I told OPB last week, “When we start losing people here, and we are losing people, that puts at risk the work we’re doing to understand ocean warming and hypoxia and acidification and rising water levels. It also puts the fishing people going into those waters at risk if they don’t have a clear prediction of what the conditions are going to be out there.”
Robert Cowen, the director of the Hatfield Marine Science Center, added that the work the scientists do has a huge economic impact on the state of Oregon. “We have some of the best managed fisheries in the world. When you have sustainable fisheries, it’s well recognized and easier to sell the fish at a premium.”
These changes have broad consequences in our communities that rely on NOAA to tell us if an ice storm is coming or on Hatfield researchers to prevent disease from devastating the oyster industry. But there is also a human side of these dramatic shifts.
I’m hearing from long-time federal workers who received emails terminating their work with one hour to clean up and leave. I’m hearing from people with positive performance reviews that are now fired “for cause”. And I’m hearing from people who were on “probation” now suddenly dismissed. Those probationary workers are either newly hired or have worked in the federal government for decades and started a new role that subjects them to a probationary status of one to two years. When you are fired for cause or during probation, this raises questions as to whether you qualify for unemployment compensation. So these families are suddenly wondering how to buy groceries next month.
We have concerns about what may be next.
Federal funds represent nearly 11 percent of the Lincoln County School District’s $107 million operating budget. The money is used for programs such as special education, food services, college and career readiness, and professional development for staff, the district said.
Lincoln County Health and Human Services director Jayne Romero said her department receives $18 million in federal funds that come either directly from the federal government, are passed to the county from the state, or are earned by providing health care to individuals under the Oregon Health Plan, Medicaid, and Medicare.
There are major worries that the nearly-complete $80 million PacWave wave-energy testing project taking place north of Waldport will be shuttered if the U.S. Department of Energy, which has funded much of the project, turns its focus to oil and natural gas production — as President Trump has asked.
The Port of Newport is seeking about $28 million in federal grants from both the U.S. Department of Transportation and the Maritime Administration’s port infrastructure development plan to replace its Port Dock 7.
Angell Job Corps has 143 students, about 51 staff members, many of which are not Forest Service employees, and an annual budget between $4.5 million and $6 million. Angell, like other Job Corps, is operated by the US Forest Service in partnership with the US Department of Labor.
Oregon’s Democratic U.S. House members warned this week that firing firefighters and employees at agencies that manage federal land could have drastic consequences for the upcoming fire season. The federal government owns just over 50% of Oregon’s land, and it’s mainly managed by the U.S. Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management.
Let me be clear. I support identifying and eliminating waste in government. Right now, I’m engaged in reviewing state budgets and applying 10% reductions to each of our agencies in the event that revenue does not meet expectations. You need to do that carefully. But what I’m seeing from Washington, DC, is not careful.
Rural Oregon is hurting and very angry. And our federal government is about to make them hurt more and probably make them angrier. |