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Letters Aug. 7, 2010
Leos collect again
It is time for another Leos deposit can
and bottle collection.
Thanks for your support last month! We
raised over $600, which will be given back to the community. We
hope to see you in the Rosauers parking lot on Saturday, Aug. 7,
from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Even though the recycling trailer has
moved because of the construction, we will still be collecting in
the usual spot. Thanks!
Ali Danko
Parkdale
See ‘Anne of Green Gables’
If you love music and support the Hood
River Valley High School Music Department, then please come to see
the benefit musical “Anne of Green Gables,” with performances Aug.
12-15 and 19-21 at the Columbia Center for the Arts in Hood River.
Proceeds will benefit the music
department and the upcoming chamber singers’ United Kingdom tour
in 2011 coordinated by Mark Steighner.
The show features adults, teens and youth
from Hood River and White Salmon. The performers bring to life the
beloved children’s classic story by Lucy Montgomery.
Tickets can be purchased at Waucoma
Bookstore, at the door and online at www.showtix4u.com.
I’m proud of all the hard work these
volunteers have put into making this a great production — come out
and support them!
Julie Raefield-Gobbo
Hood River
Better idea?
I find it interesting that in our paper it
says the Patriot Act is “a dark and cynical piece of intentional
public misdirection” (Editorial, July 31).
Hello; I’ve always been glad we had it, as
it allows the FBI and CIA to share information on possible
terrorists who live in our own land, and use our services to plan
and carry out their dark, dastardly designs.
I’m thinking someone has a better idea how
to thwart this? I’m curious ... share.
Marilyn Brennan
Hood River
ANOTHER VOICE
Level playing field equals loss of economic
freedoms
By KARLA KAY EDWARDS
An important discussion is taking place in
Oregon among counties and agricultural interests regarding
regulating activities allowed on farmlands, especially on lands
zoned as Exclusive Farm Use.
During the 2010 Special Legislative
Session, the Oregon Legislature passed Senate Bill 1055, which
addressed the ability of wineries to sell incidental items and
services in conjunction with the winery as long as they do not
exceed 25 percent of on-site sales income.
How absurd that private property rights in
Oregon have been eroded to such an extent that citizens willingly
engage in a conversation about how to limit people’s ability to
run successful businesses on their own land.
In this economic recession government at
all levels should make every effort to remove regulations that
constrain private property rights in an attempt to stimulate the
natural outgrowth of entrepreneurialism and new market
opportunities.
Yet, due to more than 30 years of
command-and-control statewide land use policy, agricultural
interests have become used to the State of Oregon imposing
proscriptive regulations that outline exactly what constitute
appropriate farmland activities beyond what is already in statute
for EFU lands.
If the state defines these activities
further, counties won’t have the bureaucratic “burden” of
defending, and in many cases protecting, their homegrown
definition of uses to the public, other counties or the Land
Conservation and Development Commission.
Uniform statewide regulation of
agriculture might seem to create a “more level playing field”
among competitors in adjoining counties. However, the economic
losses to individual counties will be much greater than the
perceived advantages of restrictive statewide definitions.
The long-term, slow erosion of property
rights in Oregon has led to political infighting, a waste of
valuable resources and a loss of basic liberties.
Additional statewide regulation would
force every agricultural operation into a framework that would
limit further the creative development of new markets and
opportunities because it is incredibly difficult to predict future
consumer demands and needs.
Who would have predicted 30 years ago that
the Willamette Valley wine industry would be so strong?
Agriculturalists by their nature are
entrepreneurs and risk-takers. That is the only way they survive
in a volatile industry that relies on unpredictable weather and
natural resources to earn a living. Creating and enhancing a
competitive advantage for their operation is necessary in order to
succeed in business.
Obviously, a farm in one part of Oregon
has different advantages than one located elsewhere. One farm or
the other is likely to have better soils, more rainfall, cheaper
energy inputs, shorter transportation distances, stronger local
markets and a multitude of other advantages or disadvantages.
It is unfortunate in Oregon that
government at any level has a role in the discussion of whether a
farm operation remains competitive and viable. To eliminate even
one unforeseen opportunity for a farm in an effort to create a
“level playing field” for all farms is against the spirit this
country was founded upon.
I recognize that it must be frustrating
for local farmers to look at their colleagues in an adjoining
county which provides greater freedom to create economic
opportunities. But that is the beauty of a decentralized
government structure.
In a perfect world, property rights would
not be infringed upon by government, but at best local governments
provide the ability for communities to develop through a means
that best meets the needs of its citizens. Oregon has greatly
limited that ability through statewide land use regulations,
though there is still a diminutive amount of freedom for counties
to accentuate each community’s uniqueness and potentially create a
competitive advantage for its citizens.
Allowing, or in some cases forcing,
counties to decide for themselves what farmland and ancillary
activities are best for their community is important and a far
more desirable process than creating a centralized mandate at the
state level.
Benjamin Franklin once said, “They who can
give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety
deserve neither liberty nor safety.”
For the past 30 years Oregon’s land-use
regulations have been chipping away at citizens’ economic freedom.
When will we recognize that these regulations have cumulatively
eroded Oregonians’ economic freedom and ability to prosper?
n
Karla Kay Edwards is Rural Policy
Analyst at Cascade Policy Institute, Oregon’s free market public
policy research organization. She has held positions of leadership
in numerous organizations focusing on agricultural and rural
industries and issues, including the Oregon Department of
Agriculture.
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