OPINION A4 • HERMISTONHERALD.COM A4 HERMISTONHERALD.COM SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 2015 SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 2015 EDITORIAL • COMMENTARY • LETTERS HermistonHerald VOLUME 109 ɿ NUMBER 11 -(66,&$.(//(5 EDITOR MNHOOHU#KHUPLVWRQKHUDOGFRP 541-564-4533 MAEGAN MURRAY 6($1+$57 6$0%$5%(( JEANNE JEWETT &$66,1(:721 .,0/$3/$17 REPORTER mmurray@hermistonherald.com 541-564-4532 SPORTS REPORTER sbarbee@hermistonherald.com 541-564-4542 OFFICE COORDINATOR RI¿FH#KHUPLVWRQKHUDOGFRP 541-564-4530 REPORTER smhart@hermistonherald.com 541-564-4534 MULTI-MEDIA CONSULTANT jjewett@hermistonherald.com 541-564-4531 OFFICE MANAGER NODSODQW#KHUPLVWRQKHUDOGFRP 541-564-4530 To contact the Hermiston Herald for news, advertising or subscription information: • call 541-567-6457 • e-mail info@hermistonherald.com • VWRSE\RXURI¿FHVDW(0DLQ6W • visit us online at: www.hermistonherald.com ANNUAL SUBSCRIPTION RATES 'HOLYHUHGE\FDUULHUDQGPDLO:HGQHVGD\VDQG6DWXUGD\V Inside Umatilla/Morrow counties ......................................................................................... $42.65 Outside Umatilla/Morrow counties ...................................................................................... $53.90 7KH+HUPLVWRQ+HUDOG8636,661LVSXEOLVKHGWZLFHZHHNO\DW+HUPLVWRQ +HUDOG(0DLQ6W+HUPLVWRQ25)$;3HULRGLFDO SRVWDJHSDLGDW+HUPLVWRQ253RVWPDVWHUVHQGDGGUHVVFKDQJHVWR+HUPLVWRQ+HUDOG 3ULQWHGRQ (0DLQ6W+HUPLVWRQ25 recycled A member of the EO Media Group Copyright ©2015 newsprint The consequences of your vaccination decision C alifornia is experiencing an entirely new disturbance in the Force. The Magic Kingdom has become the Measles Kingdom. Disneyland is ground zero for the largest outbreak of measles in the last 15 years. So far, more than 100 cases have been reported since the initial exposure, some from as far away as Boston. (Rest assured, Mickey and Goofy DUHVWLOO¿QH This makes last year’s fear of an Ebola outbreak spreading across the nation look even more prescient and the sleepy, lethargic response of the CDC look even worse. Measles was so rare, it was one of those diseases that I feared environmentalists would try to put on the endangered species list. When I was a boy, mothers used to have an informal measles network. When one child came down with it, the other mothers would rush their kids over to be exposed, so they could get the illness and be done with it. This was also the procedure with chicken pox. But with the development of safe, effective vaccines, measles almost disappeared. I was anticipating a measles exhibition in the Smithsonian to mark WKHGDWHZKHQLW¿QDOO\ vanished, but I didn’t anticipate Jenny McCarthy ZRXOGVWRSÀDXQWLQJKHU boobs and start preaching to boobs. McCarthy — a former Playboy centerfold — and a “doctor” whose medical license has since been revoked, began warning the public about a non-existent connection between measles and autism. Most of us simply ignored her misinformation, but a recent study showed the two demographics where McCarthy’s message made inroads were Americans with very little education and those with advanced degrees. Presumably both demographics include Disneyland patrons. As a result, gullible parents have been refusing Letters Policy 0,&+$(/5($*$1 MAKING SENSE Cagle columnist to have their children vaccinated. For a while WKLVZDV¿QH7KHVHSDUHQWV are parasites depending on the good sense of those that do vaccinate their children to keep the disease rare enough to protect the unvaccinated. But now we may be past the tipping point where so many children are unvaccinated that epidemics can break out. This means there is more to consider than the expense when contemplating being trapped inside a submarine on the Finding Nemo ride. Some in the medical profession have taken note and are taking sensible steps. The Associated Press reports Dr. Charles Goodman, a pediatrician in Los Angeles, has banned unvaccinated children from KLVRI¿FH³3DUHQWVZKR choose not to give measles shots, they’re not just putting their kids at risk, but they’re also putting other kids at risk — especially kids in my waiting room.” And Dr. Goodman is not alone. But there are complaints from mothers unhappy that little Typhoid Mary can’t visit the doctor. Dotty Hagmier, founder of Moms in Charge, told AP that mothers are feeling “betrayed and upset.” Just like the moms whose kids become ill because of her negligence. The decision to vaccinate or not vaccinate belongs to the parents, but the parents