HERALD OPINION and reader’s forum Wednesday, July 13, 2022 OUR VIEW Time for solutions to water emergency I t shouldn’t be this difficult. It shouldn’t be a great leap — as the richest nation in the world — to expect clean drinking water. Yet, in Morrow County — as a recent investigation by Salem’s Capital Chronicle news outlet showed — clean drinking water is a bridge too far. We’ve remained relatively silent editorially on the mat- ter because we expected — once the facts of this partic- ular case were made public — a widespread federal and state response. So far as we can tell, that’s been lacking. The crux of the matter is a simple one. As the Capital Chronicle showed in its investigative series, the Port of Morrow allowed more than 600 tons of excess nitrogen from its wastewater to be applied on farmland on top of the area’s already contaminated aquifer in the last decade. At the same time, the Oregon Department of Environ- mental Quality did little to enforce penalties on the port when it violated its wastewater permit. The state eventually laid down a $2.1 million fine on the port. Recently, voters quizzed U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden on the matter during a town hall session. Wyden referred to an idea where a group of local governments, businesses and residents could come together and tackle the is- sue. That type of plan has worked, to some extent, for Wyden before. His efforts to create a diverse group to help solve management issues of the Owyhee Canyon- lands in the southeastern part of the state was a triumph of diplomacy. However, the water issues in Morrow County are quite different than the land-use issues tied to the canyonlands. Clean drinking water is what separates highly ad- vanced, digital-age societies from the 19th century. To encounter a clean drinking water issue in the U.S., in Or- egon, in this day and age should be nearly unthinkable. However, here we are. Wyden and the rest of the state’s federal lawmaking delegation need to step in and prompt federal authorities to take on this issue. Clearly, the problem evolved out of the realm of a state or local response almost immediately. Once federal help is on the way and visible, then the state must review the entire case and start asking some very pointed questions to several state agencies, starting with the DEQ. Finally, those who are in charge at the Port of Morrow need to stand up and publicly respond to what was an ap- parent decade-long plan to ignore state rules. A clean drinking water issue should not be occurring in the U.S. early in the 21st century. PUBLIC OFFICIALS President Joe Biden Comment line: 202-456-1111 U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden 221 Dirksen Senate Office Bldg. Washington, DC 20510 La Grande office: 541-962-7691 U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley 313 Hart Senate Office Building Washington, DC 20510 Pendleton office: 541-278-1129 U.S. Representative Cliff Bentz 1239 Longworth House Office Building Washington, DC, 20515 202-225-6730 State Rep. Greg Smith, District 57 900 Court St. NE, H-482 Salem, OR 97301 503-986-1457 State Sen. Bill Hansell, District 29 900 Court St. NE, S-423 Salem, OR 97301 503-986-1729 COLUMN Which Johnson would govern? STEVE FORRESTER WRITER’S NOTEBOOK B etsy Johnson entered my office at The Astorian in 2000 as a candidate for the state House of Representa- tives. Decades prior, our family histories intersected when my father and John- son’s mother were colleagues on the state Board of Higher Education. They had a simpatico relationship. So I was inclined to like this legislative candidate. And I did. Not being a pollster, I will leave it to oth- ers to speculate on the viability of Johnson’s strategy for winning the three-way race she has with Democrat Tina Kotek and Repub- lican Christine Drazan. What interests me much more is what kind of governor she would be. Oregon has not had a governor with busi- ness ownership in their background since Victor Atiyeh, our last Republican governor, who led the state from 1979 to 1987. Ati- yeh grasped the concept of being the state’s CEO. Our state government has grown consid- erably since the 1980s, but some of the same challenges beg for oversight. With govern- ment’s growth, the state’s dependence on computer systems and software platforms has grown markedly. And Oregon has lacked a governor who grasped that particu- lar challenge and dealt with it. Volume 115 • Number 28 Andrew Cutler | Publisher • acutler@hermistonherald.com • 541-278-2673 Erick Peterson | Editor • epeterson@hermistonherald.com • 541-564-4536 Angel Aguilar | Multi-Media consultant • aaguilar@hermiston herald.com 541-564-4531 Audra Workman | Office Manager • aworkman@eastoregonian.com • 541-564-4538 Tammy Malgesini | Community Editor • community@eastoregonian.com • 541-564-4532 To contact the Hermiston Herald for news, advertising or subscription information: • call 541-567-6457 • email info@hermistonherald.com • stop by our offices 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. Main St., Hermiston, OR 97838, 541-567-6457. Periodical postage paid at Hermiston, OR. Postmaster, send address changes to Hermiston Herald, 333 E. Main St., Hermiston, OR 97838. Member of EO Media Group Copyright ©2022 Journal of the American Medical Associa- tion. Its conclusions were: “Gunshot injury costs represent a substantial burden to the medical care system. Nearly half this cost is borne by the US taxpayers,” (Aug. 4, 1999). David Hemenway, of the Harvard School of Public Health, was a leading explorer of the intersection of firearm woundings and deaths and public health. “Private Guns, Public Health” was his 2004 book. The vir- tue of Hemenway’s work and other public health physicians is that it moved the gun is- sue away from politics and emotion into the world of medicine, healing and prevention. In an attempt to have a fruitful dialogue with