Who to believe
 The troubling world we now live in is full of many conflicting voices.  One may ask, who should I believe or trust? May I suggest a proven voice: the voice of the Lord. His words have always been true and have or will yet all be fulfilled. So, where can one find these precious words? A. The words of God are recorded in the scriptures. God reveals His mind and will to His prophets. “Surely the Lord God will do nothing, but he revealeth his secret unto his servants the prophets.” Amos 3:7 (also, Amos 8:11-12).
 Who are the Lord’s living prophets in our day? What is the Lord revealing to them? Listen for yourselves this coming Saturday and Sunday, April 4-5, at 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. local time TV channel 9403.
Joe Stewart
The Dalles
‘Misleading picture’
In the March 28 issue of the Hood River News, a letter written by Cindy Allen was published that claimed to make factual statements by Sen. Chuck Thomsen at an event hosted by the Port of Cascade Locks last November. Each fall, the port has a retreat for its commissioners, staff and invited guests to review the port’s prior year and to plan for the future. Invited guests are generally legislators, local elected officials and others who are able to present on topics of interest for the port.
Cindy Allen was not present at the November dinner she references in her letter. The allegations she makes about statements made by Sen. Thomsen lack accuracy and context. It’s unfortunate that Ms. Allen’s comments have painted a misleading picture about what actually occurred at the event.
Mark Johnson
Government Affairs director
Port of Cascade Locks
‘A win’ for Gorge
It’s no secret local journalism, as an institution, is struggling to make ends meet. Toss an unprecedented global pandemic on top and you have a recipe for hardship.
Rather than folding under intense pressure, the three Gorge newspapers have found a new owner in Publisher Chelsea Marr. This is a clear win for our communities.
I speak as a former Eagle Media Group employee. The News provided my first career job, as a reporter. It was a rewarding experience getting acquainted with Hood River County and meeting the remarkable people who live here. I grew up in Oregon but have found few places so endearing.
Journalism isn’t an easy undertaking, operationally or financially. Many U.S. communities have lost their historic news institutions. Since 1990, newspaper staffing has fallen by two-thirds nationwide, the Oregonian/OregonLive reported April 1, citing Bureau of Labor Statistics data.
Too often, the media goes underappreciated. Many take it for granted when their kids grace the sports page, the local bands get coverage — bias disclosure: I’m a musician — and citizens stay informed about government actions. Much of the information we consume originates from a local newspaper, even in the social media age.
Please remember: Journalists are real people. They live in this community, raise their families here, and they tell your story. It’s been that way in the Gorge for a century.
I urge readers to share their appreciation for the people working behind the scenes. Thank a reporter. Take out an ad to promote your business. Write letters showing you care.
Whatever manifestation it takes, local journalism will keep bringing us together as a community. Amid crisis, we need it more than ever.
Patrick Mulvihill
Hood River
Thomsen irresponsible
It’s sad to say that some folks will stop at nothing to defend a bad choice.
I don’t know Rick Larsen but since my name was included in his letter to the editor of April 1, 2020, in the Hood River News, I will try to respond.
Sen. Chuck Thomsen chose to leave Salem and a lot of legislative business hanging just before COVID-19 hit the news. He maligned recall signature gatherers as working during the COVID-19 outbreak in a news interview: www.opb.org/news/article/hood-river-oregon-legislative-recall-race-controversy.
In the article, Chuck was allowed to gaslight the signature campaign rather than answer for his own poor choices, deflecting criticism and blaming others rather than owning up to his own faults and omissions.
In Mr. Larsen’s thinking, recalling Chuck is destroying the community response to the pandemic. Sen. Thomsen’s choice has nothing to do with pulling together as a community during a time of unprecedented crisis. Mr. Larsen is guilty of a non sequitur and a false equivalence, e.g. either you support Chuck’s choice or you don’t support the community.
Perhaps the reason that the Republican Party has such a small representation in Salem is due to this kind of poor logic and rampant animosity.
