OPINION Blue Mountain Eagle A4 Wednesday, October 13, 2021 OTHER VIEWS Feds not needed to police school board meetings T he National School Boards Association’s defi nition of what might constitute domestic terrorism and hate crimes is awfully broad. Broad enough, potentially, to encompass actions clearly pro- tected by the First Amendment. The Association recently sent a letter to President Joe Biden asking for federal law enforce- ment to help “deal with the growing number of threats of violence and acts of intimidation occurring across the nation.” The letter reads, in part: “the classi- fi cation of these heinous actions could be the equivalent to a form of domestic terrorism and hate crimes.” In response, U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland said the FBI would work with other federal, state and local agencies to “develop strategies against the threats,” according to an Associ- ated Press story. Obviously it’s not accept- able for people who are upset with school boards to escalate from verbal or written opposition to physical. But every state has criminal laws regarding assault. And most communities have police departments to deal with people who break those laws. The School Boards Associ- ation off ers no compelling evi- dence of a rash of violence against school boards that local offi cials aren’t capable of han- dling, or that warrants federal involvement. The letter to Biden cites an Illinois case in which a per- son was arrested for aggra- vated battery and disorderly conduct during a school board meeting. This, not surprisingly, was accomplished without the involvement of the FBI or any other federal agency. Other examples listed in the letter include school boards “confronted by angry mobs,” an Alabama resident who called school administrators while vid- eoing himself on Facebook Live, and a person who yelled a Nazi salute during a school board meeting in Michigan. Some of this behavior sounds obnoxious. Some, as with the Nazi salute, is abhorrent. But being part of an angry mob, or making videos of phone calls with public offi cials, or even yelling Nazi salutes, not only is unlikely to be criminal, but it’s probably constitutionally protected speech. This is not to suggest that people who are aggrieved by school board actions, or inac- tions, should seek to derail pub- lic meetings, even by nonviolent means such as shouting. This accomplishes nothing. But the ultimate test of the First Amendment is not that it protects the soft-spoken and the reasonable. That’s easy and uncontroversial. If the term “free speech” is to be anything other than an empty platitude, it must off er equal protection for the loud, the boorish and the purvey- ors of conspiracy theories, even if they cause school board meet- ings to last longer than they oth- erwise would, or expose mem- bers to uncomfortable diatribes. In any case, the reality that disgruntled citizens attend public meetings is no cause for asking the most powerful law enforce- ment agency in the land to get involved. suffi ciently loud and clear so as to be understood. With the present method of broadcast, a speaker at the podium using the microphone can be under- stood; however, court member com- ments and comments from the audi- ence are diffi cult to hear and diffi cult to understand. There also should be an established procedure to allow those participating via broadcast to make comments. The present sys- tem is unacceptable, and I am asking the court to address this matter fi rst by acknowledging this letter and sec- ondly by responding with a reason- able solution. Since COVID has cre- ated this issue, maybe there could be some COVID funds available to cor- rect the problem. Just my thought! Jim Spell John Day Blue Mountain EAGLE USPS 226-340 Grant County’s Weekly Newspaper Email: www.MyEagleNews.com Phone: 541-575-0710 John Day, Oregon MEMBER OREGON NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION Bennett Hall, bhall@bmeagle.com Steven Mitchell, steven@bmeagle.com sports@bmeagle.com Alex Wittwer@awittwer@eomediagroup.com Kim Kell, ads@bmeagle.com Alixandra Hand, offi ce@bmeagle.com PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY BY EO Media Group Blue Mountain Eagle 195 N. Canyon Blvd. John Day, OR 97845-1187 Copyright © 2021 Blue Mountain Eagle Periodicals Postage Paid at John Day and additional mailing offices. One year .... ................................................... $51 Monthly autopay ................................... $4.25 Subscriptions must be paid prior to delivery POSTMASTER — send address changes to I n mid-August, three days after Afghanistan fell to the Taliban, Oregon Gov. Kate Brown pro- claimed our state “ready to welcome any and all Afghans.” Fifty-one of 55 Democratic legislators, who com- prise supermajorities in the state House and Senate, issued letters declaring the same. So it came as no small surprise when the White House informed Brown in mid-September that, of the initial nationwide distribution of 37,000 Afghan refugees, Oregon would receive 180. Consider that number vis-a-vis other states’. Our neighbors to the north and south, Washington and Califor- nia, were allocated 1,679 and 5,255, respectively. Kentucky, whose popula- tion approximates Oregon’s, got almost fi ve times our number (850). Even reli- ably-red