The INDEPENDENT, October 19, 2011 Where to Find Them U.S. Senator Ron Wyden (Dem) 1220 SW 3rd Avenue, Suite 585 Portland OR 97232 Phone: 503-326-7525 223 Dirksen Senate Ofc. Bldg. Washington, D.C. 20510-0001 Phone: 202-224-5244 E-Mail: http://wyden.senate.gov/ contact Website: http://wyden.senate. gov U.S. Senator Jeff Merkley (Dem.) One World Trade Center 121 SW Salmon St., Suite 1250 Portland, OR 97204 Phone: 503-326-3386 313 Hart Senate Ofc. Bldg. Washington, DC 20510 Phone: (202) 224-3753 E-Mail: http://merkley.senate. gov/contact WebSite: http://merkley.senate. gov U.S. Representative David - Wu (Dem) OR District 1 ace pl 620 SW Main, Suite e 606 r Portland, OR 97205 o on Phone: 503-326-2901 – n lecti d e Ofc. Bldg. 2338 Rayburn l ne ti House g i Washington, s un DC 20515 e t Phone: R en 202-225-0855 Website: m http://house.gov/wu Senator Betsy Johnson (Dem) Senate District 16 PO Box R, Scappoose, OR 97056 Phone: 503-543-4046 900 Court St. NE, S-314 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1716 E-mail: sen.betsyjohnson@ state.or.us Website: http//www.leg.state.or. us/johnson Representative Brad Witt (Dem) House District. 31 21740 Lindberg Road, Clatskanie, OR 97016 Phone: 503-728-4664 900 Court St. NE, H-373 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1431 E-mail: rep.bradwitt@state.or.us Website: http//www.leg.state.or. us/witt Representative Deborah Boone (Dem) House District 32 PO Box 926 Cannon Beach, OR 97110 Phone: 503-717-9182 900 Court St. NE, H-375 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1432 E-mail: rep.deborahboone@ state.or.us Website: http//www.leg.state.or. us/boone Page 3 Letters Fund raising problem is nearing correction To the Editor: We all want to believe in the greater good of someone and believe that they genuinely care about an organization they want to provide a fundrais- er for. That is not always the case as we have recently learned. The repercussions of one’s actions can be disap- pointing, time consuming and hard to understand. Last Spring our youth base- ball program was approached with an offer to do a fundraiser to help raise money for our boy’s baseball program, oper- ated though our local Booster organization. At the time this seemed like a good and easy way to raise a couple hundred dollars to support our program. Unfortunately, things did not go as planned and the fundraiser that should have been all wrapped up by the end of June is still an ongoing problem! We, as a nonprofit organization, as parents of baseball players, as friends, family and coworkers of baseball players, and most of all our kids have been taken advantage of. Many untruths were told along the way only to confuse and prolong the process of get- ting this situation straightened out. Our number one goal has been to get people the prod- ucts that they paid for back in June. Our second goal has been to get our baseball pro- gram the money profited by this fundraiser. It has not been with- out countless hours and effort put into this matter that we have almost reached our goals. We will not stop working on this until everyone has been taken care of. We have definitely learned from this experience as a base- ball board. Although our main fault was being trusting, we certainly never predicted the problems that were to come. We know now to get everything in writing no matter who the offer to help comes from. We also learned to better research the financial benefit to our cause as well as the customer satisfaction history on the per- son leading the fundraiser. Throughout this fundraiser the business in question has been helpful and understand- ing, and has been fulfilling those orders that still had not been delivered by the repre- sentative in charge of the fundraiser. We hope that this does not poorly reflect on the business or other representa- tives. This was a problem with an individual, not the company in general. And for those of you out there whose intentions are less than honorable; please leave our kids and nonprofit organi- zations alone! Junior Baseball Organization Board, Pres. Brooke Morrison Treasurer Amy Cieloha Secretary Cami Archer Being homeless is a learning situation To the Editor: Our family arrived in Oregon over a year ago. We have seen so much since our decision to vacation for three months while my husband and I tried to see who could obtain work. The idea was for him to retire and mom (being me) would go back to work. This plan didn’t go as we had hoped. In a way it has been enlightening. I have wondered over the past three years where people were going after the banks foreclosed on their homes. We have now met many of those folks. I have also talked with and listened to many people over the years. Many think homeless people are lazy – just looking