OPINION READER’S FORUM Founded in 1906 WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 5, 2022 A4 OUR VIEW Rotten 2021 provides glimmers of hope for 2022 Looking back at 2021, we might be tempted to despair. Pandemic, civil unrest, insurrection and more were front and center in the news. While we were all suff ering the fallout from global and national catastro- phe, each of us dealt with the same things that have always troubled our lives — bills, work, family squabbles and so on. How- ever, when we look closer into the events of the past year, we can have hope for the newly arrived year. One thing from 2021 that we can be happy about is the mobilization to get peo- ple vaccinated. In our community, there were several people who worked tirelessly to vaccinate others against the coronavi- rus. Many of these people were in our com- munity, at event booths, pop-up clinics and even workplaces. We have benefi ted from their service, and they were there for us. We can also be glad for the work that was started in 2021 that we will be able to enjoy in 2022. The new Hermiston City Hall is one of those projects. Located downtown, the old 1965 building lacked space and accessibility. Hermiston had out- grown that building, and the new one will off er us more. As the roof has been recently added, and the walls are being fi lled in, we are getting a fuller look at the promise of the new city hall. It will be a symbol for Hermiston. It will show others the town is growing and is worthy of its place on the map. The people of Hermiston deserve to have such a struc- ture, and we can be pleased to have it. This is not the only construction that is happening, however, as work is being done throughout the area. To see this, we need only to drive through our neighbor- hoods and have a look around. We see new schools, new homes and new businesses being built. These are places that we will come to fruition this year, thanks to the hard work of people in our community. We can be thankful for the people who have made eff orts to give us hope in 2021. Our local schools are fi lled with such peo- ple, who brought our children back into classrooms. Thanks to their work, they were able to teach students again. And it is not just school staff who got the ball rolling on progressing our community; it was also the many other workers. Labor- ers kept our restaurants, stores and factories open and productive. In 2021, the Hermiston Herald was fi lled with stories of people working to better our community — not just paid workers, but unpaid volunteers. These volunteers were behind big donation drives, such as Christ- mas Express. They provided for less fortu- nate people. Locally, charity eff orts con- tinue, fueled in part by organizations such as Lions, Kiwanis, Rotary and Altrusa groups. Eastern Oregon Mission was also a big contributor to our area in 2021. Its work in 2021, in providing for people at Agape House and Martha’s House, stood out. The eff orts of their workers, paid and unpaid, provide hope that we can solve poverty in our community. Our cities, like every city in the nation, remain beset with problems. Looking back at the stories of 2021, however, we are jus- tifi ed to be optimistic. Yes, overall, it was a wretched year. People died and livelihoods were crushed. Likely, the stories of the year will forever scar us. Still, there were many good things and great people who made news in 2021. They give us hope for 2022. PASTURES OF PLENTY ANOTHER VIEW Home-schooling will boom Transmuting moments of long after COVID-19 vulnerability into magic S tudent enrollment in public schools has nosedived as par- ent disgust with school COVID- 19 policies, student learning losses and controversial education policies has gone through the roof. In the wake of this enrollment implosion, home-schooling has boomed across the country. At the beginning of the school year, the U.S. Depart- ment of Education estimated 1.5 million students had left the public schools since the corona- Lance virus pandemic began. Izumi If students are not enrolling in public schools, where are they going? The numbers show many for- mer public school students are now being home-schooled. The U.S. Census Bureau found the percentage of home-schooling house- holds more than doubled in 2020 from 5% in spring to 11% in the fall. According to a recent University of Michigan study, from 2020 to 2021, the enrollment at public schools in Michigan fell by nearly 46,000 stu- dents, which represented a more than a 3% drop. Among kindergartners, there was a decrease of more than 11%. The increase in home-schoolers does not come from just a narrow seg- ment of the American population. A University of Washington Both- ell analysis found, “The diversity of home-schoolers in the U.S. mirrors the diversity of all students nationally,” including all racial, religious, political, and income groups. For instance, the Census Bureau found that among African Amer- ican households the increase in home-schooling was much steeper than in the country as a whole, rising from 3% to 16%, a fi ve-fold jump. This increase in African American home-schooling is not surprising given recent research by McKinsey & Com- pany that found “Students in major- ity Black schools ended the (2020-21 school) year with six months of unfi n- ished learning.” Demetria Zinga, one of the coun- try’s top African American home- school YouTubers, says, “I believe home-schooling is growing and exploding amongst African Ameri- cans and there will be more and more home-schoolers.” Home-school mom Magda Gomez, an immigrant from Mexico, has become an activist for home-schooling in the His- panic community. She observes: “We His- panics as a culture are usu- ally very protective and loving towards our children. How- ever, I explain that love is not enough to raise our children. We have to educate ourselves in diff erent areas (of education), especially since we are not in our (native) country but are immigrants.” “It is my dream,” she says, “to see more Hispanic families doing home- school.” Her dream is coming true with home-schooling doubling among Hispanic households, from 6% to 12%. In addition to the racial diver- sity of home-schoolers, in 2021 the school-choice organization EdChoice found: “Many parents of children with autism, ADHD, and other neuro-de- velopmental disorders report that pub- lic schools cannot eff ectively address their child’s specialized learning needs.” Pediatric nurse and home-school mom Jackie Nunes unenrolled her spe- cial-needs daughter from public school saying, “There just wasn’t enough of the things that matter — time, atten- tion, patience, persistence, passion, support.” The