Here’s the bottom line:
1. It was irresponsible of Sen. Chuck Thomsen to bail on the legislative session.
2. Ms. Lara Dunn is her own person and the chief petitioner of the recall effort.
3. I am chair of the Hood River Democrats but not the boss.
4. I support the recall.
5. Mr. Larsen is way out of line.
Mark Reynolds
Hood River
Chuck ran
FYSA...
Chuck didn’t stand.
Chuck ran.
V/R
Gary Tichenor
Hood River
Supports Thomsen
For most of my adult voting life, I aligned with the Democratic Party. However, I am seeing the consequences of a supermajority in Salem. With a supermajority, there is very little room for debate and compromise. The past two legislative sessions, the Republican legislators “walked out” in order to represent their constituents. During the regular session of 2019, I found it frustrating and felt that the Republican walkout undermined representative democracy; however, I followed the legislative process more closely as the 2020 short session unfolded. Among several bills, I was eager for Rep. Williams’ bill to increase search and rescue funding to county sheriffs’ offices, which would directly support the Hood River community, to pass. Why did the Democratic leaders choose to bring the highly contentious and polarizing cap and trade bill back for a vote so early in the short session before other important legislation could be passed? Denying quorum and effectively halting the legislative session is an extreme measure, but in this case I found it courageous on behalf of the Republican legislators as their seemingly only option to represent THEIR constituents who opposed the cap and trade legislation. Furthermore, over two-thirds of Oregon’s county commissions voted a proclamation to oppose Cap and Trade. During testimony Republican legislators brought forth dozens of amendments to the Cap and Trade bill including a referral to the people of Oregon for a vote.
The Democrats voted down every single amendment. When the supermajority dominates every committee and every subcommittee in the legislature, it creates no room for negotiation. Legislators are elected to represent their constituents and this past legislative session, we witnessed Republican legislators doing just that. I support Sen. Chuck Thomsen and his courage to walk out on behalf of the majority of his constituents who communicated their opposition to cap and trade. We need to maintain a bipartisan balance in Salem. A balanced legislature is important for representative and just legislation. We need to keep Sen. Thomsen in office through his term. He is a moderate Republican and has a strong reputation in Salem for building bipartisan relationships.
Meghan Larivee
Hood River
Editor’s Note: Hood River County Commissioners did not pass a proclamation opposing cap and trade.
Prisoners at risk
There’s no such thing as social distancing in prison, where crowded facilities make hygienic conditions and adequate healthcare extremely difficult, if not impossible. Public health professionals across the country tell us that the COVID-19 pandemic poses a heightened risk of infection for people who are imprisoned or detained as well as for the staff working in these facilities. Since deportations and mass incarcerations disproportionately target people of color, these communities and families share a disproportionate grief and loss during this time of pandemic. Hundreds of families over the past few weeks have called attention to how their loved ones are being treated behind bars during the pandemic.
The Justice Department’s early-release COVID-19 plan is not what it seems. Looking into the how this plan will be implemented, we see that candidates for early release will be screened primarily using a controversial algorithm called PATTERN which is untested, and would continue to propagate the racial disparities in our criminal justice system.
President Trump and our Governors need to follow the recommendations of our public health leaders to release the elderly and those with compromised health from prisons, jails, and detention centers. This release needs to be done without racial discrimination, in a humane way that respects each person’s civil rights.
I’m joining many concerned citizens asking for children, nonviolent prisoners, the elderly, and those who are ill and ailing to be released for prisons, jails and detention centers. Once released, adequate testing and self-quarantine are needed. Those who remain imprisoned need more sanitary conditions, and complete, ongoing information about pandemic policies, and the supplies necessary for personal hygiene and safety.
Mimi Maduro
Hood River
Grow up, Donald
It had to have been the lowest day in President Trump’s presidency when he announced he would have no more contact with the governors of Washington and Michigan.  He thought they hadn’t shown enough “appreciation” for the help in providing antivirus “supplies.”  He instructed Vice President Pence to not communicate with those “ingrates.”
I am personally incensed because I have relatives in Seattle and Spokane who might just need masks or gowns, and if these items are withheld because of a “snit” of juvenile proportions, I will really be angry.