for handouts and don’t want to work. I have to say even I have viewed the home- less in a similar way – as those that didn’t wish to face the chal- lenges of alcohol or drug abuse and maybe even mental chal- lenges. My view came from the news and how they portray homelessness. It also came from how my parents viewed the homeless people they called “hobos”. That was yesterday’s home- less. Today we have a new homeless. I didn’t see it until our trip to Oregon, after our plan to relocate didn’t go as we planned. Today’s homeless are renters, the unemployed, peo- ple whose homes have gone into foreclosure. The younger and older generations who can’t afford a home. All mixed with yesterday’s homeless. The sad part is that some of us have income and can’t get into a home. We have also had bad experiences with home- owners who foreclosed on homes we rented. Many of us have paid off bills in hopes of relocating to an area where we could own a home only to find ourselves listed as homeless. It cost a bit more sometimes to camp than rent, but the feel- ing of security we have know- ing we won’t be losing our shel- ter outweighs the costs. The new homeless are good folks just trying to make it. The sad part is many of us are la- beled as those who may not want to make it. The future homeless are going to have even more people like us. Until one experiences homeless- ness one can’t even under- stand how it feels. Just being called homeless, or to hear someone refer to someone as being lazy due to being home- less still hurts. We knew the economy was a mess. We believed that mov- ing and starting over was a good idea. We have met some really good people. When one is camping, one blends in with other campers. We didn’t hear ourselves referred to as home- less until the church and school labeled us as homeless. So if one doesn’t live in a home that is attached to solid ground, one is homeless in the eyes of today’s people. Many seniors today live in mobile homes as they did when I was a child. Many of them serve as camp- ground hosts due to the high cost of living in a home. So we are looking into being camp hosts. Our only issue is we still have school-aged teens and we would like to stop moving so they can finish school. Our youngest is done with school in five years. Our hope is still to own a home with land to pass on to our kids and grandkids. It is pretty sad that our government has let things get this out of hand. During the Great De- pression, the President signed a law which didn’t allow proper- ty or land to be taken until the economy and jobs recovered. That was very smart as taxes continued to be paid, farms continued producing crops and people were able to find work. Today we are just increasing the problem; banks, loan com- panies and realtors don’t pay property taxes until a property is sold. So jobs will continue to be lost and homes foreclosed on. Many people think that someone going through fore- closure is walking away. Many don’t understand how people ended up in foreclosure. Renters are also now being af- fected. Our family was renters – we owned our own home and sold it 15 years ago when we needed a larger place when a family member needed to stay with us. Then the house we were renting went into foreclo- sure. Some people might ask, how can homeowners not see foreclosure coming? But I be- lieve the more important ques- tions is, why is this happening in our country? The answer – because we all trusted that we as Americans (our assets, how companies operate, control of monopolies) were being watched over. But we were fooled – had the wool pulled over our eyes. Whatever one wants to call it, we lose. What can we do to fix it? Stand up, educate ourselves and our youth and vote. Our family has tried many things, advertising on Craigslist that we would help a family if they had a second home on their land they could rent, or park our trailer and help them pay their mortgage so our fam- ily had a place to stay and at the same time help them save their home. We have not had any takers. We continue to go month by month hoping some- thing might change. Our prayer is that no one else has to go through what our family has had to go through. Yes, it has been an adven- ture. We have been helped and have helped others, too. We have met some really special people. I have fished with many good hearted folks and even had good friends come and stay with us for a few nights. That made our temporary home really feel like our home. So, at times I have not felt Please see page 21 Policy on Letters The INDEPENDENT will not publish letters with per- sonal attacks on private citi- zens. Preference will be given to brief letters, 300 words or less. All letters must be signed and include a verifiable ad- dress or phone number.