I had the honor of seeing our county government and citizens in action lately when I was invited to give the Invocation at the County Commissioners meeting last month on June 3. I had picked the date at random and arrived to find a packed hearing and the kind of testimony that makes your hands shake and your voice crack. Almost everyone in the room was there because they felt their families, their homes, and their quality of life was at stake. The tension was palpable.
The issue was the proposed mining overlay that would impact hundreds of families in Clark County, no small number of which live right here as part of our wider Camas community on Livingston Mountain, areas I would soon see denoted as “12, 13, & 14” on the overlay map. Thanks to Google Earth, the squares under discussion, even in the hearing room, visually showed themselves in the truth of what they were: jewels of lush, forested and green wilderness that makes Clark County a treasure to those who are fortunate enough to live or vacation here.
I came just to open with a prayer, but I stayed the full four hours of the meeting. And what I heard then moved me to go back there again, today.
During both hearings I heard the distress and testimony first hand from families who had been asked to tell their stories over and over again, of bedrock-shattering dynamite blasts and their result: moving earth cracking foundations and compromising wells and water ways, water quality and wildlife. Over and over again came the stories of peril on the narrow hairpin roads and near misses from pedestrians and drivers alike, one of whom testified with both words and bruises. Today we heard the testimony of
Mike Nerland, Superintendent of Camas Schools, whose stated concern for the safety of Camas school students and staff were well illustrated by a young man from Camas High School who spoke of the time the school bus he was riding in was forced off the road from the fast moving, oncoming, fully loaded gravel truck-the truck cleared the bus by only inches.