should also be responsible enough to live with the results of their decision and demand the rest of us be put at risk because they chose to take their medical advice from a Playboy bunny. — ©2015 Michael Rea- gan. Michael Reagan is the son of President Ronald Reagan, a political consul- tant and author. Send com- ments to Reagan@cagle- cartoons.com. His column is distributed exclusively by Cagle Cartoons news- paper syndicate The Hermiston Herald welcomes original letters for publication on public issues and public policies. Submitted letters must be signed by the author and include the city of residence and a daytime phone number. Phone numbers will not be published. Letters may be mailed to the Hermiston Herald, 333 E. Main, Hermiston, OR, 97838; or emailed to editor@hermistonherald.com Something to brag about? I f the Hermiston School District’s plan to become the premier district in the state doesn’t work out, perhaps it can go into public relations instead. The Oregon Department of Education released the graduation rate information for districts in the state last week, and, in short order, the school district had a press release on its website hailing its success. According to the school district press release, Hermiston High School’s District’s four-year cohort graduation rate was 85.04 SHUFHQW,W¶V¿YH\HDU cohort rate — including students who graduated in ¿YHUDWKHUWKDQIRXU\HDUV was also 85.04 percent. While these numbers and the fact that the district out-performed the state sound impressive — especially if you’re grading on a curve — it was a clear example of an agency manipulating data to suit its own purposes. What the district failed to mention in its press release was the overall graduation rate with the numbers for the Innovative Learning Center, the -(66,&$.(//(5 HERMISTON HERALD Editor district’s alternative high school, factored in. While the state includes the ILC’s numbers when calculating the overall graduation rate in its report, the school district apparently prefers not to even mention the ILC. Of course, factor the ILC in and suddenly the graduation rate drops to 67.89 percent, which actually is not as good as the state’s average. In his presentation at the Hermiston Chamber of Commerce Distinguished Citizens Banquet Wednesday, during which teachers are also honored, Hermiston Superintendent Fred Maiocco, with no trace of irony, recited the high school’s graduation rate numbers as an example of the progress the school district is making in its goal to become the premier school district in the state. Of course, he only presented the graduation rate numbers from the main high school — apparently the only ones that matter — and not the overall rate with the ILC stats. A word of caution to the school district: Don’t believe your own PR lest you be forced to eat your words in future. While it might be uncomfortable for the district to admit, especially when spinning graduation numbers into a pretty package, the ILC is an offshoot of Hermiston High School. The teenagers it serves are high school students; if and when they graduate, they do it with their peers at HHS; and the state no doubt calculates the overall graduation rate with the ILC in mind because many of its students started high school at HHS. An even more indisputable inconvenient truth — especially when GLVWULFWRI¿FLDOVDUH tying graduation rates to premier district examples — is the ILC is part of the district — even when GLVWULFWRI¿FLDOVZDQW to dissociate it from the “regular” high school. How many people would associate a 67.89 percent district graduation rate with a premier school district or even evidence the district is making progress in its goal to become a premier district. How many people would consider a 67.89 percent graduation rate a bragging point at all? District RI¿FLDOVFDQGLIIHUHQWLDWH the school buildings in their calculations, but, really, they’re only putting lipstick on a pig. Even if it is a lovely shade of magenta. A better tack for the district to take in future is to leave the lipstick in its tube and present the graduation rates in their pure form and then follow up with all the things the district is doing — or going to do — to improve those numbers. Because the school district is committed in its goal to becoming the premier district in the state — where all its students count and are counted. — Jessica Keller is the editor of the Herm- iston Herald. She can be reached at jkeller@ hermistonherald.com LETTER TO THE EDITOR ‘The