B6 The BulleTin • SaTurday, april 17, 2021 EDITORIALS & OPINIONS AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER Heidi Wright Gerry O’Brien Richard Coe Publisher Editor Editorial Page Editor OSU-Cascades needs your help in Legislature I f you have a few minutes this weekend, future college students from Central Oregon and elsewhere could use your help. Want them to have a great place to go to a 4-year college right here? They have that in OSU-Cascades. But there’s a big difference between getting to college and succeeding in college and going on to get a job. That’s where the plans for OSU-Cascades’ student success center comes in. Gov. Kate Brown threw her support behind it. Local legislators are behind it. But money for it is not in the bill that matters, Senate Bill 5505. That doesn’t mean it won’t be there. To ensure it is added in and stays there, legislators in Salem need to know the people of Central Ore- gon support their campus. Don’t take it for granted. One legislator tried earlier this session to hamstring the poten- tial of OSU-Cascades by severing its connection to OSU. Staff and students would get no say as their school would be transformed into something else, and they would be switched. The new school would have been forbidden from offering anything more than a master’s de- gree. That bill died, though that at- titude toward this campus can’t be allowed to take hold. What the student success center will offer is the kinds of services that can have students’ backs and help show them the way forward. It will be the home of academic and career advising, tutoring, support for veter- ans and the very important personal counseling and counseling about how to pay for school. It’s where stu- dents will be able to go for intern- ships, to find out about recreation programs and student organizations. There will also be a multicultural center. Don’t discount the impor- tance of that to help ensure all stu- dents feel welcome. Our first thought — and maybe yours — was: Why does the campus need a new building for that? The answer: growth. Unlike almost ev- ery other higher education institu- tion in the country, OSU-Cascades is seeing solid, sustained increased enrollment. There’s student demand. Everything is getting more crowded. If local students want a local oppor- tunity to go to college, they should have one. If students from outside the area and outside the state want to lift up themselves and learn in Cen- tral Oregon, let’s get behind that. The cost will be some $13.8 mil- lion. That has already been matched by student contributions of $5 mil- lion. That’s right, students voted to increase fees on themselves to raise $5 million for a campus building. Surely, it’s an impressive statement about how students feel about their school. So if you have a moment take some time this weekend and send off an email to a member of the Ways and Means Committee tinyurl.com/ waysandm or the Joint Subcommit- tee on Capital Construction tinyurl. com/subcomcap and tell them to put the money for the OSU-Cascades Student Success Center in SB 5505. There is a much easier way, but it will likely look like a form letter. That’s by going to beav.es/J9C . Historical editorials: Saloon gets rejected e e Editor’s note: The following historical editorials originally appeared in what was then called The Bend Bulletin on April 20, 1906. T he Supreme Court of Wash- ington recently handed down a decision which is of interest to people owning lots in Bend. The owners of the townsite of Clark- ston, Washington conveyed lots by deeds providing for a reversion to the grantor or in case of a barroom, saloon or brewery should be main- tained upon the land. A grantee leased the premises for a saloon and the action was brought for a restitu- tion of the property. The defendant did not seriously deny the validity of the reversion clause but claimed it had been waived as to him. The court decided against this conten- tion and held that reversionary clauses of this nature are valid. A provision similar to the one involved in this case is contained in the deeds of the Pilot Butte Development Company to lots in Bend. … The resolution adopted by the city council some time ago request- ing citizens to clean up their adja- cent streets and alleys, seems to have been quite generally acted upon.... Every sum is made up of its units and if every householder will keep his premises and their surroundings in good order the tidy and attractive appearance of the city is assured. 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. My Nickel’s Worth Don’t flatten Worrell I read with horror the plan to flat- ten Worrell Park. This is one of the last pockets of natural landscape in downtown Bend. With its rocky ter- rain, it is a wonderful place for fami- lies and children with imaginations to enjoy our native landscape. It is a ves- tige of what Bend was once like before any of us arrived. All of this to justify expanding a parking lot by 68 spaces. Please save this enchanting small space. — Susan Raleigh, Sunriver Protect pollinators The Bulletin had a great story in the April 10 edition about protecting pollinators and the Pollinator Pathway program. This was the front page. In striking contrast with the front page story was the Real Estate section cover page story “Wake Up Your Lawn for Spring” which reported “at the end of daylight savings time brings the ar- rival of spring.” I think spring and the start of daylight savings go together (OK a typo) but lawns and mowing and fertilizing and using herbicides are all potential death to pollinators. So maybe forget about waking up your lawn and try reducing its size and plant some native plants. Good for Basey Klopp, a local res- ident, who has received a grant and, along with others, is encouraging peo- ple to plant native plants and is work- ing with many in the community to plant pollinator gardens and create a Pollinator Pathway that will eventu- ally grow to other communities. How about instead of flattening the Bill Worrell Wayside at the County headquarters into a parking lot, the county retain it like it is and add it to the Pollinator Pathway? — Donna Owens, Bend Parking infractions David Welton’s guest column from April 9 advocating for removing mini- mum parking requirements contained a number of erroneous assumptions. I want to take issue with two of them. Mr. Welton claims that the 5% of people who don’t own cars would benefit from not being forced to pay for a spot to keep something they don’t own. We all are forced in some way to pay for things we don’t use. People without children pay into the school system. People with cars pay for bike lanes they don’t use through road taxes. Mr. Welton also claims that the cost of a parking spot could make or break some budgets. For single family homes, surface parking is only 1% of building costs. Price is determined by the market, not cost of spaces. 