Oklahoma — every one of whose 77 counties voted for Donald Trump over Joe Biden in 2020 — net- ted 1,800. Will Oregon’s leaders now — believing an allotment of “only” 180 refugees slights our state’s reputation as (in Brown’s words) “a welcoming and inclusive place” — implore the Biden administration to send us far more? Most likely. What they should do, however, is remove their “woke” blind- ers, look unfl inchingly at Oregon’s current predicament, and objectively consider the impact a mass infl ux of Afghan refugees would have on the cit- izens of an already-overstressed state. Even before Afghanistan fell, Ore- gon was beset by multiple crises. Since the pandemic’s start, more than a third of a million Oregonians have contracted COVID; as of last week, some 1,400 new cases still were being reported each day. In our biggest city, crime has exploded; between January and August 2021, Port- land already had seen more murders than in Richard F. any entire year since LaMountain 1994. And rural com- munities continue to rebuild from the summer’s devastating wildfi res, which consumed hundreds of thousands of acres. Stretched, already, to the breaking point, need Oregonians’ leaders volunteer them for yet another costly challenge? Most harmed by a mass infusion of Afghan refugees would be Ore- gon’s poorest. Statewide, reports the National Low Income Housing Coa- lition, there is a shortage of almost 99,000 rental homes available to what it terms “extremely low-income house- holds, whose incomes are at or below the poverty guideline or 30 percent of their area median income.” Should Gov. Brown and her Democratic col- leagues force poor U.S. citizens to compete with thousands more destitute Afghans for our already-scarce low-in- come housing? And however uncomfortable it may make them, Brown et al should take a clear, unbiased look at the Afghans themselves. Between 2008 and 2012, the Pew Research Center surveyed residents of Muslim countries, including Afghan- istan. (During those years, remember, Afghanistan had a pro-U.S. govern- ment and American personnel were working to imbue its people with dem- ocratic values.) What Pew discovered: Ninety-nine percent of Afghans sur- veyed believed sharia should be the law of the land. Eighty-fi ve percent believed sharia should sanction the stoning of adulterers. And 61 percent believed sharia should govern not just Muslims, but non-Muslims. Considered “sometimes” justifi able were suicide bombings (by 39 percent of Afghans polled) and “honor” kill- ings of female family members who had engaged in extramarital sex (by 60 percent). Crime? In Europe, resident Afghans commit disproportionate numbers of violent off enses. In Austria, for exam- ple, a 2018 government report, sum- marized by the Center for Immigration Studies’ Jason Richwine, found that “Afghans’ overall crime rate is seven times higher than the rate of Austrians, and that Afghans commit rape at an astonishing 22 times the Austrian rate.” Given all this, how likely are Afghans, as a whole, to assimilate seamlessly into Oregon communities? Rather than plead for more Afghan refugees for our state, Brown and her colleagues should urge the Biden Administration to seek to resettle them in Central Asian nations — especially Pakistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan, which border Afghani- stan directly, share its cultural attributes and, collectively, have received billions in U.S. aid. Since 1975, Oregon has welcomed some 70,000 refugees — which testi- fi es mightily to our character and com- passion. But given our already-numer- ous challenges and the problematic values, beliefs and behaviors of so many Afghans, our state, today, must say no to more. Richard F. LaMountain, a resident of Mt. Vernon, is a former assistant edi- tor of Conservative Digest magazine. COMMENTARY To the editor: For several years I and others attended Grant County Court meet- ings and had the opportunity to become aware of issues before the court and at times comment. When COVID became an issue it became necessary to limit the number of peo- ple allowed in the room, and pro- ceedings were broadcast thanks to the assistance of the Blue Mountain Eagle and their technology. Likely the court will, due to COVID, continue to restrict the num- ber of individuals allowed to physi- cally attend court meetings. The alter- native available for attendance is a continuation of broadcasting pro- ceedings. Broadcasts of proceedings should aff ord to listeners the same level of involvement as experienced SUBSCRIPTION RATES (including online access) Oregon should pause Afghan resettlement Editor’s note: This editorial originally appeared in the Baker City Herald. