A4 OPINION Blue Mountain Eagle Wednesday, December 15, 2021 OUR VIEW Governor hopefuls need to listen to rural Oregon ‘T is the season not only for Christmas trees and year-end celebrations but for Oregon’s gubernatorial candidates to shift into high gear in anticipa- tion of the 2022 election. First off , we want to wish all of the candidates the best. At last count, 28 candidates were in the running for the Democratic or Republican nominations, and a handful of others were in the wings. Add the independents and third- party candidates, and Ore- gonians will have plenty to choose from in the November general election. Running for governor is a grueling and sometimes demeaning undertaking in which candidates are often marketed like boxes of cereal. Armed with the latest polls and piles of donations, they ply their trade with one goal in mind — getting Oregonians to vote for them. Many of them seem to be saying, “Be reasonable, and see it my way.” Others seem to be quoting a character in the movie “Napo- leon Dynamite,” who prom- ised during a student coun- cil election, “Vote for me and all of your dreams will come true.” But that’s all backwards. Candidates need to refl ect Ore- gonians’ views, not the other way around. Only then will the state’s voters get a governor worthy of their support. We have a suggestion for the candidates. Instead of pre- senting voters will pre-pack- aged platforms, why not go where Oregonians live? And listen, really listen. Those of us who live in rural parts of the state — the vast majority of Oregon’s 98,466 square miles — know what it’s like to be ignored or, almost as bad, patronized. A candidate from Portland — whose area is a puny 145 square miles — or some other city will often do a drive-by “appearance” in rural Oregon aimed at getting some atten- tion in the press and then head for the next stop. But in the process what do they learn about rural Oregon? Do they understand the stress and hardship laws written for urban areas can have on the rural residents and their econ- omy? If they do, what have they done about it? Do they know the diff er- ence between throwing money at a problem and solving it? And in this era of COVID, what, specifi cally, would they have done diff erently if they were governor? Should tiny Burns be subjected to the same regulations as Portland? The answers to those and other questions should not come from bullet points from a canned speech but from serious discussions of the issues with working rural Oregonians. We’re not just talking about meeting with the local big- wigs. We’re talking about the folks who farm and ranch, who work at dairies and nurs- eries or who punch a time clock at a factory or process- ing plant. The squeaky wheels in Portland and the rest of urban Oregon get plenty of attention. It’s time for the politicians to listen to the drive wheels that make this state’s economy go. OFF THE BEATEN PATH How to carve a coconut hwack! The early morning thump awakens me in my Tongan fale (cottage). I tie my lava lava (skirt) around my waist, slip into sandals and head outside. A muscular youth with a fear- some-looking machete reduces a pile of coconuts to coconut halves. He strips off the brown outer fi bers, gives the coconut a chop and the shell cracks open as easily as though he peeled a banana. I off er to help. Communication consists of pantomime. I reach for his machete wanting to try a couple whacks — it looks simple yet impressive. With actions and words thick with vowels, I’m given to under- stand he will not be responsible for me hacking off my limbs. Using a sharp tool attached to a stool, he shreds the coconut. I spot the machete on the ground thinking I could snatch it, get in a couple trial chops on a coconut before he intervenes. He sees me eying the machete and plants his foot on the blade. When the coconut overfl ows a pan, he throws a few scraps to wan- dering chickens. He picks up a pile of the brown fi bers that surround the coconuts, fans the fi bers across his hand, piles shredded coconut in the middle and wrings out the fi bercovered coconut as if it were a dishrag. The creamy white liquid he collects in a pitcher and drops the dry fl akes into another pan. He hands me a golf ball-sized hunk T what else — a machete. He hefts a coconut, gives it a smack and the coconut splits open. “The trick is to locate the cru- cial