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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Editorial How we vote -- ballot measures Measure 14
-- Removes historical racial references from Oregon Constitution: Yes.
Measures 15 & 16 -- Allows the state to issue general
obligation bonds for seismic rehabilitation of public education and emergency
buildings: Yes on both. The work will eventually be mandated and it has
to be paid for. This way does not place any direct burden on state or
local governments.
Measure 17 -- Reduces minimum age requirement to serve
as State Legislator from 21 to 18: Yes. If a young adult is old enough
to vote and serve in the military he or she is old enough to serve in
the legislature. Maturity is not necessarily a function of age.
Measure 18 -- Allows establishment of split-rate tax
districts: Yes. The measure would be a step toward fixing a major problem
for Deschutes County -- unstable funding for the sheriff's department.
It allows the sheriff to ask for a permanent tax district to replace the current serial levy system -- a good thing for the sheriff's office and for
the residents of Deschutes County.
Measure 21 -- Allows for "none of the above" votes in
elections for judges: No. While it is tempting to rebel against the common
pattern of judges winning appointments then running perpetually unopposed
in subsequent elections, this is a poor response. Better that strong candidates
be fielded to run against incumbents.
Measure 22 -- Requires that judges of the Oregon Supreme
Court and Oregon Court of Appeals be elected by judicial district: No.
as desirable as geographical diversity might be (especially for us on
the East side), this measure threatens to politicize the judiciary, making
judges as susceptible to parochial political winds as legislators.
Measure 23 -- Creates health care finance plan; creates
additional income, payroll taxes: Yes. It's time Oregonians recognized
that decent health care is for everyone.
Oregonians are not so callous to say those without money should simply suffer. Or that hospitals and doctors should give their services for free, hiding that cost in bills paid by others. Measure 23 is not perfect. Government is not perfect. But it is time we shared health security with the 400,000
Oregonians, including 70,000 children, who have no insurance.
Measure 24 -- Allows licensed denturists to install
partial dentures (replacement teeth). Yes. This gives consumers an additional
choice in the marketplace.
Measure 25 -- Increases Oregon Minimum Wage to $6.90;
increases for inflation: No. Unemployment continues to run high in Oregon
and increased minimum wage requirements tend to impede job growth at the
entry level.
That means fewer jobs to go around.
Measure 26 -- Prohibits paying initiative signature
gatherers by the signature: Yes. This removes a temptation to commit fraud,
which has clearly proven to be a problem in the initiative process.
Measure 27 -- Requires labeling of genetically engineered
foods: No. This is a symbolic gesture that will not make anybody safer
and will simply lead to more regulation and expense. Consumers already
have the choice to buy organic if they fear genetically engineered food.
J.C.
Yes. We have a right to know what is in our food. In fact, this measure doesn't go far enough. We also need to know which of the chickens we eat are fed antibiotics, and which of the cattle are fed growth hormones. A free society needs information to be free. E.D. |
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