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR those physically present in the County court needs by courtroom. Specifi cally, communi- cation by anyone speaking should be better broadcasts E DITOR R EPORTER S PORTS M ULTIMEDIA M ARKETING R EP O FFICE A SSISTANT COMMENTARY All rights reserved. No part of this publication covered by the copyright hereon may be repro- duced or copied in any form or by any means — graphic, electronic or mechanical, including pho- tocopying, taping or information storage and retrieval systems — without written permission of the publisher. www.facebook.com/MyEagleNews @MyEagleNews Keeping elk on public land W here are all the elk? It’s a common ques- tion heard every fall around campfi res and wood cook- stoves in the Blue Mountains. Hunters share any number of the- ories about why they can’t fi nd elk: too many predators, too many hunters, too many motor vehicles, not enough (or too much) logging, too much cattle grazing, bad herd management — the list is long and imaginative. The Blue Mountains have the potential for some of the world’s best quality habitat for Rocky Mountain elk. There are about 55,000 elk in the Blue Moun- tains, and in most areas the herds are near the state’s management objectives. So why do some hunt- ers have a hard time fi nding elk? As is often the case, it’s not about numbers, it’s about distribution. Elk like to be where they can fi nd good habitat without being disturbed. Traditionally elk would spend the spring, summer and fall in the Blue Mountains, where they found cooler temperatures and shade, plentiful water and lush forage. With the arrival of winter snow, they migrated to lower ele- vations, only to repeat the cycle in the spring and follow the green-up into the hills. But some elk in the Blues have changed their habits to avoid pub- lic land, spending more time on lower-elevation private lands, where hunters and motorized vehi- cles don’t disturb them. By the time elk rifl e season rolls around, the elk have been pushed around for several months by bowhunters and deer hunters and in increasing numbers they have moved off pub- lic lands to get the security they L crave, well before the winter snow. Private land- owners greet this development in a variety of ways. Some are pleased Bill just to see elk on Aney their land. Some want elk so that their family and friends can hunt, and some are fi nding ways to monetize this public resource by charging for hunting and/or access on their property. And some land- owners want no elk on their land because elk eat the same feed as domestic livestock and have a habit of destroying fences. I maintain that we need a way to hold more elk on public lands through the fall. This is good for public land hunters, obviously, but it also would reduce confl icts with agricultural interests. I also confess that I don’t like the idea of private landowners selling the rights to hunt native wildlife when those animals should be on pub- lic lands. How do we keep them there? The science is known — and it’s local. Projects completed on the La Grande Ranger District have demonstrated how managing veg- etation and reducing disturbance from motor vehicles can turn around this problematic migration pattern. Forest thinning and prescribed burn- ing creates quality feeding areas that are especially attractive to elk in the late summer and fall when they are trying to put on the calories for winter. But quality feed is useless to elk if they are constantly disturbed by motor vehicles. With over 4,500 miles of roads on the Umatilla National Forest, elk often abandon areas used by cars, pickups, ATVs, motorcycles and the like. Fortu- nately, the Umatilla National For- est has a travel management plan that identifi es only a subset of these roads as open to motor vehicles, with the remainder closed for all or part of the year. This is a good thing for elk as it improves habitat security and can ultimately increase public land elk hunting opportunities when elk relearn to stay on public lands later in the fall. However, this requires that we all know what roads are open to traffi c and which are closed, and fol- low the plan. A new cooperative venture between the Forest Service, Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, and Oregon State Univer- sity Extension Service should help. The eff ort will be highlighted in the 2022 big game hunting season syn- opsis, as well as on signboards at National Forest entry points and in printed brochures and downloadable digital maps. In the meantime, elk hunters need to learn which roads are closed to motor vehicles in their hunting area and commit to driving only on open roads. The Forest Service Motor Vehicle Use Maps are avail- able for free download on their web- site and paper copies in the forest offi ces. We also need to be supportive of forest thinning and prescribed burning projects, recognizing that the high-quality habitat that results will attract and hold more elk and improve the odds for public land hunters. Bill Aney is a forester and wild- life biologist living in Pendleton and loving the Blue Mountains. ETTERS POLICY: Letters to the Editor is a forum for Blue Mountain Eagle readers to express themselves on local, state, national or world issues. Brevity is good, but longer letters will be asked to be contained to 350 words. No personal attacks; challenge the opinion, not the person. No thank- you letters. Submissions to this page become property of the Eagle. The Eagle reserves the right to edit letters for length and for content. Letters must be original and signed by the writer. Anonymous letters will not be printed. Writers should include a telephone number so they can be reached for questions. We must limit all contributors to one letter per person per month. Deadline is 5 p.m. Friday. Send letters to editor@bmeagle.com, or Blue Mountain Eagle, 195 N. Canyon Blvd., John Day, OR 97845; or fax to 541-575-1244.