A8 The BulleTin • Thursday, May 27, 2021 EDITORIALS & OPINIONS AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER Heidi Wright Gerry O’Brien Richard Coe Publisher Editor Editorial Page Editor Consider new kind of housing for Bend F or a starting teacher or a starting police officer, finding housing for a family in Bend can be too pricey. Single people can find they don’t want roommates — they need them to afford to live in town. Not everybody that wants to live in Bend has to live in Bend. But if the city wants to continue to attract the best talent, it needs to continue to hunt for solutions. What if the city of Bend could partner with businesses to help pro- vide housing for employees? Where housing pressure is acute, commu- nities are exploring those options and others. You’d expect it, perhaps in Silicon Valley, in Aspen, in New York City. But it’s happening all around the country. The government doesn’t have to be involved. If Bend, though, could leverage federal dollars it would open up a lot of possibilities. City staff told us it is investigating what might be allowed. So, it might not happen. It wouldn’t be because of lack of trying. In some places, businesses have stepped up. They help with financing for apartments. For instance in Tilla- mook, Tillamook Creamery pledged to fill some apartments to help se- cure financing for a new apartment building. The city of Aspen and Pit- kin County in Colorado has long had lotteries for employee housing in that community. In California, voters in the San Mateo School District passed a bond to build a 100-plus-unit apart- ment complex for school faculty and staff. And of course, much closer to home are the efforts in Sunriver to build employee housing for Sunriver Oregon, as a whole, does not do well in some national rankings of affordable housing. It has one of the lowest rates of housing available for people who are extremely low income, according to the National Low Income Housing Coalition. And unfortunately, low-income renters are also disproportionately people of color. Resort. Oregon, as a whole, does not do well in some national rankings of affordable housing. It has one of the lowest rates of housing available for people who are extremely low income, according to the National Low Income Housing Coalition. And unfortunately, low-income renters are also disproportionately people of color. It is to be expected in Bend or any place where people flock to live that a premium will be paid to live here. But Bend should not just concede that teachers, firefighters, nurses, police officers and so many other employees don’t deserve to live here as well as work here. State goes after more taxes when it has a bulging budget T he state of Oregon’s revenue picture is nothing short of stunning. It could be bulging with $1.8 billion more in its two- year budget than it had expected in February. Income taxes surged. The state budget picture was al- ready looking a rosy shade of rosy before the most recent budget pro- jection. The $2.6 billion from the American Rescue Plan Act was go- ing to fill what had been anticipated to be a $1.3 billion budget gap. Then earlier this week, in the Sen- ate Committee on Finance and Rev- enue, a proposed amendment was dropped that was no less stunning. It aimed to grab more revenue. From businesses. When Congress did not intend the money to be taxed. Which legislator or legislators proposed is not disclosed on the amendment. That is not stunning. It’s an all too common practice of legislative secrecy, preventing voters from being able to hold legislators accountable. The amendment proposes to tax forgiven Paycheck Protection Act loans. The amendment would ex- empt the first $100,000 in loan for- giveness. Full disclosure: The Bulle- tin benefitted from a PPP loan. Remember, Congress passed the PPP to help businesses in desper- ate pandemic times. It helped pre- vent the country from dipping into a horrible recession. And despite that help, many businesses still went under. Many employees were let go. Now the state of Oregon plans to go after those dollars even when the state budget is bulging with bil- lions? Congress did not intend that the PPP loans would be taxed as income when they were used as in- tended. The money is not needed by the state. Do legislators need more reason than that to let the amend- ment die? 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. Managing conservation in the Upper Deschutes has its complexities BY BRIDGET MORAN W ith a river that serves as the backbone of both our human communities and wildlife species, sustainable water management is a balancing act that has taken years to achieve in the De- schutes River Basin. Years of research and collaboration among managers, biologists, hydrologists, and other ex- perts have gone into the effort to en- sure critical water needs are met for Central Oregonians and our wildlife. Recent articles and discussion in The Bulletin have debated these issues, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service would like to highlight our perspec- tives regarding the complexities of wa- ter management in the basin. One of the species dependent on the Deschutes River, the Oregon spot- ted frog, has been central to the Ser- vice’s conservation work in the basin since it was listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act (ESA) in 2014. More than half of critical hab- itat designated for the species occurs within the Deschutes River Basin, un- derscoring the importance of the area to conservation and recovery efforts. An entirely aquatic species, spotted frogs require water year-round for all stages of their life history, including breeding, rearing, and overwintering. Ensuring the life history needs of spotted frogs are met in the Deschutes River, which has been heavily altered from a century of water management, is challenging. In particular, the highly regulated stretch from Wickiup Dam downstream to Bend is at the heart GUEST COLUMN of a long-standing conservation issue surrounding the extreme seasonal flow changes that are inherent to irri- gation water management. The legacy of storage and release operations has altered the physical structure of the river, the extent of surrounding habitats, and the behav- ior of spotted frogs as they move be- tween seasonal habitats. Dams in the upper basin store water through win- ter for irrigation in summer, leading to winter flows insufficient to inun- date the slough and wetland habitats that extend high onto the floodplain due to decades of artificially high summer flows. Even historical (pre- dam) flows now would fail to reach floodplain habitats where they exist today and could no longer support spotted frogs. The recently approved Deschutes Basin Habitat Conservation Plan (HCP) addresses water management to better support spotted frogs and other ESA-listed species. The HCP outlines conservation measures that modify the timing, volume, and du- ration of irrigation releases to align with life history needs of spotted