spot to hit,” says the B&B owner. Sounds simpler than the ham- mer, screwdriver and hack- saw I employ at home to open a store-purchased coconut. With forks, houseguests take turns prying out hunks of coconut. What ranks as more spectacular, increasingly rare fruit bat sightings or the rich fl avor of fresh coconut? The answer remains under dispute. When I return home, an Ore- gon morning turns brisk and cold. I scout a grocery store for coconut and pay for purchases. From a grocery sack, I pull out packages of fl aked coconut. With a plastic knife, I saw open a bag and toss coconut across grilled chicken. I sprinkle coconut across the top of a frosted cake, stir coco- nut into coconut cream pie fi ll- ing and garnish with oven-toasted coconut. I add shaved coconut to homemade granola. Foods fami- ly-rated as “mighty fi ne eating.” Coconut-laced meals, yes, but not quite quintessential coco- nut freshly forked from a shell served with fruit bat entertainment. I wished for a pile of fresh coconuts and my own machete. Jean Ann Moultrie is a Grant County writer. She anticipated a gift of a machete but instead received a fi shing pole and pocket knife. of coconut and I savor the treat as he works. When the pitcher and pan are fi lled, he knocks at the back door Jean Ann of a restaurant and Moultrie hands the shredded coconut and coco- nut cream to the cook. At another Tongan island, I’m served delicious chicken breasts stuff ed with papaya chunks and rolled in a crusty coating of toasted coconut. Days later in Fiji, while sitting on a mat in a village home, the home- maker instructs me in the proper way to toast coconut: heat a stone in the outdoor fi re pit, place the hot stone in a basket of coconut fl akes, and toss until the coconut turns a pale brown. My last night in the South Pacifi c and I’m sitting on the patio of a B&B in American Samoa. A fi sh soup simmers on the stove. While waiting for dinner, we congregate as the B&B owner discusses the rain- forest around us. The attraction for the evening: bats, as in fruit bats. The owner points out the fi rst fruit bat sighting that evening that looks to me like a soaring rap- tor. Bats the size of cats and kit- tens swirl on wind currents. Slack- jawed, I watch them lift off from branches and dip past tree trunks. The B&B owner ambles inside to check the soup and returns with — COMMENTARY Mental health gets short shrift uring the fi rst wave of the pandemic in April 2020, my boyfriend asked, not unkindly, if I’ve ever been diag- nosed with anything besides gener- alized anxiety disorder. I was relieved that somebody had fi nally asked about my mental health. All spring and summer 2020, I kicked the ball of my fritzing brain down the fi eld to some imaginary goal of “things” getting better in the world, or at least more stable. Plainly, that didn’t happen. And so, like many others, I went back to therapy. Or tried to. I’m on Medicaid, and while the insurance I receive through the pro- gram is accepted by many dentists and primary care physicians, fi nd- ing a therapist or a psychiatrist who takes it has been, in my experience, impossible. I used Psychology Today’s search tool and found just three therapists in my area who said they accepted Medicaid. Only one returned my email, but after a detailed intake interview, I never heard from her again. Over the next eight months, more fruitless attempts to fi nd care for my mental health took a real toll on my time, money, and well being. I asked for help fi nding a ther- apist and a psychiatrist from my in-network primary care physi- cian. A month later, she wrote to say that she knew no psychiatrists who accepted Medicaid, ending the mes- sage with a well-intentioned but D WHERE TO WRITE GRANT COUNTY • Grant County Courthouse — 201 S. Humbolt St., Suite 280, Canyon City 97820. Phone: 541- 575-0059. Fax: 541-575-2248. • Canyon City — P.O. Box 276, Canyon City 97820. Phone: 541-575-0509. Fax: 541-575-0515. Email: tocc1862@centurylink.net. • Dayville — P.O. Box 321, Dayville 97825. Phone: 541-987-2188. Fax: 541-987-2187. Email: dville@ ortelco.net • John Day — 450 E. Main St, John Day, 97845. Phone: 541-575-0028. Fax: 541-575-1721. Email: cityjd@centurytel.net. • Long Creek — P.O. Box 489, Long Creek 97856. Phone: 541-421-3601. Fax: 541-421-3075. Email: info@cityofl ongcreek.com. • Monument — P.O. Box 426, Monument 