OPINION Blue Mountain Eagle A4 Wednesday, November 17, 2021 OUR VIEW On the value of high school sports and local journalism L et’s take a moment to show some apprecia- tion for Grant County’s high school athletes, who just wrapped up fall sports. Both Grant Union and Prairie City sent teams to the postseason, and while Dayville/Monument had less success this year, we applaud all the student-athletes for their hard work and dedication. The Grant Union volleyball team capped a strong 2021 cam- paign by bringing home some hardware. After fi nishing the reg- ular season with a 19-10 over- all record, the Lady Prospectors went 2-0 in the Blue Mountain Conference Tournament to move on to the state playoff s, where they collected a trophy for fi n- ishing fourth statewide in Divi- sion 2A. Even though they fi elded a much smaller roster than some of their opponents, the Grant Union football team made the postsea- son after going 3-3 in the 2A Special District 5. The Prospec- tors bowed out in the fi rst round after falling on the road against Lakeview. One of the Pros’ sea- son highlights was scoring a pair of touchdowns against a pow- erful Heppner squad that hadn’t given up a single point in any of their previous league matchups. The Prairie City volleyball team fi nished strong, going 2-1 in the High Desert League’s tournament to qualify for post- season play. In their fi rst-round matchup, the Panthers faced Central Christian of the Moun- tain Valley League on the road, falling 3-1. The Prairie City football team just missed the playoff s this year after losing a 51-48 slugfest to Alsea. It was a tough end to a strong season that saw the Pan- thers go 6-1 in the High Desert League. The team also racked up the league’s Coach of the Year honors for Nick Thompson and Off ensive Player of the Year for standout running back Cole Teel. And while we’re at it, we’d also like to express our gratitude to all the hard-working coaches and volunteers who put so much time and eff ort into helping these kids be the best they can be, not only in their chosen sports but in life as well. Thanks for all you do. Here to stay On today’s Opinion page, you’ll fi nd a letter to the editor from Gary Davidson, a Canyon City resident who wants to know about the future of the Blue Mountain Eagle. He’s concerned that the paper could lose its local editorial control and become a repository for regional news with little relevance to Grant County readers. We suspect other readers share Mr. Davidson’s concerns, so we wanted to take the time to address them here. The Blue Mountain Eagle is the oldest weekly newspaper in Oregon, tracing its roots all the back to 1868. In 1979, the Eagle was purchased by the East Ore- gonian Publishing Co. Now known as the East Oregonian Media Group, the company pub- lishes 15 newspapers and two magazines in Oregon and south- west Washington. EO Media is not some far- away, publicly-traded corpo- ration beholden to stockhold- ers who care about nothing but profi ts and dividends. It’s a fourth-generation family-owned company with deep roots in Ore- gon and a demonstrated commit- ment to local journalism. Here at the Eagle, we don’t subscribe to any national wire services, but we are able to use stories pro- duced by other EO media news- papers, including half a dozen right here in Eastern Oregon. We see that as a strength, not a limitation. We’re also able to collaborate with other papers in the group to produce regional stories about topics that have local impacts here in Grant County, leveraging what we’re able to accomplish with our small staff . As regular readers will have noticed, we’ve been down to one reporter since June. We happen to think Steven Mitchell has done a terrifi c job, but he can’t be everywhere at once, and we are actively recruit- ing to fi ll our vacant reporter position. Once our newsroom is back at full strength, you’ll see even more local stories and pho- tos in our pages. So, Mr. Davidson, to answer your question: No, this newspa- per is not going to be swallowed up by its parent company and stripped of its local identity. The Blue Mountain Eagle is here to stay, and we’re going to keep on doing what we’ve been doing for the last 153 years: serving the people of Grant County, Oregon. We are grateful to all the sub- scribers who support our mission of delivering strong local journal- ism. If you’d like to become one of them, go to www.bluemoun- taineagle.com/subscribe-now/ to see our latest off ers. 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 E DITOR R EPORTER S PORTS M ULTIMEDIA M ARKETING R EP O FFICE A SSISTANT 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 offi ces. SUBSCRIPTION RATES (including online access) One year ..................................................