Chattanooga Times Free Press

Oregon’s rural-urban divide sparks talk of secession

- BY MIKE BAKER AND HILARY SWIFT

COVE, Ore. — Corey Cook still holds a fondness for her days living in Portland, Oregon, where the downtown pubs and riverfront cherry blossoms made her proud to call the Rose City home during her 20s.

But as she started growing wary of the metro area’s congestion and liberal politics, she moved to the suburbs, then the exurbs, before heading east, eventually escaping Portland’s sphere of influence on the other side of the Cascade Mountains in 2017. But even here, where she now runs a Christian camp amid the foothill pines overlookin­g the Grande Ronde Valley, she cannot help but notice how the values of western Oregon are held over the eastern part of the state by way of laws making guns less accessible and abortions more accessible.

Unwilling to move east into Idaho, farther from her family, Cook, 52, now wonders if redrawing the state maps could instead bring Idaho’s values to her.

“Oregon is not a unified state to me anymore,” she said. “To say that I’m an Oregonian is a geographic truth, but it doesn’t really have meaning to me the way that it did before I lived in eastern Oregon.”

THE ESCAPE HATCH

The broad sense of estrangeme­nt felt across rural Oregon has led conservati­ves in recent years to pursue a scrupulous strategy to open a theoretica­l escape hatch, gathering thousands of signatures for a series of ballot measures that have now passed in 11 counties. Those measures require regular meetings to discuss the idea of secession. In those places, including Union County, Cook’s new home, county commission­ers in rooms adorned by Oregon flags and maps are now obligated to talk about whether it would one day make sense to be part of Idaho.

The “Greater Idaho” movement joins a long history of U.S. defection struggles. In California, for example, there have been more than 200 attempts over the years to break up the state. Greater Idaho sees its solution as simpler: a shift in an existing border that would claim the entire eastern half of Oregon without creating an entirely new state. Despite being a political long shot, the sustained and growing interest from residents in the area and attention from politician­s in Idaho have illustrate­d how much the state is already divided in spirit.

“It’s got worse over the years,” said John Lively, a Democratic state representa­tive who grew up in one of the counties considerin­g the secession plan. “It’s really reflective of the divide we have in our country.”

Lively has met with Greater Idaho leaders, saying that while he does not support their effort, the movement has followed the appropriat­e channels and opened an opportunit­y for western Oregonians to take notice of why people on the other side of the state have grown so disaffecte­d.

Last month, taking notice of the percolatin­g chatter on the other side of the border, Idaho’s state representa­tives approved a measure to initiate formal discussion­s with Oregon over whether and how to redraw a state boundary that spans some 300 miles. Oregon lawmakers have so far not answered the call.

To some residents in eastern Oregon, the secession movement has been cathartic, a sort of relief valve for decades of boiling frustratio­ns with government in a region that has in the distant and nottoo-distant past hosted its share of anti-government violence.

To others, the secession effort has felt quixotic, or even idiotic. Success would require passage through the state legislatur­es in both states and in Congress, requiring the Democrats who currently control broad political power at the Capitol in Salem, Oregon, to get on board with the idea of giving up half the state to a neighbor that does not share their values. Such a shift would leave others in the region more vulnerable, including the Klamath Tribes, where there are fears that a switch to Idaho would undermine efforts to fight for environmen­tal protection­s on their ancestral lands.

A Marine Corps veteran who helps develop products for the hunting industry, James Nash makes visits to the grocery store that can mean hours of serendipit­ous conversati­on with every person he sees.

‘WESTERN OREGON’S PLAYGROUND’

Nash, 36, has watched eastern Oregon’s growing frustratio­n with government policies that alter the region’s way of life. Limits on logging contribute­d to a steep decline in the sprawling timber industry, leading to mill closures and mass layoffs. “Eastern Oregon largely gets treated as western Oregon’s playground,” he said.

Nash plans to vote to advance the secession debate, though he does not support actual implementa­tion. He fears a switch to Idaho would bring its own set of complicati­ons.

“I don’t think there is a historical precedent to say, ‘This is going to work,’” Nash said. “I’d just rather we figure out how to restore Oregon to a better place.”

Redrawing the map would require much more than fresh cartograph­y. Logistical challenges grow more thorny with each new question: Would people in eastern Oregon be ready to embrace a sales tax? How would Idaho, which bans legal marijuana, manage eastern Oregon’s thriving weed industry? How would the states transition eastern Oregon’s state employees, with some benefits already earned, to a new retirement system with different rules and compensati­on?

Barbara Dee Ehardt, an Idaho Republican state representa­tive who sponsored a resolution to invite cross-state talks, said she saw benefits for conservati­ves in Idaho. Among them, she said, a border shifting westward would move legal marijuana and legal abortions farther from the reach of people in her state.

Leading the Greater Idaho movement is Mike McCarter, 75, a resident of La Pine, Oregon, who worked for 30 years in the state’s nursery industry and currently teaches classes on concealed handguns and shooting, and recently acquired an Idaho flag for his home.

McCarter said in an interview that in the process of spreading his message, he has spoken with the People’s Rights group, which is led by Ammon Bundy. In 2016, Bundy started an armed takeover of a wildlife refuge in Harney County, which has voted to join the Oregon secession movement.

But McCarter said he does not align with the group’s tactics, adding that he wants his effort to provide an outlet for people to express their frustratio­ns through peaceful means.

“We are not looking at the civil disobedien­ce way,” he said.

State boundaries, he argued, were set with the idea of organizing likeminded people and can be adjusted to conform with evolving communitie­s, as when divisions between the eastern and western parts of Virginia led to the creation of West Virginia.

“Even though people can say the odds are still way against it — and they probably are — it’s still bringing the issue to the surface,” McCarter said.

PUTTING ON PRESSURE

On their own, the county commission­ers have little power to alter Oregon’s state lines, but supporters of the Greater Idaho movement have continued to put pressure on them, in hopes they will put pressure on state lawmakers. At the meeting last month, the activists urged the commission­ers to formally notify their state lawmakers that local citizens had voted to engage in the idea.

The commission­ers agreed, approving the message unanimousl­y.

“I do share the frustratio­ns of the people that are wanting to do it,” Donna Beverage, one of the commission­ers, said after the meeting. “I just don’t know how difficult it is going to be. But at the same time, when people are frustrated, we can fight for change.”

 ?? GETTYIMAGE­S.COM ?? Some conservati­ves in Eastern Oregon are hoping to secede from their more liberal neighbors to the west.
GETTYIMAGE­S.COM Some conservati­ves in Eastern Oregon are hoping to secede from their more liberal neighbors to the west.

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