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Sunday, October 19, 2008
Paul Jacob :: Townhall.com Columnist
Whistling past Wahkiakum
by Paul Jacob
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“Death spiral.” Quite a term for the national economy, eh? For all I know, Tony Lystra, a reporter for The Daily News in Longview, Washington, may be right. Perhaps the national economy is in a death spiral.

And caught in that vortex, as he explains, is one of that state’s smallest counties, Wahkiakum.

It used to be a farming, fishing, logging community. But not much farming, fishing, or logging goes on any more. It’s filling up with retirees, people who (for reasons known only to them) don’t mind lots and lots of rain.

The farmland is far from the major distribution center — Wahkiakum County is fairly isolated. Though I’ve traveled to the Pacific Northwest umpteen times, I’ve never driven through Wahkiakum. (I just have friends there, who keep me updated.) Naturalist Robert Michael Pyle calls it a “forgotten place” in the subtitle to his recent book Sky Time in Grays River.

The fish, of course, have mostly gone away. The salmon’s run on the Columbia has been physically hampered by numerous dams, and the waters are warmer, now, than salmon prefer (blame that on the dams, too, I guess . . . though when you think about it, we civilized people like warmth, and there may be heat spillover everywhere, for all I know). Fish runs in the local tributaries aren’t much any more, either, from what I hear — despite the work of state hatcheries.

The logging industry, too, has changed in the last 30 years. Huge fir and spruce and hemlock and the occasional cedar used to be pulled out of the forests, almost constantly, hauled out by train, tugboats, and log trucks. Now the trees harvested tend to be quite small, the kind Wahkiakum folk used to titter at when they visited places like Maine or Minnesota.

But it’s not the private economy that is really worrisome, in this wet area amidst the hills of the coastal range on the north side of the Columbia. It’s the county government that’s in danger. At the beginning of the month it was sliding into deep debt — $1.4 million. That may not seem like a lot, but the county has less than 4,000 people in it. The figure is not pocket change.

The article in the News followed a slightly less doom-and-gloom piece in the county’s paper of record, The Wahkiakum County Eagle, a week or so earlier. Both mention the debt. Both discuss the layoffs. And while the local paper doesn’t go on and on about the political negotiations with the state government for compensation regarding lost timber revenues, like the News does, it doesn’t really need to. The Eagle’s been covering that issue for years.

But neither cites the one other factor that has put the county furthest out to teeter on the edge of the precipice, ready to be sucked in by that dread “death spiral”: The county’s medical clinic.

Years ago this little enterprise was helmed by a doctor or two plus a nurse working as receptionist. Progress occurs, of course, and it grew into a clinic. And, in the context of modern medicine, with its multiple government-influenced and -prescribed policies, plus ballooning insurance costs, the clinic did not maintain a nose-above-water status. It’s last private owner, PeaceHealth, pulled out four years ago.

And the county nabbed it.

The commissioners who set out to “save the clinic” prophesied dire economic degradation if the clinic were allowed to fail. In classic modern political fashion, they just had to prop it up.

But they claim they had no idea of the expenses. Running the clinic has cost the county well over a quarter million dollars per year.

So, that extra burden, added onto so many other burdens, has pushed the county to the edge of ruin.

The current commissioners knew years ago that the county’s financial security was at threat. They knew revenues were falling. The little county, like many in the Evergreen State, got quite a bit of its revenue from timber sales. During the Depression, I’m told, foreclosed timberland wound up in the hands of the county. And the state’s Department of Natural Resources has tried to manage timber sales from those acres, giving the county a substantial revenue stream — well over half its income. Continued...

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About The Author
Paul Jacob is President of Citizens in Charge. His daily Common Sense commentary appears on the Web, via e-mail, and on radio stations across America.
 
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Wahkiakum County and the take over
Wahkiakum County is a sad wakeup call to all Americans. Private property rights are a thing of the past in this County. Columbia Land Trust an NGO owns ¼ of the County. Bought and paid for with your tax dollars under the guise of “Salmon Recovery”. They are not required to pay property tax however they do at this time at a lower conservation rate about 10% of normal so the tax base has been extremely impaired.

Laws and Ordinances are violated by the many NGOs that have descended on the west end of the county as salmon recovery fills their pockets with millions. We have more salmon redirected by CLT laying dead in our hay fields. 67 “projects have been defined by Lower Columbia Fish Recovery Board at a cost of 90 million not including acquisitions. These “projects” will take private land and dig channels through them. Dairy farmers for Organic Valley have already lost acres due to “projects” causing erosion and now they stand to lose more acres. LCFRB has placed many landowner names on their list as participants that are not we have written letters and requested in public forum for them to remove our names for over a year. Using our names gives them grants as they state they have community support when in fact only 3 people listed are participants.

The County for what ever reason allows these entities to commit various crimes against private property owners to date 33 laws and violations have occurred and are occurring daily.

The honest people wonder what these entities have to give, they are bankrupting the county and destroying lives and certainly unwelcome by those who care about the Grays’ River Valley. People live here because we are a community a sort of extended family, we have great schools and except for a few we care about each other.

Looks like all that foreclosed land
Is going to be sold back into private property.
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