A4 OPINION Blue Mountain Eagle Wednesday, November 3, 2021 OUR VIEW Senators shoot wide of the mark with wolf letter ardon us if we stifl e a yawn in response to a letter 21 U.S. senators penned the other day. New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker and Michigan Sen. Gary Peters led the letter-writ- ing campaign to call on Inte- rior Secretary Deb Haaland to protect gray wolves from being hunted for about eight months. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which is a part of the Interior Depart- ment, is already reviewing the status of wolves in the West. The senators just fret, need- lessly, that a lot of wolves will be killed in the meantime. Judging from the lan- guage of the letter, one would think wolves were again on the verge of extermination. In reality, their problem was with states such as Idaho and Mon- tana, which have plenty of wolves. For example, Idaho has an average of about 1,500 wolves. The total harvest of wolves during each of the past two years was about 500 wolves, but the populations have rebounded both years to 1,500. Reproduction is a spe- cialty of wolves. The Capital Press previ- ously reported that the state Fish and Game Commis- sion last summer established wolf seasons from Nov. 15 to March 31 on public land in 43 hunting units where elk are below population objectives or where there are histories of chronic livestock depredation. It left unchanged all other wolf hunting and trapping seasons on public land. Idaho has 99 hunting units. That hardly sounds like wolves will be eradicated. In fact, that sounds a lot like prudent management of a predator. Similarly, Montana, which has about 1,100 wolves, has been adjusting its wolf sea- sons to avoid confl icts with other protected species. A total of 38 wolves have been harvested this fall, according to the state’s Fish and Wild- P life Commission. Yet the wolf experts in the U.S. Senate want the hunting stopped. “If continued unabated for this hunting season, these extreme wolf eradication pol- icies will result in the death of hundreds of gray wolves and will further harm federally protected ecosystems like Yel- lowstone,” the senators wrote, referring to three wolves that were killed outside the park in Montana. The other authors were Pat- rick Leahy, D-Vt.; Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y.; Jack Reed, D-R.I.; Richard Blu- menthal, D-Conn.; Bernie Sanders, I-Vt.; Jacky Rosen, D-Nev.; Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif.; Alex Padilla, D-Ca- lif.; Sheldon Whitehouse, D-R.I.; Mazie K. Hirono, D-Hawaii; Chris Van Hol- len, D-Md.; Chris Murphy, D-Conn.; Tammy Duck- worth, D-Ill.; Catherine Cor- tez-Masto, D-Nev.; Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass.; Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio; Brian Schatz, D-Hawaii; Robert Menen- dez, D-N.J.; and Ed Markey, D-Mass. You’ll note that, with the exception of Upper Michigan, none of the states they rep- resent has a signifi cant num- ber of wolves. We suspect the purpose of the letter was more to curry favor with environ- mental groups than to protect wolves, which, by the way, are doing just fi ne. They continue to spread across the West with- out any help. Here’s an idea. We propose the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Ser- vice deliver 200 wolves to each of the states those sen- ators represent. Send 200 each to New Jersey, New York, Massachusetts, Califor- nia, Ohio, Illinois, Nevada, Rhode Island, Connecticut and Maryland. And don’t forget about Hawaii. Let’s just see how that works. COMMENTARY River bill has big problems S en. Ron Wyden has proposed adding over 4,700 miles of waterways to the federal Wild & Scenic Rivers System in Oregon. With half-mile no-touch buff ers, the River Democracy Act will apply access and management restrictions to 3 million acres of federal land, much of it in our communities in Northeastern Oregon. There are signifi cant issues still unad- dressed and important questions still unanswered for such a consequential bill that is now moving through the U.S. Senate. For starters, there no detailed maps available from federal agencies that allow Oregonians to see where these designations are located, and how these designations would aff ect pri- vate property, public access, and other traditional uses such as ranching. The only available map on the Internet appears to be produced by a Portland environmental group that helped write the bill. Secondly, the original Wild & Sce- nic Rivers Act was intended to pre- serve certain rivers with outstanding natural, cultural, and recreational val- ues in a free-fl owing condition. From a list provided by the bill’s supporters, we know that 85 percent of the bill’s Wild & Scenic designations would be applied to small creeks, gulches, draws and unnamed tributaries — many of which are not free-fl owing and do not even carry water through- out the year. Sen. Lynn Findley the River Democracy Act will add more restrictions to 3 million acres at a time when land management agen- cies are already struggling to imple- ment proven and proactive for- est management activities to reduce the risks of wildfi res to forests and watersheds. The reasons for agency inaction include a lack of funding and per- sonnel, and the cost and time it takes them to satisfy exhaustive analysis and regulatory requirements. In addi- tion to the half-mile buff ers, the River Democracy Act will require agen- cies to prepare exhaustive river man- agement plans that will take years to complete, drain agency resources, and open the door to ongoing and addi- tional litigation. Proponents of the bill claim the River Democracy Act will support wildfi re prevention eff orts and pro- tect private property rights. Yet history shows that Wild & Scenic River des- ignations only encourage more law- suits and analysis paralysis, especially where they intersect with private prop- erty and other public land uses. As this bill advances through Con- gress, citizens should be asking: what does the bill actually do, why is it nec- essary, and does it really benefi t rural and frontier Oregon? Sen. Lynn Findley (Senate District 30) and Rep. Mark Owens (House District 60) represent Eastern Oregon in the state Legislature. Rep. Mark Owens If these small creeks, gulches, draws and unnamed tributaries