A8 The BulleTin • Tuesday, June 22, 2021 EDITORIALS & OPINIONS AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER Heidi Wright Gerry O’Brien Richard Coe Publisher Editor Editorial Page Editor McPherson Douglass was cleared, but her post was wrong T he investigator’s conclusion was straightforward. Carrie McPherson Douglass, Bend-La Pine School Board member, was not found to have done anything wrong. She did not violate school board policy, legal standards for campaign speech or the district’s harassment policy when she posted personal information about her opponent, Maria Lopez-Dauenhauer, on Face- book during the May campaign for school board. That doesn’t mean what McPher- son Douglass did was right. On April 15 McPherson Doug- lass posted on her personal Face- book page fairly typical political campaign charges — that her op- ponent is “uber wealthy” lives in a $4.2 million house, spent most of her life in California, is a single-is- sue candidate who is committed to fully reopening schools “at all costs” and has “far-right views.” Then she did something out of the ordi- nary: She posted Lopez-Dauenhau- er’s address, a map showing where the home is, and a family picture, including Lopez-Dauenhauer’s children. “I do not want any negative com- ments about her here or anywhere else,” she did add. “She is a mother and a Central Oregon community member and I want all candidates treated with respect.” Lopez-Dauenhauer filed a com- plaint with the school board, saying McPherson Douglass was doxing, or revealing personal information about her to hurt her. We aren’t going to go into detail of the legal analysis by the investi- gator, a lawyer hired by the High Desert Education Service District. Briefly, Oregon did not have a dox- ing law when these actions took place. School district policy has no specific policies applicable to board member’s conduct when they are campaigning. And laws regarding political speech give people a lot of freedom to express themselves. There’s no question that Lo- pez-Dauenhauer’s address was pub- licly available before McPherson Douglass posted it on Facebook. It’s in the form candidates must fill out when running for office, among other places. But was it necessary for McPherson Douglass to make it easier for people to find it, to publi- cize it? Note that McPherson Dou- glass got security and a private ad- dress for her own home to protect her own family. Images of Lopez-Dauenhau- er’s children were also part of Lo- pez-Dauenhauer’s campaign. Still, should McPherson Douglass have used images of her opponent’s fam- ily as part of an effort to campaign against her opponent? Using a pic- ture of Lopez-Dauenhauer would be one thing. Using an image that in- cluded her children is another. The most telling thing is that McPherson Douglass apologized for the post. She wrote she regretted it from the moment she hit publish. She took the post down. She deserves credit for recognizing that. And while we are certain she will con- tinue to be an excellent school board member, the post was wrong. If you want to read the investiga- tor’s report and conclusions, we had to make a public records request to get it. Email us at rcoe@bendbulletin. com, and we will send you a copy. Nearman doesn’t deserve to be back in Legislature H e didn’t get the message. Former state Rep. Mike Ne- arman apparently wants to replace himself in the Oregon Legis- lature after he became the first legis- lator ever expelled from the Oregon Legislature. Nearman helped plan and then let demonstrators into the locked Cap- itol during a special session on Dec. 21. His Republican colleagues called on him to resign. Nearman refused. Every legislator voted to expel him except one, Nearman. Even in the moments before the vote to expel him, Nearman tried to warp the narrative, insisting he was being expelled because he believes the public should be let into their Capitol. He was not expelled be- cause of his beliefs. He was expelled because his actions allowed demon- strators — some armed — into the Capitol. We can’t imagine he would be re- appointed to the same seat. A freshly introduced House Bill 3413 would make it clear that an expelled legis- lator could not be reappointed to the Legislature. Worth passing. 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. GUEST COLUMN Critical thinking and theory are needed now BY WILLIAM BARRON T oday, more than ever we need to practice critical thinking and the principles of critical theory. We are bombarded by parti- san media, politics and opinions. We face both sides of the ‘Big Lie’, ‘Stop the Steal’, and unabashedly biased ‘journalism’ and editorials. Without a structured, normalized, approach toward analysis, we are destined to wallow in unverified, unchallenged fantasies which can then become the structure of our society, institutions, and legal systems. Critical thinking and theory do not profess any bias toward outcome, rather they focus us on a questioning process and let the outcome evolve and crystallize more with ever prob- ing questions. We must never just accept, but rather presume some- thing is wrong, something can be im- proved, and/or be more holistically truthful. Process and practices which encourage us to make explicit self-ex- amination, and which are more con- cerned with preventing the loss of truth rather than being afraid of the resulting outcome are good for indi- viduals, institutions and societies in general. Critical thinking and theory typically has three aspects: 1) pre- sume something is wrong and iden- tify what, 2) identify the aspects, or actors, which can be and/or need to be changed, and 3) establish norms for routine criticism and analysis. The only way to determine if our insti- tutional knowledge are institutional myths is to critically challenge, probe and analyze every aspect, on a contin- uous basis. If it proves false, then let facts prevail. If it withstands the scru- tiny, either the challenge needs to be changed or the facts are firm. There- fore, critical thinking and theory are the antithesis of cancel culture. As to critical race theory, let’s agree; racism isn’t biological. We are not born racists. It is learned. Therefore, racism must be a normal feature of our social fabric, woven into our edu- cation, public policy and legal struc- ture. If so, then our responsibility as a society, as members of a civil order, is to critically ask ourselves, what needs to be changed in those institutions, and legal framework to eradicate sys- tematic racism. Consider how much fuller and richer our accepted history would be if it were written includ- ing all perspectives including those of race, religion and gender. Imag- ine how our legal system could be improved, presuming institutional racism could be recognized and removed. If you are not willing to accept the pretext of institutional racism, ask yourself why it took over a hundred years after the end of the Civil War for the Civil Rights Act to be passed and the Supreme Court to recognize the legitimacy of mixed marriages? Ask yourself why the Civil Rights Act was even necessary? Why were Jim Crow laws passed and brutally enforced? And why, even today, are voter sup- pression laws being proposed and passed by state legislators? Those amongst us who refuse