right thing to do’ men and women were in uniform, with 292,000 being killed on the Editor, EDWWOH¿HOG DQG PRUH G\LQJ In the past year I have attended from other causes. Many more were several funerals of 90-year-old men wounded. who were memorialized as being Our military/industrial complex members of “America’s Greatest went into overdrive. Many key jobs Generation.” Tom Brokaw, in his were done by women. Folks at home 1998 book “The Greatest Genera- ZHQW³DOOLQ´VDFUL¿FLQJWRPDNHVXUH tion,” said, “It is, I believe, the great- our troops and allies were supplied est generation any society has ever with the best that was available. It produced.” These men and women was “the right thing to do.” did what they did because it was “the As bad as our losses were, we right thing to do.” fared better than most of the rest of They came of age during the Great the world. It is estimated that from Depression and witnessed the anxi- 60 to 80 million people died as a re- ety and hardship that was occurring sult of this war. When one things of when unemployment of able-bod- the impact this carnage must have ied men was about 25 percent. The had on these veterans, it is no won- children of these unemployed were der they did not want to talk about it often malnourished, ill and had to when they came home. quit school to work alongside adults When these veterans came home, who resented their taking the job of we had become an industrial giant, a man. and these veterans needed the skills When the government initiated WR¿WLQ7KH*,%LOOZDVSDVVHGSD\- the New Deal with its WPA and CCC ing for school tuition and expenses, programs giving the unemployed and low-cost loans for mortgages jobs, there were many who resent- and businesses became available. We ed the intrusion of government into also realized a good portion of the their lives and the increase in taxes ZRUOG ZDV KXUWLQJ DQG ¿QDQFLDO DV- this entailed. But, over time, they sistance would help them get “back came to realize it was “the right thing on their feet,” so we made loans to to do.” them. This all cost money, but they Things were still only margin- viewed it as “the right thing to do.” ally better when World War II be- Our highway system needed im- gan. The timeline for the start of the provement to bring about a speedy war was September 1939 to August evacuation of our cities in the case of :H RI¿FLDOO\ HQWHUHG RQ 'HF a feared atomic bomb attack, and it 7, 1941, when the Japanese attacked was decided that we needed a nation- Pearl Harbor. Over 16 million U.S. al system of interstate and defense highways. The 41,000 miles devel- oped gave our veterans employment and made our country the envy of much of the world. With all of this happening, it is obvious that we had incurred a mas- sive debt, 112.7 percent of GDP at the conclusion of the war, the highest in our history. This “Great- est Generation” paid it off in about 20 years. How did they accom- plish this? By taxing incomes over $200,000 with a tax rate of about 90 percent and being blessed with the longest run of economic success in our history. I only knew one per- son who admitted to being in the SHUFHQW EUDFNHW +H FRQ¿GHG WR me in 1947 that he made a lot of money, probably more in the pre- vious year than I ever would make in my lifetime as a teacher. He told me he could never be a teacher, but he was good at making money. He made a point of telling me that it was his generation that had incurred this debt, and he felt it was his gen- eration’s obligation to pay the debt, “the right thing to do.” In the memorials I attended, little was mentioned about what these men had done while in the service. Had they been asked, they would proba- bly have said they did their duty. In response to all the volunteers ser- vice, they had done during their life- time, they probably would have said, “It was the right thing to do.” CARLISLE HARRISON HERMISTON ELECTED OFFICIALS STATE District 29: Sen. Bill Hansell, R-Umatilla Co., 900 Court St. N.E., S-423, Salem, OR 97301, 503-986- 1729. 101 S.W. Third St., Pendleton, OR 97801 (541) 278-1396. E-mail: ssen.billhansell@state.or.us. District 30: Sen. Ted Ferrio- li, R-John Day; 900 Court St. N.E., S-223 Salem, OR 97301, 503-986- 1950. 750 W. Main, John Day, OR 97845, (541) 575-2321. E-mail: ferr- ioli.sen@state.or.us. District 58: Rep. Bob Jenson, R-Pendleton; 900 Court St. N.E., H-480, Salem, OR 97301, 503-986- 1458. 2126 N.W. 21st., Pendleton, OR 97801, (541) 276-2707. E-mail: rep.bobjenson@state.or.us.