coronavirus pandemic has exposed all the fl aws in the one-size- fi ts-all public schools, which is why the home-school boom is shaking up American education. ——— Lance Izumi is senior director of the Center for Education at the Pacifi c Research Institute. I ’ve been thinking recently about vulnerability. What it looks like, feels like, entails. If vulnerability is the mul- tiplier, what do we multiply it with, what is the product, the outcome of this action? Courage adjacent, vulnerabil- ity asks to shed light on the innermost workings of our hearts and mind and past. The process then is honesty and bravery in spite of the nagging, intrusive thoughts. It’s a realignment, for those of us who have Alex fought against and lost Hobbs many times over to the self-preservation instinct which tells us to harden our- selves against disappointment. There is no guaranteed upshot. Only ripples. Ever-ex- panding. A seed buried in the cold hard earth. In 2009, I was 19. A soph- omore English major whose identity was fully wrapped up in the brick-clad build- ings of academia. Of Ameri- can literature anthologies and annotations, of my column in the university newspaper, in booze-laden conversations only undergraduates have once they become equipped with the multisyllabic language of romanticism and philosophy. Before then, existing on a college campus seemed beyond contemplation. Unobtainable. Freshman year had sputtered to a close, but my sophomore year held vast potential. A fog had lifted and in its stead, the sun, lionhearted and lemony, blossomed. But in October of that year four incontrovertible lines, like Roman legions conquer- ing Gaul, spread across the planes of two pregnancy tests. I capped the tests and placed them gently in my pocket. It was raining that night and would continue to rain for some time. That moment has been with me on repeat since its occur- rence. Echoing in perpetu- ity. A constant companion. The clarity with which I instantly understood my path still befud- dles me to this day. My hand had been forced and I would deal with the repercussions as they came, but at that moment I knew what I would do despite the control which would soon be wrested from me. I would keep my son because I could see him with such clarity that it seemed almost preternatural. Marry- ing this sense of fate with grief is a strange experience. Simul- taneous blooming and wilt- ing. Stranger still is purpose- fully walking forward with the understanding that a giant precipice nears, that soon you will be unable to halt the momentum, and that over the edge is all that lies ahead. That fall, I moved back home to Eastern Oregon where I waited for my son to be born into the spring. I met him earthside in May 2010. He was round and perfect and had long strands of dark hair (those would later be spun to gold). I can still feel his cheeks squish beneath my lips like a mud-luscious puddle. Accompanying me at this moment, however, was grief. Unimaginable, all-con- suming, fl ailing, despairing grief. It shrouded everything it touched with a blackness so complete that when I look back on that day nearly 12 years later, I feel heartbroken for that girl and her baby — alone in a sterile room, save the doctor and nurse. Mov- ing forward despite the ground opening up and swallowing her whole. The breaking of the world and torrential rains — too much to bear now. That rain, however, nour- ished the seedlings left behind by the rotten fruit — the grief, the sadness. I didn’t under- stand the anatomy of a blos- som then. Soon those seed- lings would germinate and take root. They would twist and embrace and stretch and fi ll the hollow ground with hope and with gratitude. With love. Why share this story? We are complicated crea- tures capable of holding simultaneous confl icting beliefs, emotions, wants, and needs. Accepting suff ering as a gift is a radical act of vul- nerability. So is arriving at the understanding that those com- plicated moments will irre- vocably change us. Moments in time that you cannot undo, words that cannot be unsaid, emotions that can no longer be neglected. Stepping into that reality is terrifying but the alternative is scarier — a denial of self. I cannot change the past no more than an alchemist could translate mer- cury into gold. But I can trans- mute moments of vulnerability into magic. We can plant the seeds and hope the fruit they bear is sweet. ——— Alex Hobbs is a former educator turned full-time homeschooling mom. LETTER TO THE EDITOR Donate to cultural nonprofi ts that matter to you Twenty years ago, a mighty group of visionaries celebrated the fulfi llment of a dream — a simple and eff ective way for Ore- gon taxpayers to direct funds to cultural activities. This was the genesis of the Oregon Cultural Trust and its cultural tax credit. It remains cause for celebra- tion. As the Oregon Cultural Trust marks its 20th anniver- sary, it has proven itself a stable source of funding for Oregon’s arts, heritage and humanities nonprofi ts. The state tax credit is available to any Oregonian who donates to one or more of the 1,500-plus cultural nonprofi ts and makes a matching gift to the Cultural Trust. At tax time, the amount you gave to the trust comes back to you — dollar for dollar. And the state sets those funds aside for Cultural Trust grant awards the following year. Since its founding in 2001, the trust has raised — through the cultural tax credit — more than $74 million for culture statewide. It has distributed nearly 10,000 grant awards totaling more than $34 million and its permanent fund now exceeds $33 million. In addition, the Cultural Trust net- work of County Cultural Coali- tions enabled the distribution of more than $25 million in Coro- navirus Relief Fund for Cultural Support awards to 621 organi- zations struggling to survive the CORRECTIONS Printed on recycled newsprint VOLUME 115 • NUMBER 1 Erick Peterson | Editor • epeterson@hermistonherald.com • 541-564-4536 Angel Aguilar | Multi-Media consultant • aaguilar@eastoregonian.com 541-564-4538 Audra Workman | Offi ce Manager • aworkman@eastoregonian.com • 541-564-4538 Tammy Malgesini | Community Editor • community@eastoregonian.com • 541-564-4532 Andy Nicolais | Page Designer • anicolais@eomediagroup.com To contact the Hermiston Herald for news, advertising or subscription information: • call 541-567-6457 • e-mail info@hermistonherald.com • stop by our offi ces at 333 E. Main St. • visit us online at: hermistonherald.com The Hermiston Herald (USPS 242220, ISSN 8750-4782) is published weekly at Hermiston Herald, 333 E. 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