A4 OPINION Blue Mountain Eagle Wednesday, March 23, 2022 OUR VIEW Public can get stung by trade secrets T he recipe for Oreos. Facebook algorithms. The mix that makes a Black Butte Porter a Black Butte Porter. Those are all arguably trade secrets. You wouldn’t expect Deschutes Brewery to be forced to make public the pre- cise recipe for its beers. The problem can be when trade secrets — or what are argued to be trade secrets — intersect with things important to the pub- lic. Like water. In The Dalles, the City Council approved a new deal with Google to allow it to expand its data centers. Data centers are thirsty. And technically, under Oregon law, all water belongs to the public. Some residents of The Dalles and some journalists wanted to know how much water Google would be using. City offi cials argued the amount of water the expansion will take is sustain- able for its aquifer. But people have diff erent ideas about what is sustainable. And members of the public can’t really judge how good a deal is unless they know how much water the data cen- ters will be drinking. Google argued that information is a trade secret. The Dalles sued The Oregonian to keep the information secret. And so far, that is the way the issue remains. The Oregon Sunshine Committee, set up to ensure Oregon’s public records laws are working, has been taking a look at the trade secrets section of public records laws. Businesses do have trade secrets that deserve to be protected. And government agencies need to contract with businesses. In those contracts, businesses will make assertions that the agree- ments contain trade secrets. It’s generally in the interest of a company to assert that as much as possible of an agreement is covered by trade secrets. That limits the ability of a competitor or anyone else to gain any advantage by reading the contract. But government bodies are not typically equipped to decide if what a business is asserting is a trade secret or not. “This could allow for overclassifi cation of potential trade secrets with the public entity stuck in the middle between a record requestor and the potential trade secret holder,” according to a Sunshine Com- mittee document. State law does make it possible to go to court to overturn an assertion that a so-called trade secret should become public. A public records requestor can argue there is a public interest. But that probably means going to court. How many people would, say, have the resources to take on the city of The Dalles with Google backing it up? The Sunshine Committee favored advocating that the state make three changes in the law. 1. Businesses would be required to explain to a government entity why something should be considered a trade secret and clearly denote what is a trade secret and what is not. 2. The committee also would like to see the two statutes in Oregon law that discuss trade secrets condensed into one. One statute states that there should be a public interest balancing test when considering if something should be a trade secret. The other does not. The suggestion is the public interest balancing test should apply in the revised statute. 3. Oregon could also revise the statute so that a business with an alleged trade secret — not the public entity — is the appro- priate party to respond in any appeals process when a public records requestor is seeking information. We don’t know if these reform ideas will go anywhere. We can’t imagine businesses will like them. And we are now sure how they will level the playing fi eld so the public has much of a chance when a business asserts something is a trade secret — even when it’s how much of Oregon’s water will be guzzled. up. Ag overtime bill not a victory efore even the fi rst gavel dropped on the 2022 legislative session, I knew that one of the most consequential bills of my legisla- tive career would be considered. HB 4002, or the agriculture over- time bill, was a divisive bill from the start and presented the Oregon Leg- islature with two options. One that would favor one side to the detriment of the rest of Oregon, especially the agricultural economy. This is what I called a win — a win for a select few at the cost of the rest of us. The other path included compromise, good-faith negotiation and a bill that would gen- erate support from both parties. This is what I called a victory — a victory for all of Oregon. I worked hard to get a victory, not just a win on agriculture overtime. But the fi nal result was a win — a win for Willamette Valley liberal special inter- ests who donate money to the majority Democrats’ campaign funds. It will make these groups feel good about themselves, but it won’t make Oregonians better off . HB 4002 will result in higher prices at the grocery store for working families, hours and pay capped for agricultural workers, and ultimately the shuttering of small B Sen. Bill Hansell family farms that fi ll my district. Agriculture is a unique indus- try. During harvest seasons, it requires long hours to reap all the crops before frost or rains come. In ranching, there is even more nuance. The bottom line is that farmers and ranchers don’t set their own prices, they have to take whatever price the markets are off ering. The Demo- crats advanced an argument about ag overtime that essentially stated that a bushel of wheat harvested in the 41st hour is worth 50% more than one har- vested at the 5th hour. Anyone who has grown up around farms knows that that is not true. And requiring farmers to pay their workers as such will soon result in a dwindling number of family farms to even employ these workers. HB 4002 leveled all these unique distinctions in agriculture and man- dated a one-size-fi ts-all “solution” that is really no solution at all. The “olive branches” that Democrats extended, the agricultural community never asked for. One example: Under this new overtime pay mandate, family farms will now be able to apply for tax credits to ease the burden of the new overtime pay mandate. Now taxpayers will be subsidizing this new program. Farmers and ranchers never asked for that, but the majority decided that is what would be best for them. I worked hard to come to a