Johnson, I gave her one of Hemenway’s papers. At that point, this very articulate woman said nothing in response. I was sorry to hear Johnson’s response to the school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, but it was the Betsy I listened to some 20 years ago. I know that her independent campaign for governor demands that she cultivate a hard-line stance for the single-issue voter – to cut into the Republican electorate. That’s fine for short-term thinking. But it is not leadership for what has become a mortal concern. Put simply, Johnson is on the wrong side of history. And if Oregon has another Umpqua Community College shooting (2015), Clackamas Town Center incident (2012) or Thurston High School shooting (Kip Kinkel, 1998), most Oregonians will want much more than a clichéd response from their governor. that is known to have high nitrate levels for decades. This is also an older development that would not meet today’s standards. It is 1-acre lots with individual septic systems and shared wells. What are the chances that they may have failed septic systems that are contributing to their own problem? The high nitrate issue has been around for decades. I can remember my friend Carol Michaels decades ago when she worked for Oregon State University Ex- tension Service encouraging people in the area to check their wells for nitrates, and passing out literature at public events, such as the Irrigon Watermelon Festival and Morrow County Fair. State law that has been around for decades requires a test of the domestic well in any real estate transaction and the results be given to the buyer. This is not a new problem. Jim was quoted as saying that before he and Commissioner Melissa Lindsay were elected, that the relationship between the Port of Morrow and county government was like the tail wagging the dog. During my 12- year tenure as a county commissioner we had quarterly meetings with the Port of Mor- row, city of Boardman and Morrow County. We met in the same room and tried to work on mutual problems for the public good. We didn’t always agree on the solutions, but were always civil to each other. Not the scream- ing and yelling and finger-pointing that Commissioner Jim Doherty likes to do. The emergency meeting that was called to declare the emergency barely met the public notice requirements. None of the regional part- ners, including the cities of Boardman and Irrigon, were notified. One can only wonder if that was done to exclude the public from participating. There was no reason for the fear-mongering that has taken place. There was no reason to cast a shadow of doubt on city water, which is continually tested. Jim Doherty needs to be part of a solution and not just a finger pointer. If he wants to point the finger at the problem, he only needs to look in the mirror. John Wenholz Irrigon █ Steve Forrester, the former editor and publisher of The Astorian, is the president and CEO of EO Media Group. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Jim Doherty needs to be part of a solution, not just a finger pointer I’ve read the recent articles on the Port of Morrow being fined by Oregon Department of Environmental Quality for over application of nitrogen. I’ve also read Morrow County Commissioner Jim Doherty’s spin on blam- ing the high nitrates in the area solely on the Port of Morrow. Attached from one of those articles is a pie chart where the DEQ estimates where the nitrates come from. The Port of Morrow along with food pro- cessing in Umatilla County accounts for 4.6%. The Port of Morrow handles the dis- charge water from food processors in Mor- row County. This is the only group that is regulated by DEQ, and they are only a small portion of a bigger problem. Jim Doherty is a cattleman, and if I add the 8.1% from pastures with the confined animal feeding operations of 12.9%, I get 22% attributed to Jim Doherty’s industry. Onsite, which is septic tanks and drain fields, is 3.9%. Jim has been targeting an area in rural Boardman HERMISTON HERALD Oregon’s state government’s computer system disasters are no secret. Refreshing my memory about those malfunctions, I consulted a man with some 30 years of watching the statehouse – Dick Hughes, our newspaper’s Salem columnist. “They’re aw- ful,” Hughes said. On the one hand, computer systems have become the nervous systems of most businesses and governments. On the other hand, no candidate for state office will run on a platform of improving them. This is not sexy stuff. Based on what Hughes tells me and what I know of Johnson, she would have the moxie to ask the tough questions of systems and software providers who are contracted to serve the divisions of state government – which are equivalent to large companies – in terms of their payroll, budget and the size of the customer base they serve. Guns, however, are a sexy issue – a highly visible flashpoint. When Johnson told me, more than a decade ago, about the machine gun that she purchased at an auction, I was startled. In U.S. Marine Corps infantry training, I had fired the M60 machine gun. Why, I wondered, would anyone not in uni- form want that killing machine? When Johnson and I had this conversa- tion, a national community of public health physicians was gathering numbers on the scale of gun woundings, deaths and sui- cides. They argued that America should rec- ognize this as a public health issue. A calam- ity. An epidemic. An example of this public health perspec- tive was “The Medical Costs of Gunshot In- juries in the United States,” published in the CORRECTIONS Printed on recycled newsprint It is the policy of the Hermiston Herald to correct errors as soon as they are discovered. Incorrect information will be corrected on Page A2. Errors committed on the Opinion page will be corrected on that page. Corrections also are noted in the online versions of our stories. 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