95% of Bend households own 1.9 cars. We need to keep minimum parking requirements for new devel- opments so as to minimize conges- tion for the vast majority and to keep streets safe and accessible for snow removal and cyclists. — Diana Franklin, Bend Lost control over border It is difficult to have confidence in an administration that has either lost control of our border or is sat- isfied with thousands pouring over the border. In March, over 172,000 were apprehended crossing our bor- der illegally. This does not include the thousands who escape apprehension, or overstay their visas. The Biden ap- proach has been to spend millions of dollars of taxpayer money to accom- modate the migrants rather than stop them from coming here. Many of the migrants are looking for a better life, but also included are gang members, terrorists and numer- ous criminals. Most would not qualify for asylum, but many are being re- leased in the U.S. without a require- ment for a court date; in other words, open borders. According to U.S.A. Today, 18,890 unaccompanied children were ap- prehended in March, up from 9,297 in February, with many held in over- crowded conditions as bad or worse than when President Trump was ac- cused of keeping kids in “cages.” Ac- cording to Fox News, the numbers are projected to be 30,000 by June. Most speak only Spanish and will be added to crowded classrooms in the U.S. The border problems accelerated when President Joe Biden overturned the previous administration’s policies, including the banning of deporta- tions and requirement that migrants remain in Mexico until their case for asylum could be heard. Promising amnesty and free health care during the campaign acts as a magnet. Until the administration closes the border, expect the numbers and chaos to escalate. — Charles Boyd, 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 Republicans will regret their breakup with big business BY TYLER COWEN Bloomberg A s the author of a book-length love letter to big business, I have long viewed the Repub- lican Party as more aligned with cor- porate America than are Democrats. That’s certainly the case from a rhe- torical standpoint, and on policy as well: It was former President Donald Trump’s administration, after all, that pushed through a significant cut in the corporate income tax rate. Yes, the real picture is much more complicated. Big business typically wants more high-skilled immigra- tion, which Democrats tend to favor, and the Democratic Party at times has done more for free trade than have Republicans. In any case, all that has changed. Many U.S. big businesses have sided with Democrats on some aspects of the culture wars, and leading mem- bers of the Republican Party have re- sponded with vitriol. In the span of just a few years, they have gone from making apologies for big business to making threats against it. The final straw may have been Ma- jor League Baseball’s decision last week to relocate the All-Star game to Denver from Atlanta over con- cerns about a new voting-rights law in Georgia. Many Republicans in the state favored the changes, and the re- sponse from some Republicans in Congress was to start talking about revoking baseball’s antitrust exemp- tion. This is what it has come to in 21st-century America: Left-wing ac- tivists bully corporations through so- cial media, while right-wing critics threaten them with the law. Baseball’s relocation of the All-Star game was very likely a business rather than a political decision. If the game had proceed in Atlanta, some of the players undoubtedly would have spo- ken out against the new voting law or boycotted the game. The event might have been dominated by poli- tics. So baseball followed a common crisis-management strategy, deciding to take one public-relations hit now instead of having to confront a slow drip of unpleasant revelations over the next several months. There is a simple solution for the Republican Party, if it is interested: Give up its opposition to such voting laws. Even if it opposes some parts of the laws, or if the negative aspects of the laws have been exaggerated, it hardly seems worth the price to be pushed into these ideological corners. Practically speaking, the best evidence suggests that such laws may not be a big deal anyway. There is also something about base- ball itself. This is the institution that so helped race relations in America by clearing the path for Jackie Robinson. You don’t have to agree with MLB’s every decision to see its overall so- cial influence as strongly positive. It is hardly a historical villain in need of restraint. Beyond sports, there is more evi- dence of a falling-out between Repub- licans and big business. When more than 100 major corporate leaders had a conference call last week to discuss what to do about the voting laws in Georgia and elsewhere, J.D. Vance’s response was the social-media equiv- alent of pounding the table with his shoe. “Raise their taxes and do what- ever else is necessary to fight these goons,” tweeted the best-selling au- thor and likely Republican candidate for U.S. Senate in Ohio. “We can have an American Republic or a global oli- garchy, and it’s time for choosing.” Senator Josh Hawley of Missouri, meanwhile, has put forward a “trust busting” plan to rein in big business. The plan seeks to beef up antitrust prosecution and eliminate mergers and acquisitions for firms of $100 bil- lion or more in value. It is something you might expect from the far left wing of the Democratic Party, not a leading Republican senator. Of course this isn’t a serious pro- posal. Do Republicans really want to see Democratic administrations have the dominant hand in antitrust deci- sions for four or maybe more years? Does the U.S. want to stop major pharmaceutical firms from acquiring smaller, more innovative companies with drugs of potential importance? Hawley’s bill is meant to send a mes- sage: “Nice business you’ve got here. Be a shame if anything happened to it.” It is both a plea and a threat about big business’s leftward slide. I am not seeking to debate Geor- gia’s voting rights bill, nor those of any other state. But I do know a little about sports. Baseball has long been the least political and most traditional of America’s pastimes, and it has a rel- atively old fan base. So the question Republicans might want to ask them- selves is not how to punish Major League Baseball. It’s how to get it back. Right now, Republicans are moving in exactly the wrong direction. e e Tyler Cowen is a columnist for Bloomberg. He is a professor of economics at George Mason University and writes for the blog Marginal Revolution.