$51 Monthly autopay .............................. $4.25 Subscriptions must be paid prior to delivery POSTMASTER — send address changes to 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 COMMENTARY Tax credit will support local news I magine this page was blank except for one question: “What if there were no local reporters?” That was the front-page question posed by our friends at Pamplin Media last week. It’s a good question and regardless of how you get local news — by watching TV, listening to local radio or reading a story in the newspaper or on a news organization’s website — it’s not hyper- bole to say communities suff er when there is no local news coverage or when independently owned media companies are gobbled up by hedge funds that gut newsrooms. And it’s a timely question because there is a bipartisan provision in the fed- eral budget reconciliation bill work- ing its way through Congress that will give media companies a temporary pay- roll tax credit to hire and retain journal- ists. Oregon’s Sen. Ron Wyden chairs the Senate Finance Committee that will have a great deal of say on whether this provision makes it through to the fi n- ish line. Wyden is a co-sponsor of the bill written by Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash. Being the son of a prominent journalist, he is a longtime champion of a free press. In a recent interview with the Seattle Times, Wyden responded to a question about the potential for some to dislike government helping the press. He said, “This is not the government putting its hand on certain types of speech. This is about generally empowering local Heidi Wright journalism in a big way. By the way, there are plenty of local journalism out- lets that span across the political spec- trum, left, right, center, you name it.” On the House side, the bill was co-authored by Rep. Dan Newhouse, R-Wash., and Rep. Ann Kirkpatrick, D-Ariz., and is strongly supported by two key Oregon representatives — Peter DeFazio and Earl Blumenauer. For anyone who follows the chal- lenges of media companies and the reality of growing news deserts around the country, this temporary tax credit known as the Local Journalism Sus- tainability Act is a welcome relief that will directly aid news gathering orga- nizations, including an estimated 113 newsrooms in Oregon. It’s the only piece — some would say the most important piece — left of an original three-part proposal intended to stabilize and reform an industry upended by the deadly trio of Google, Facebook and the pandemic. The tax credit sunsets in fi ve years, giving media companies a reasonable timeframe to build a sustainable busi- ness model that supports local journal- ism in the internet age. It also sends a message to young people that journal- ism is a career worth pursuing where there will be jobs available with those companies that make the successful transition. Numerous studies show what hap- pens in communities where there’s no professionally trained journalists asking questions and accurately reporting on what is happening at a local level: gov- ernment waste and potential for corrup- tion by public offi cials increases, voter turnout drops and communities fi nd it harder to solve their own problems. News deserts create democracy deserts, especially in rural communities. If you are reading this and want to help, email our Oregon congres- sional delegation and let them know you support keeping the Local Jour- nalism Sustainability Act temporary tax credit in the budget reconciliation package. Heidi Wright is the COO for EO Media Group and the publisher of The Bulletin and serves as treasurer for America’s Newspapers, an indus- try group representing more than 1,600 newspapers across the country. Email her at hwright@eomediagroup.com. OFF THE BEATEN PATH Turkey carcass compatibility quiz T he holiday turkey carcass trig- gered the trouble. The problem at a holiday isn’t only what to cook and how to cook it, but what family and friends participate in after the meal. For instance, I might wear my Komfort Fit elastic waistband clothes only to fi nd the host rounded up bicycles for everyone for an after-dinner bike marathon. Knowing this, I can pace myself at the dessert table. I propose a Compatibility Quiz be taken before accepting an invitation as a holiday dinner guest or serving as a host/hostess. Circle your answers. After a holiday meal, one expects to enjoy: • Vivaldi, Chopin • TV football game • Marathon sports event — guests participate (bike, hike, climb, run, etc.) If one hears what sounds like a Boe- ing 747 taking off cross-wind at the Portland Airport, it’s: • Uncle Henry, belly up, snoring on the couch • Family dogs banned to a back bedroom • The Left-Overs, a rock band that plays with a backdrop of a Sears Crafts- man Deluxe automotive tool chest in the garage If a roar of anguish