A8 The BulleTin • Thursday, June 17, 2021 EDITORIALS & OPINIONS AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER Heidi Wright Gerry O’Brien Richard Coe Publisher Editor Editorial Page Editor Give Oregon a shot of more normalcy W e want wearing masks to be over. We want more normalcy in restaurants, in stores, in backyard parties and in schools. And Oregon is so wonderfully close. We just need several more thousand people to get vaccinated to get us to the 70% adult, state- wide vaccination rate that Gov. Kate Brown set as the trigger for dropping most restrictions. We can debate if 70% is the right number. We can debate as some argued Tuesday night before the Bend-La Pine School Board that the restrictions should already be gone. But vaccines are the most potent weapon we have against this virus. They work. Cases in Central Oregon have dropped fairly steadily since May. And even if someone does con- tract COVID who has been vacci- nated, the severity of the illness is usually reduced. If you happen to be someone still on the fence about the vaccine, well, here’s one more thing to think about. Your employer can require all work- ers entering a workplace to be vac- cinated against COVID-19. There do have to be reasonable accommo- dations for those who have medical reasons or a religious belief, but basi- cally employers can require it. That’s a decision by the U.S. Equal Employ- ment Opportunity Commission. Perhaps that will be challenged and overturned. Those are the rules now. The worrying thing about the 70% number is there are pockets of Oregon and of the country where vaccination rates are low. In Malheur County for instance, less than 30% of the people are vaccinated. Some areas of Jefferson County are that low as well. At this point, that’s more about a choice than lack of available vaccine. Masks are going to come off. We are going to get more back to nor- mal. But people are still going to end up in the hospital. Gasping for air. Removed from those they love. And some will die. Please get vaccinated. Residents should get involved in Bend’s neighborhood associations BY STEPHEN KATZ I Submitted photo This is the building under construction at Bend High School that is named after Robert Maxwell, Medal of Honor recipient and former teacher. A pleasing tribute to Robert Maxwell T he Bend-La Pine School Board voted Tuesday night to name a new building at Bend High School after Robert Maxwell, recipient of the Medal of Honor and a longstanding teacher. It’s a deserved tribute for a World War II hero and a man to admire. The school board had to waive a rule to do it. Board policy is that a school or a building cannot be named after a person unless they have been dead five years. That pol- icy is in place in part to protect the district from having to go through what could be an embarrassing pro- cess of a name change if a person was later discovered to have some dark secrets. We thought the district should have named what is now called Cal- dera High School after Maxwell in 2020. After all, if it’s OK to waive the rules for a building now, why wasn’t it OK to waive the rules when nam- ing that school? We suppose you could argue a school name is more significant, so this is less of a risk. It’s also less of a tribute to Maxwell, though still a pleasing one. 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. n the city of Bend there are 13 neighborhood associations (NA) officially recognized by the Bend City Council and each provided an annual budget to spend on such things as a website and an annual gen- eral meeting. Each NA is assigned a city councilor as a liaison between the council and the NA. Each NA sends a representative to something known as the Neighbor- hood Leadership Alliance (NLA), which meets once a month. The cur- rent chair of the NLA is Hans Jor- gensen from the Awbrey Butte NA. The NLA period- ically reports its considered positions on various issue to the City Council. This is an officially recognized group. Each NA also has a land use chair who represents the Katz NA at the Land Use Com- mittee meetings whose cur- rent chair is Deb DeWeese. This group is also officially recog- nized by the council and issues re- ports as necessary. Finally, there is the Neighborhood Association Roundtable (NART), which is an informal grouping of rep- resentatives from each NA. It is not officially sanctioned and does not issue reports. The leader of this group is Joette Storm, who is from the Boyd Acres NA. In this NEIGHBORHOOD FORUM group the NAs can sort of “let their collective hair down” and speak very candidly about pending local issues and their frustrations with having those issues addressed appropriately by city government. Out of discussions at NART came the idea of approaching The Bulle- tin for an occasional column for NA leaders to directly discuss issues pub- licly without any filter. I can assure you that we do not speak with a sin- gle voice; there are definitely a range of views on different problems of which there are many (and most overlap with each other): Water; wildfire; illegal fire- works; Mirror Pond; trans- portation; parking; legacy trees; HB 2001 and middle housing; affordable hous- ing; rapid growth; homeless/ houseless; policing; effective bilateral communication between the bureau- cracy and concerned residents; public notice of proposed projects; racism; density; city revenues; building codes; pandemic; schools; septic tanks; land use planning; urban growth bound- ary; tourism; recreation; transient rentals, the dump; the railroad; pre- serving a small town ambiance; li- brary expansion, parkway improve- ments, downtown street closure(s), the railroad and many more. As Bend morphs from a lumber mill town into a real city, our part- time City Council will find