EDITORIAL: Lessons from a heated election season
It may have been gorgeous weather outside, but inside, politically, October was sort of an ugly month in Camas.
It may have been gorgeous weather outside, but inside, politically, October was sort of an ugly month in Camas.
The word “transparency” seems to be getting tossed around quite a bit these days.
Happy Thanksgiving week, readers. We hope you — much like this November Cheers & Jeers column —are bursting with cheers and short on jeers this holiday season.
“It’s too much sometimes. I know we have to talk about it — do something about it — but sometimes all the bad news makes me want to tune it out. It’s really depressing.”
Anyone who has ever had to make a dollar stretch farther than they thought possible understands the value of a well-made product.
Now that the election (which took an unexpectedly heated and divisive turn in Camas) is over, it’s time to concentrate on the things that unite us every November and December — breaking bread together, exchanging gifts, donating to families in need, celebrating holiday traditions with family and friends, feeling grateful for the things that make life worth living and, of course, pie.
Happy Halloween to everyone reading this Cheers & Jeers editorial on the day it publishes. And Happy The-Election-is-Almost-Over to everyone else.
The “Vote No on Camas Pool Bond” folks have been getting their 15 minutes of fame this week, after an impromptu “debate” hosted by a conservative online media group devolved into what could best be described as a bunch of bullies coming after the mayor of Camas — and all because she dared to suggest (along with the Camas City Council) that voters should decide if Camas should build a community center.
In her interview with the Post-Record last week, Camas Mayor Shannon Turk said she was willing to shoulder the bulk of people’s anger over the city’s decision to place a $78 million community-aquatics center bond on the Nov. 5 ballot, but added that she doesn’t fully understand people’s ire over the bond.
As we mark the 79th annual National Newspaper Week this week, many of us who have worked in the newspaper business for a couple decades are feeling more conflicted than ever before.