com- promise. Simple adjustments for sea- sonality, fl exible scheduling, and rec- ognizing the diff erence between the kinds of agriculture would have helped. But the majority party rejected all these and charged ahead with what seemed to be a predetermined out- come, driven by their special interest groups. I know how much Oregon’s farm- ers and ranchers care about their employees and their families. HB 4002 will now force those farmers and ranchers to make diffi cult decisions about how much they can aff ord their employees to work. I grew up on these kinds of farms and I am afraid that under this policy, less and less of those farms will be around in the future. Sen. Bill Hansell, R-Athena, is in his 10th year representing the seven coun- ties that make up Senate District 29. COMMENTARY Proposed mountain bike trails raise alarm T here’s a storm brewing over the Ochocos. A storm big enough that it may aff ect all of Ore- gon’s national forests. The Ochoco Mountains, which are southward extensions of the Blue Mountains, are located near the geo- graphic center of Oregon on the Ochoco National Forest. Covering 845,498 acres of land, the Ochoco National Forest is home to more than 375 diff erent species of reptiles, amphibians, birds and mammals. Also within these colorful mountains and lush valleys are many family ranches. Some of those ranches have been there for over 100 years. The geographic center of Ore- gon is also home to one of the fast- est-growing cities in the Western United States, Bend. People are fl ock- ing to Bend for its mild climate, beau- tiful scenery, and abundant outdoor recreation opportunities. Just travel north or south from Bend on Highway 97 and you will see for yourself the maddening increase in traffi c. The increase in population has increased the need for outdoor recre- ation on our national forests, and this is the epicenter of the storm brew- ing. The mountain biking group Cen- tral Oregon Trails Alliance, known as COTA, has proposed to the For- est Service a need for more trails to ride on. A new trail system called Lemon Gulch has been proposed. The system would encompass 52 miles of bike trails with parking lots at trailheads in a 9-square-mile area in the Mill Creek drainage area of Crook County. The Forest Service, by virtue of the 1976 Federal Land Policy and Management Act, or FLPMA for short, is required to manage all pub- lic lands based on multiple use. That means grazing, min- ing, hunting, fi shing, hiking, birdwatching and, yes, even moun- tain biking. Matt The Forest Ser- McElligott vice proceeded with the COTA bike trail proposal under the guise of manag- ing for multiple use. Yet the agency obviously ignored FLPMA where it clearly states the public lands must be managed in a manner that will pro- tect the quality of scientifi c, scenic, his- torical, ecological, environmental, air and atmospheric, water resource, and archeological values; and that, where appropriate, certain public lands will be preserved and protected in their natu- ral condition. There is no way that jamming in 52 miles of trails into this area will preserve and protect the public lands in their natural condition. The law is also very clear on the process that an agency must abide by when mak- ing signifi cant changes to the current use of the public lands it manages — in this case, dramatically increasing the human footprint in the Mill Creek drainage, specifi cally Lemon Gulch. The law says: No action concerning the proposal may be taken that would 1) have an adverse environmental impact or 2) limit the choice of reasonable alternatives. The erosion and sedimentation from the trails will aff ect stream and water quality. Many additional people in a small area will adversely aff ect the wildlife population. It will degrade the natural plant population and increase noxious weed presence. The major mistake that the Forest Service made in moving forward with this project is that it did not adequately notify the local grazing permittees or the adjacent landowners, as required by law. There was no direct mailing, con- tact, or notifi cation provided to adja- cent landowners, aff ected landowners, or existing special use permittees. The trail system has already been marked and fl agged on the ground. The For- est Service has decided Lemon Gulch is the location and refuses to consider other areas in this process. On KTVZ, the local Bend channel, there was a news story on mountain bike usage on public lands. A public aff airs offi cer for the Forest Service is quoted as saying, “these trails are hurt- ing the land.” Why is the Forest Service pushing this through when they admit openly that it will hurt the land? The local peo- ple and local permittees are not against multiple use. They are against the size and scope of this project and the way it is being forced upon them. Their new slogan is, “Don’t Bend Prineville.” Concerned members of the pub- lic are encouraged to attend the Crook County Natural Resources Advisory Committee meeting at 1 p.m. on April 13 in the Clover Building at the Crook County Fairgrounds. Opposition to the Lemon Gulch project will ask the committee to better convey the need for county commissioners to offi cially withdraw their support of the proposal until a larger community conversa- tion takes place regarding recreational development in the Ochocos. You can learn more about this issue and future town halls at the Don’t BEND Prineville Facebook group. Matt McElligott is the Oregon Cat- tlemen’s Association president-elect and Public Lands Committee chair. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR If you leave, don’t come back To the Editor: So a recent poll reports that Dem- ocrats would cut and run if Putin were to invade the United States of Amer- ica. It is sad that they are a self-serv- ing, cowardly bunch, but it is good to know that we won’t have to trust them in a foxhole with us. We can only hope that when they leave the country the only way back is for them to sneak in 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 ............................................................. 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