land development including the redevelopment and management of two multi- tenant properties in Bend. Letters policy Guest columns How to submit 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, 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. Your submissions should be between 550 and 650 words; they must be signed; and they must include the writer’s phone number and address for verification. We edit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. We reject those submitted elsewhere. Locally submitted columns alternate with national colum- nists and commentaries. Writers are lim- ited to one letter or guest column every 30 days. Please address your submission to either My Nickel’s Worth or Guest Column and 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 Beverly Cleary taught girls to asked to be loved for who they are BY MONICA HESSE The Washington Post A mong the many indignities en- dured by Ramona Quimby is a midyear progress report sent home by her first grade teacher, which informs her parents that she is a busy- body and needs “to learn to keep her hands to herself.” Ramona, devastated and misunderstood, tries to explain: she wasn’t bugging her seatmate, she was trying to help him. She was doing her very best. There, in the penultimate chapter of “Ramona the Brave,” our 6-year-old heroine collapses in tears. Her mother pats her back and murmurs, “What are we going to do with you?” And then: “With red eyes, a swollen face, and a streaming nose, Ramona sat up and glared at her mother. ‘Love me!’” Ramona, sigh. Headstrong and ex- asperating and grubby and irrepress- ible. She tries to crack a hard-boiled egg on her head; it turns out the egg is raw. Her sheep costume isn’t fin- ished in time for the Nativity play; she is forced onstage in her pajamas. The family’s cat passes away, and though he never liked Ramona anyway she still frets over the correct liturgy for a feline funeral. Beverly Cleary, whose death at 104 was announced Friday, first intro- duced Ramona as a minor charac- ter in a different children’s novel. But over the next 50 years and eight books she became her own protagonist, a real girl suffering the real problems of childhood, in all of their smallness and their enormity. “She does not suffer fools. She is full of vim and vigor,” wrote Amy Poehler in the forward of a recently rereleased Romana novel. “Ramona was a pest! She was irascible and uncompromis- ing! She was allowed to be angry and not afraid to stand up to boys!” Today these traits would be unre- markable for a female literary heroine — standard, even, obsessed as we are now with the hazy notion of “strong female characters.” In 1950, when Ra- mona made her first appearance, they were not unremarkable; they were trailblazing. Cleary took every attri- bute that girls were then warned away from — bossiness, brashness, hot tem- per — and she tucked them all into one character. And then she made that character into an inspiration. “Upon a cursory read, it might be tempting to describe Ramona as mis- chievous, but Cleary herself has pro- tested against this accusation, and with good reason,” read a LitHub analysis of the character from a few years ago. “Ramona loves the world with ferocity; she does not so much want to disturb it as she yearns to dis- cover, to turn it over, examine every piece and crook and marvel at why each creature, commodity, and sub- stance exists the way it does.” First lady Jill Biden put it more sim- ply. “Millions of girls saw themselves in Ramona Quimby,” she tweeted on Friday. “Thank you from all the ‘pests’ out there.” To identify with Ramona Quimby was to understand that the world didn’t fit you yet, but it might one day. To hold your loved ones to high stan- dards, and yourself to even higher ones. To belt out “99 Bottles of Beer on the Wall” at top volume in the middle of a rainstorm and to — just once, just for the bragging rights — get all the way down to one bottle of beer. To identify with Ramona Qui- mby was to never question whether you were too improper, too loud, too much. To demand that space be made for you, and for all the girls like you, who have more than once heard someone murmur, “What are we go- ing to do with you?” Love me. Love me. What a brave and beautiful request. Some days we are all snot-filled and red-eyed, wishing the world would better understand us. Some days we are not princesses or princes; we are grubby, unyielding, irrepressible children, asking for the one thing every one of us deserves. e e Monica Hesse is a Washington Post columnist writing about gender and its impact on society.