to challenge the social norms and sta- tus quo will forever be the pawns of those who want to manipulate the uninformed with disinformation, bi- ased partisan partial perspectives, and conspiracy theories. Ironically, those claiming cancel culture are the ones who have tried for centuries to cancel and ignore the historical perspectives of others. All of us, to some degree, are racist and sexist; our social cul- ture made us what we are. Maybe we should be engaging in critical gender and critical religion theory as well. And who am I? I’m an engineer, trained to question everything, chal- lenge the status quo and continu- ally search for a better way to make things, systems and processes work. Trained never to accept anything at face value regardless of who prop- agated the thought or policy. The one who practiced the art of critical thinking and theory as an engineer and executive in the private and pub- lic sectors to advance engineering, as well as corporate and public policy. #NeverFeartheDream e William Barron lives in Bend. Letters policy Guest columns Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250 words and include the writer’s phone number and address for verification. We edit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. We reject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhere and those ap- propriate for other sections of The Bulletin. Writers are limited to one let- ter or guest column every 30 days. Your submissions should be between 550 and 650 words and must in- clude 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 columnists and commentaries. Writers are limited to one letter or guest column every 30 days. Email: letters@bendbulletin.com Return-to-Office: A new competitive “strategically hybrid” model BY NITIN NOHRIA Bloomberg H ow many days each week is your company asking you to be back in the office? That’s become a polarizing question — and the answer is seen as a marker of whether the company or employees come first. Apple, for instance, says it wants workers in the office on Mondays, Wednesdays and Thursdays starting in September — a plan that sparked an employee backlash. Citigroup has also asked employees to be in the of- fice three days a week. Some compa- nies, including Goldman Sachs Group and JP Morgan Chase & Co., hope to revert to an everyone-on-site model. Bank of America Corp. wants all vac- cinated employees in the office in early September — it will figure out what to do with the unvaccinated later. Ford Motor Co., Salesforce.com and Twitter say they will extend work-from-home privileges indefinitely. While plans still vary widely, most firms are contemplating a hybrid ar- rangement like Apple’s — a set sched- ule of companywide remote days and office days. But one-size-fits-all policies covering every employee are a mistake. Leaders deciding how to organize work should make more nuanced choices that re- flect the needs of both employees and company. It’s more complex than sim- ply picking one scheme for the whole firm, yet the payoff for that complexity will be well worth it. Think of this model as “strategically hybrid” — a schedule that reflects the specific ways individuals and teams interact to create value. Optimizing a company in this manner can help sharpen its competitive position. It can increase productivity and speed in some areas, while doubling down on creativity, collaboration and the full human experience in others. Taken together, these choices — precisely be- cause of their difficulty — will be hard to replicate and can form the founda- tions of a durable advantage. The following questions should drive these choices: • Where do we want to prioritize efficiency, speed and coordination — recognizing that the answer often points toward remote work? • Where do we want to prioritize creativity, complex problem solving and spontaneity — which are more likely to happen in person? • For culture-building activities, what is the right mix of in-person and virtual interactions? • If employees in different jobs or roles have their own preferred location for work, how much flexibility will we provide? And are we prepared to lose people if we can’t accommodate their preferences? To illustrate what I mean by being strategically hybrid, consider the re- turn-to-work choices of two hypothet- ical firms. Trendy Store and ClassicClothes. com are retailers. Each sells casual clothing primarily to young women. Trendy Store’s competitive strategy is to be store-centric and fashion-forward. ClassicClothes.com’s strategy is to sell a curated collection of established brands online. The different strategies driving the firms’ return-to-work plans can be seen department by department. • Finance. Trendy Store’s finance di- vision performs routine activities and its productivity rose while working remotely. Post COVID-19, these em- ployees will continue remotely, coming to the office two days a month for busi- ness reviews. Because ClassicClothes. com adjusts prices on its website dy- namically, its finance group consults hour-by-hour with the merchandising department to make pricing decisions. This team will return to the office to make that cooperation easier. • Procurement. Trendy Store’s large group of fashion-forward designers will return to the office every day to collaborate on the tactile, three-dimen- sional work of designing clothing — a process that can’t be replicated ade- quately online. Because ClassicClothes. com sources its goods from established brands, its merchandisers can continue to work remotely. • Sales/Customer Service. Trendy Store needs it sales staff to come to the store to serve customers in-person. ClassicClothes.com, whose custom- ers order online, will allow its custom- er-service team to continue working remotely. Note that across every department and function, each company’s choices are guided by its overall corporate strategy. In some cases, these choices may become even more fine-grained. Writing in Harvard Business Review, Lynda Gratton argues that managers should make return-to-work decisions not only by function or department, but also on a person-by-person ba- sis, factoring in variables such as the length of an employee’s commute, the availability of space for a home office, the strength of the employee’s existing network within the company and his or her tenure with the firm. There are significant potential downsides to the strategic hybrid ap- proach. Building a strong, cohesive corporate culture will be harder in such a workplace. Organizations must ensure that their diversity and inclu- sion goals are not inadvertently set back in this process. Allowing some people to continue working from home and requiring others to return to the office risks fostering jealousy, resentment and complaints about fair- ness. The strategic reasons for those decisions must be communicated clearly and firmly. Becoming strategically hybrid re- quires recognizing the kinds of in-per- son collaboration that create value while balancing the concerns of stake- holders to enhance the company’s competitive advantage. Ultimately, success is a key part of job satisfaction, and making intelligent trade-offs is the essence of leadership. e Nitin Nohria is a professor and former dean of Harvard Business School.