it difficult to grapple with all of these many is- sues; thus it imperative that you, the residents of this community, speak out — not only about identifying problems but helping find solutions, Civic responsibility does not end with Election Day voting and sim- ply leaving all decisions to the City Council. If you are concerned about the future of Bend, attend your local NA board meetings – and even better, become a member – some NAs lack a full board. The squeaking wheel gets the oil. In order to provide a more effective outreach to the Bend community and a greater discussion of topical issues, on June 2 we met with the editorial staff of The Bulletin; the paper has agreed to periodically publish essays written by NA leaders. Each essay rep- resents the opinion of the writer and not necessarily of anyone else. Dis- agree with an essay? Write a letter to the editor! I suspect The Bulletin will welcome your additional input; after all, its staff resides here too. e Stephen Katz is acting chair of the Southeast Bend Neighborhood Association. He first visited Central Oregon in 1978 and took up full time residence in 2012. 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 phone number and address for verifica- tion. We edit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. We reject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters sub- mitted elsewhere and those appropriate for other sections of The Bulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or guest column every 30 days. Your submissions should be between 550 and 650 words and 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. Lo- cally submitted columns alternate with national columnists and commentaries. Writers are limited 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 Both parties are needed to strengthen Oregon elections Since then, Oregon has admin- istered some of the most secure, n 2016, Oregon made cost-efficient, and accessible history by creating Auto- elections in the nation. But matic Voter Registration now, with five years of ex- at DMV offices, automati- perience with the new AVR cally forwarding eligible cit- system, we believe that bi- izen information from the partisan action is needed to DMV to elections officials for make some common-sense voter registration. Our first- upgrades to our voter regis- Zika of-its-kind “motor voter” law tration system. increased access to the bal- While our current system lot by registering thousands works well, we should not be of Oregonians to vote. It set complacent about something a new standard in list main- as important as our elec- tenance, ensuring that voter tions. There are two key bar- riers that prevent our voter rolls were kept as up-to-date registration system from as possible, so that each mail working as well as it should: ballot reached the voter it was (1) right now, automatic intended for, and elections of- Fahey registration and updates ficials could focus more time are only available to Oregonians who on administering elections rather have contact with the DMV; and (2) than manually entering data from Oregonians who register online must thousands of hand-written forms. BY STATE REPS. JACK ZIKA AND JULIE FAHEY I GUEST COLUMN have a state issued ID, even though state IDs are not required for registra- tion by paper forms. That means that the 10% of Oregonians who are eligi- ble to vote but only have a U.S. pass- port, out-of-state ID, or have not yet gotten a driver’s license must print off a paper form, fill it out by hand, and either mail it in or drop it off in-per- son at their local elections office. House Bill 2499 is a chance for Republicans, Democrats, and inde- pendents to come together and make common-sense improvements to our voter registration system that will save election workers time and money and further secure our elections. The bill will do two things: first, it will allow the address data from our annual state income tax returns to be shared with election officials to identify changes of address for updating registration re- cords, just as DMV records and Postal Service records are. Second, it will allow Oregonians without a DMV-is- sued ID to upload an image of their signature and register online with the last four digits of their Social Security number, the same information they provide on the paper form in order to be registered. These are small changes that will ultimately level the playing field for eligible voters, and help our elections function more smoothly. Both parties can agree that there is nothing about the act of handwriting information onto a form that makes our systems more secure — that’s why you can get a mortgage online, buy a car online, and even file court documents online. Voter registration should be no different. Voters should be able to utilize the same proof of identity that is verified on a paper form through our online systems, and we should continue to strive to ex- pand AVR to additional agencies. Or- egonians of all political affiliations de- serve to have accurate and up-to-date information on the voter rolls. This is a tense time in our democ- racy, and many feel that there is no room to cooperate in securing our elec- tions while preserving access. But we do not need to compromise on our goals in order to find common ground. Leg- islators from both parties have worked together across the aisle this session in states like Delaware, Louisiana, Maine and Kentucky to take commonsense steps to improve election adminis- tration, and Oregon should join the list. Let’s pass HB 2499, and show the country that Oregon continues to run the most secure, safe and accessible elections in America. e State Rep. Jack Zika is a Republican representing Redmond. State Rep. Julie Fahey is a Democrat representing Eugene.