97864. Phone and fax: 541-934-2025. Email: cityofmonument@centurytel.net. • Mt. Vernon — P.O. Box 647, Mt. Vernon 97865. Phone: 541-932-4688. Fax: 541-932-4222. Email: cmtv@ortelco.net. • Prairie City — P.O. Box 370, Prairie City 97869. Phone: 541-820-3605. Fax: 820-3566. Email: pchall@ortelco.net. • Seneca — P.O. Box 208, Seneca 97873. Phone and fax: 541-542-2161. Email: senecaoregon@ gmail.com. SALEM • Gov. Kate Brown, D — 254 State Capitol, Salem 97310. Phone: 503-378-3111. Fax: 503-378-6827. Website: governor.state.or.us/governor.html. • Oregon Legislature — State Capitol, Salem, 97310. Phone: 503-986-1180. Website: leg.state. or.us (includes Oregon Constitution and Oregon Revised Statutes). • Oregon Legislative Information — (For updates on bills, services, capitol or messages for legislators) — 800-332-2313, oregonlegislature.gov. • Sen. Lynn Findley, R-Vale — 900 Court St. NE, S-301, Salem 97301. Phone: 503-986-1730. Website: oregonlegislature.gov/fi ndley. Email: sen.lynnfi ndley@oregonlegislature.gov. • Rep. Mark Owens, R-Crane — 900 Court St. NE, H-475, Salem 97301. Phone: 503-986-1460. District address: 258 S. Oregon St., Ontario OR 97914. District phone: 541-889-8866. Website: oregonlegislature.gov/fi ndley. Email: rep. markowens@oregonlegislature.gov. WASHINGTON, D.C. The White House, 1600 Pennsylvania Ave. N.W., Washington, D.C. 20500; Phone- comments: 202-456-1111; Switchboard: 202-456-1414. • U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, D — 516 Hart Senate Offi ce Building, Washington D.C. 20510. Phone: 202-224-5244. Email: wayne_kinney@ wyden.senate.gov. Website: http://wyden. senate.gov Fax: 202-228-2717. unhelpful “;-(”. After combing the Internet, I found fi ve other local psychiatrists who had “Medicaid” listed on their pro- Katie fi les. They never Prout returned my emails or my calls. I cried. It turns out I’m not alone. Amer- icans are seeking mental health care in record numbers, and many are struggling to fi nd it. Even before the pandemic, NPR reported that 77 percent of U.S. counties faced a severe shortage of psychiatrists. Meanwhile the number of practices accepting Medicaid has declined. For people like me, our condi- tions can grow more disruptive and life-threatening with every pass- ing week without care. Studies show that being poor is correlated to higher rates of mental illness. What is perhaps less widely understood is that poverty causes mental illness, too. Anyone who has tried to get help knows that the process consigns whole days to the dump. During my search, I was working as a freelance journalist. The time I spent chasing down care was time I couldn’t spend fi ling stories and earning income to live. For that mat- ter, it was time I could’ve spent call- ing my mom, cleaning my fridge, applying for a job, running around the block — anything. Eventually, I found a graduate student therapist for $25 a session. 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 But a proper psychiatric evaluation remains elusive. One place said I’d have to switch my therapy over to them, but I wasn’t ready to do that. Another said I’d have to leave my current primary care physician. I said no. I didn’t want to disrupt what stable care I had in exchange for the uncertain promise of even- tual help. Medicaid has been good to my body — I got a dermatologist, a pri- mary care physician, a gynecologist, and a gastroenterologist with rela- tive ease — but it has abandoned my brain. I need timely, accessible, aff ordable care — just like millions of Americans. I want choice, not a fi stful of deeply unhelpful options wrestled from the cruel system we make poor people navigate to access health care. Some days I still can’t believe that more than a year and a half into a pandemic — with its massive lay- off s, record unemployment, hun- dreds of thousands of deaths, and increase in mental illness — this country still ties “good” insurance to your employer. We deserve so much more. For me, I want to be present in my exis- tence, rather than getting lost in the endless twilight plains of my mind. Print Friendly, PDF & Email Katie Prout is a staff writer at the Chicago Reader. This op-ed was developed by the Economic Hard- ship Reporting Project, adapted from a longer story at the Chicago Reader, and distributed by Other- Words.org. 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