are worthy of such a designation, why does this bill subvert the careful administrative study and review pro- cess under the original act? And why does this bill impose half-mile buf- fers in these areas, when the Wild & Scenic Rivers Act only calls for quar- ter-mile buff ers? Federal lands are at high risk of wildfi re and need active manage- ment, thinning and fuels reduction work. Wildfi res in recent years have scorched watersheds and degraded water quality as sediment and ash is deposited into our river systems. In 2020, over 76 percent of acres burned in Oregon occurred on lands managed by the U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management. Management is already restricted in riparian areas. Would imposing even more restrictions through Wild & Scenic designations and half-mile buff ers really make it easier to reduce wildfi re risks? Oregonians are right to ask why OFF THE BEATEN PATH Tastes like chicken — or does it? ccasionally someone off ers me an unusual food. To entice me to eat it, they say, “It tastes like chicken.” My gold standard for chicken developed from a family experience. One year we bought two batches of baby chicks — one batch to grow into laying hens, the others, a hybrid meaty breed, were destined for Sun- day dinners and picnics featuring fried chicken. This butcher fl ock, noted to be fast-growing birds, were big eaters. It seemed as though they guzzled down a semi-load of grain and a day later they looked like small turkeys. When butchered, the meat birds averaged 13 pounds. Drumsticks looked like the kind of muscle one expects to see on a professional bodybuilder. We sus- pected the chickens spent their nights pumping iron and their days eating. After the meaty birds were dressed out, we roasted, baked, fried and turned some into rich-bodied soup O laced with home- made noodles — the egg noodles courtesy of laying hens. The meat turned out lean, moist and full of fl a- vor — our gold stan- dard chickens. When someone Jean Ann say a food “tastes Moultrie like chicken,” I hav- en’t found they are speaking about our gold standard chickens. It seems more likely they are referring to a 10-year-old rooster with a terminal case of shingles. Now when someone fi xes me food that “tastes like chicken,” I know I’m off ered something that tastes some- where between pan-fried dog food and a diced and chopped tractor tire boiled in a cream sauce. The list goes on as to what some people invite others to eat: alliga- tor, beetles, locusts, wooly mammoth, snake, etc. — all reported to have “chicken-like fl avor.” A cook reports the snake stinks during the frying pro- cess, which should be a clue to diners about its palatability. These chicken-fl avored foodies don’t malign beef. I’ve never heard any- one say, “Crocodile tastes like Angus beef steaks.” A club titled Friends of Poultry united to curb the “like chicken” move- ment. Fear had risen that this prac- tice unchecked could spread to other foods like lava washing over sugar cane fi elds. Someone could make a claim about a vegetable. “Boiled cab- bage tastes like carrot cake with cream cheese frosting.” Or “mashed rutabagas taste like Marionberry pie.” To combat this, a Truth in Flavors bill has been drafted which includes notice that one cannot claim some- thing tastes like chicken — unless it is chicken. Public discussion to follow. Jean Ann Moultrie is a Grant County writer. It has been rumored that she off ered houseguests oatmeal that tastes like chocolate chip cookies. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Can’t control smoke from controlled burns To the editor: I’m curious: What is the dif- ference between “wildfire” smoke, that is hazardous and contributes to the greenhouse effect by sending carbon par- ticles into the atmosphere, and all of the “controlled burns” smoke? Maybe someone a little smarter than me can explain that. And maybe they can come up with another way to reduce fuels or thin out the amount that has built up over the last 30 to 40 years. Please help! Ken Koser Prairie City Biden has America on the edge of ruin To the editor: Joe Blo works down at the saw- mill piling lumber. He works 40 hours a week and makes, let’s say, $18 an hour, or roughly $2,880 a month before taxes. Joe Biden works at the White House doing nothing. He works (?) Blue Mountain Grant County’s Weekly Newspaper SUBSCRIPTION RATES (including online access) EAGLE Editor ........................................................Bennett Hall, bhall@bmeagle.com One year ..................................................$51 Monthly autopay .............................. $4.25 Outside Continental U.S. ....................$60 Published every Wednesday by Reporter ...................................................... Steven Mitchell, steven@bmeagle.com Sports ........................................................sports@bmeagle.com Multimedia ............................................................. Alex Wittwer, awittwer@eomediagroup.com Marketing Rep .......................................Kim Kell, ads@bmeagle.com Subscriptions must be paid prior to delivery MEMBER OREGON NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION Online: MyEagleNews.com Periodicals Postage Paid at John Day and additional mailing offi ces. POSTMASTER send address changes to: Blue Mountain Eagle 195 N. Canyon Blvd. John Day, OR 97845-1187 USPS 226-340 Offi ce Assistant .....................................Alixandra Hand, offi ce@bmeagle.com Phone: 541-575-0710 hours a week and makes $400,000 a year with probably no taxes, plus benefi ts — medical, Air Force One and on and on! So after nine months, Joe Blo has moved enough lumber to build God knows how many houses while Joe Biden has screwed up so bad he has ruined God knows how many Amer- ican lives. Something is not right here and needs to be corrected real soon. We are on the edge of ruin and people need to wake up and real- ize this. Eddy L. Negus Prairie City Copyright © 2021 Blue Mountain Eagle All rights reserved. No part of this publication covered by the copyright hereon may be reproduced or copied in any form or by any means — graphic, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, taping or information storage and retrieval systems — without written permission of the publisher. facebook.com/MyEagleNews @MyEagleNews