erupts as though a biker gang invaded the neighborhood, the sound came from: • TV viewers when the opposing team scored a touchdown • A nap-deprived 2-year-old who can’t fi nd blankie and discovers on his dinner plate a speck of gravy touch- ing a green bean When you see the word “organ,” you think of: • Bach fugue Jean Ann • Turkey giblets in Moultrie a white plastic bag What’s a giblet? • Second baseman for the New York Mets • Turkey parts including liver, heart, gizzard A gizzard is part of the digestive tract of turkeys, crocodiles, alligators, earth- worms and grasshoppers. (A grand- child and I looked it up on Wikipe- dia when we weren’t sticking olives on our fi ngers or dissecting turkey heart chambers.) What is done with the giblets? • Cooked, chopped, and made into giblet gravy • Cooked, chopped, and fed to the dog • Unopened white bag tossed into the garbage After dinner, family and friends: • Watch football games on TV • Nap • Toss around a football in the yard • Play board games • Take a 2-mile hike (Coming from a family of board game devotees, I found it imperative to know the host family belonged to the marathon hikers when off ered a second helping of pie.) While dinner clean-up is underway, you prefer to entertain a: • Teething tot • Tantrum-prone toddler • Surly teen banned from electronics for the day • Politically active Aunt Edna push- ing a petition to ban land mines and green bean bake What grosses you out? • A kid with olives on each fi nger passing the bowl of mashed potatoes • Runny noses • Uncle Rupert’s dentures sitting on the TV remote Leftover turkey should be: • Eaten at midnight with a side of congealed dressing, the culinary equiva- lent of a bowling ball • Chopped with feline nibbles and fed to the cat End of the meal, what to do with the turkey carcass? • Boil it into a rich broth to make soup (Aunt Edna comes from the school of turkey bone soup) • Toss it into the garbage During clean-up the hostess said, “Throw out the carcass.” The problem for Aunt Edna surfaced at airport security. She triggered alarms when a TSA agent caught her trying to smuggle in the turkey carcass taped to her chest. Jean Ann Moultrie is a Grant County writer, devotee of turkey bone soup, and one-time-a-year-marathon Monopoly player. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR What’s the future of Blue Mountain Eagle? To the editor: No song and dance, or soft lights and background music, let’s have the straight and honest truth! Is it the Eagle’s plan to soon dissolve and merge the local operation of the Eagle into a conglomerate of other scat- tered similar — but diff erent — “local” news outlets, and the printed page be eliminated and replaced by “online area news only”? In other words, is this “local” paper about to be swallowed up, digested, and regurgitated as what amounts to a gen- eral Eastern Oregon news publication — one that adds lots of subscriber out- of-area (and unwanted?) bits and pieces, but precious little actual local news cov- erage, other than miscellaneous volun- teer senior correspondent columns and such? Will we be enticed by the lure that our classifi ed ads will now be read by a larger — but scattered — readership as a replacement to the focused and real, local coverage and subscriber access we have had so far? Yeah, we’ve seen it steadily hap- pening all around the nation — and our state. Tell us the truth: Is it about to hap- pen here in Grant County as well? Gary Davidson Canyon City Exercising freedom not to wear a mask To the editor: Regarding a letter to the editor in the Nov. 10 edition (“Have Consider- ation for Other People”): Some of us believe we live in a republic where we ourselves have the power to choose. Indeed, when England followed the “free-thinking” pilgrims to the New World in order to control/rule them, these people fought back. Freedom was very important to them. To some of us, it still is. Obviously, that road does not run both ways with some folks. In other words, it’s none of your business if I wear a mask or do not wear one. As you admit, you mask up and have got- ten the vaccine plus booster. You are protected. Why do you insist that I do the same? I am not selfi sh when I can put together the facts and see that we are faced with not so much of a virus issue as a people issue. Certain people refuse to conform to a mandate (not a law, mind you) that is unconstitutional and infringes on my right as an American citizen to choose my own medical free- dom. I am not stupid, nor am I selfi sh. I am an American. Please do continue to mask up if you choose. That is your right as a citizen of this country and I will fi ght for your right to do so. But I will not be badgered and belittled by close-minded people. If we stand for nothing, we fall for anything. Marsha Christensen John Day