frogs while continuing to deliver water to central Oregonians consistent with Oregon water law. In general under the HCP, flows (1) increase in April to support spot- ted frog breeding by raising water levels to these adjacent habitats, (2) are managed within specific param- eters during spotted frog rearing (April-August), and (3) are sustained in-stream later in the season to help spotted frogs move into overwinter- ing habitats without getting stranded. While frogs might benefit biologically from higher flows during certain life stages, these flow increases would come at a cost to other life stages at other times of year because the upper basin has a finite capacity of water. In short, while many can suggest the best flows for frogs, no single flow volume really tells the story of what is best for spotted frogs overall. To ensure our recovery efforts are well-informed, the Service collaborates with other experts from the U.S. Geo- logical Survey, U.S. Forest Service, Or- egon Department of Fish and Wildlife, and many others to gather data, moni- tor biological activity, provide guidance on water management decisions, and a host of other activities. While there are varied opinions on how to manage the river, our experts rely on the best available biological and hydrological data to inform the Ser- vice’s decisions, including our recent finding that the HCP meets applicable requirements under the ESA. We value the community’s interest, welcome your engagement, and hope that you continue to partner with us to help the spotted frog continue its conservation journey toward recovery. For more information about the Deschutes HCP, go to tinyurl.com/ DeschutesHCP. e e Bridget Moran is Bend Field Supervisor for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. 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 There’s a massive child care worker shortage; the market can’t fix it BY ELLIOT HASPEL Special to The Washington Post P arents of young children have had a rough pandemic, fac- ing down closed playgrounds, closed pools and closed child care centers. While states have largely opened up, these parents now face a knock-on crisis: Child care programs are contending with massive and un- precedented staffing shortages, lead- ing to fewer spots and long waiting lists. The rotten seed of America’s dis- investment in child care has finally sprouted, and without a new, perma- nent source of public funding, the sec- tor is likely to crash and pull working families down with it. Child care programs have long struggled with staffing because wages are so low: The national median is $11.65 an hour, and around half of programs don’t offer health insurance benefits. The current moment is an order of magnitude worse. For much of the pandemic, child care programs were struggling with under-enroll- ment as parents worked remotely or stayed away for fear of their child bringing COVID home. Now, pro- grams are struggling to handle a surge in demand. Since day cares must fol- low mandated child-to-adult ratios, a lack of staff quite simply means they must serve fewer children. The problem cuts across geography and ideology; waiting list stories have cropped up from Ohio to Texas, and it was recently reported that one of ru- ral Iowa’s few large centers may have to close temporarily due to staffing chal- lenges. Kim Hulcher, executive director of the Virginia Child Care Association, wrote in an email that “critical staffing shortages” have led several of her mem- bers to cap enrollment and stop accept- ing parent applications altogether. The impact isn’t restricted to families with children below age 6; many child- care programs also provide before- and after-school care to elementary-aged children. When Ann Arbor Public Schools discontinued district-affiliated child-care services for the upcoming school year, the primary reason given was staffing shortages. Unlike a short-staffed restaurant that may need to curtail operating hours or menu options, child care programs are cultivating the academic and socioemotional foundations of a generation; forcing them into a lurch is frankly dangerous. Children thrive on consistent, reliable relationships, and effectively providing care and education for a group of 3-year-olds requires skill. Child care is about the last sector in which you want to see high churn and programs scraping for warm bodies. Yet here we are. There is only one solution: public investment. Child care programs don’t obey the classic rules of supply and de- mand; many experts consider the sec- tor a failed market. Parents are already tapped out, but the obscene prices they pay don’t come close to covering the true cost of care in such a person- nel-heavy enterprise. Only programs serving the most affluent can reason- ably charge more to boost wages. In one important way, child care mir- rors the rest of the economy: Raising compensation works. A study of child- care teacher turnover in Louisiana in the journal Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, found more than 44 percent of teachers in private child- care programs leave every year, nearly all exiting the profession altogether (by comparison, about 16 percent of K-12 teachers leave each year, half just going to a different school). However, for the better paid Head Start teachers and the yet-better paid public preschool teach- ers, turnover was only around a third and a quarter, respectively. President Joe Biden’s American Families Plan (AFP) sets a goal of a $15 minimum wage for child care practi- tioners, an improvement that would however return the industry to its pre-pandemic fragility. The AFP also states those with similar qualifications to kindergarten teachers would achieve pay parity, although this wades into an ongoing debate about credentialing for child care educators and how to honor the experience and expertise of a work- force substantially made up of older women of color. An alternative is the adoption of publicly supported sectoral wage scales. Several states have developed such scales, although none are fully imple- mented. For instance, a recently pro- posed scale in Minnesota would ensure entry-level classroom support roles — requiring a 120-hour certificate — start at $18.20 per hour, moving up from there toward parity with K-12 teachers. More philosophically, the nation needs to ask itself a question: Do we re- ally want programs caring for toddlers and their rapidly developing brains to be competing for staff with fast food joints and big box stores (worthy of a decent wage as those employees are)? Do we want market forces determining whether parents have viable, quality options for their care/work arrange- ments? There is a reason we don’t ex- pose fire departments or public schools to the invisible, raw hand of capitalism; child care programs are equally essen- tial to the functioning of society and the development of children. e e Elliot Haspel is the program officer for education policy and research at the Robins Foundation in Richmond, Virginia.