Grow up, Mr. President.
Marv Turner
Hood River
Moon views
“Exploring the many faces of our Moon,” by Jim White (March 28), is questionably interesting, except that I relate one misstatement in an article such as this to that old Proverb, “One rotten apple will spoil the whole box.”
Note paragraph 4:; ”Earth’s natural satellite (?) is the easiest astronomical object to see in the night sky ...”
Then again in paragraph 10, he refers to the term “degrees,” and a dime and straw for size viewing relationships.
Paragraph 11 is my favorite, due to the “But it appears much larger to most of us, when it’s near the horizon, due to a phenomenon known as the ‘moon illusion.’”
Huh!? How about due to the atmospheric density conditions caused by dust, smoke, and the relative humidity which causes refraction of its light rays.
(Personal: Loving the art of photography and the wonders of God’s created universe.) I am amused with a rising moon and its apparent viewable status prior to its actually being viewable due to refraction which lessons as it rises, thus giving the apparent illusion that it hops over the horizon.   
Alan Winans
Hood River
Rasmussen leads
For several years, I had the pleasure of serving with Carrie Rasmussen on the Department of Human Services Child Welfare Advisory Committee (CWAC) and the Child Justice Act Task Force (CJATF). Carrie was a standout leader on both of these committees. I’m proud to say that under her leadership on the CJATF, we accomplished some great collaborative projects. She held the committee and partners to a high standard of account-ability.
I know that as the DA of Hood River County, she will continue to hold the system, partners and foremost herself to a high standard of professionalism, duty and accountability. You would be blessed to have her in this leadership position.
Don Darland
Former president
Oregon Foster Parent Association
Targeting feds’ relief
The first coronavirus relief package was a good start, but it was missing crucial protections for our hardest-hit communities that cannot wait. The next “relief” bill could turn into a major corporate handout, as has happened several times in our recent past. We should be speaking up now.
I’m asking my elected officials, Sens. Wyden and Merkley, and Rep. Greg Walden, to make sure the bill includes free coronavirus treatment, universal paid sick and family leave, expanded food stamp benefits, and more support for small businesses and state and local governments.
It’s critical that further relief funding provide stronger workplace safety protection, especially for frontline healthcare workers and including personal protective equipment and hospital supplies and equipment. Fore-closures, evictions and utility shut-offs should be prohibited. Corporations should be required to use bailout funds to retain employees, not for executive bonuses or stock buybacks. National vote-by-mail and election-security measures should be fully funded. And Treasury Secretary Mnuchin should not be allowed to dole out slush-fund payouts without proper oversight.
Our senators, Merkley and Wyden, seem to be quite on track with promoting these needs. Walden — well, have you heard or read of him making any useful contributions recently? Let’s get on our phones and laptops to make sure this next bill provides substantial relief for citizens and small businesses, rather than another round of bailouts for big corporations.
Lara Dunn
Hood River
Thank you, D.C.
Focusing on the good. We are in an unprecedented national emergency and I am so grateful and proud to be an American. This morning, I learned about a program recently passed by Democrats, Republicans and Trump to help small business owners like me. It’s a program where we are receiving loans that don’t need to be repaid if we continue to pay our employees and rent. Wow! That is a lifesaver and an amazing gift for all businesses, their employees and local communities. Yes, there’s a lot of bad out there with COVID-19, but there’s also a lot of good. I’m trying to focus on the good. Thanks Washington, D.C. You just helped out one small business in tiny little Hood River.
Jon Nigbor
Hood River
Rasmussen clear choice
For the first time in over two decades, Hood River has the chance to pick a new chief prosecutor. Citizens are very lucky to have Carrie Rasmussen as a candidate. No newcomer to the office, she has served as the Chief Deputy for years. Moreover, she is known state-wide as a fearless prosecutor, fearing no one and never seeking reward or approval, as too many in politics look for. I was the elected DA for 25 years in Astoria, and I had the chance to work with virtually every prosecutor who is working today in Oregon.
Your choice is clear: Carrie Rasmussen for Hood River DA.
Joshua Marquis
Astoria